09/12/2025 | News release | Archived content
Foreign languages major Yamileth Hernandez-Becerra and community health major Melody Campos received a Best Poster award for their research, "Community Roots, Linguistic Equity: The Power of Outreach in Dual Language Immersion," during the Summer 2025 Office of Student Creative Activities and Research (OSCAR) Celebration of Student Research and Impact in August.
Yamileth Hernandez-Becerra with the award-winning poster she created with Melody Campos. Photo providedTheir research was conducted as part of a George Mason Summer Team Impact Project (STIP) that was led by Ellen Serafini and Jihye Moon, associate professors in the Department of Modern and Classical Languages in the College of Humanities and Social Sciences (CHSS).
The symposium, held at Dewberry Hall in the Johnson Center, offered undergraduate and graduate students the opportunity to showcase their research to George Mason University community.
For the STIP program, faculty make a proposal to the Office of Undergraduate Education in the Provost's Office. Projects are then selected for funding. Serafini and Moon's summer project focused on language, educational access, and social equity in local bilingual schools.
The team observed teachers at dual language immersion programs at two Fairfax County Public Schools (FCPS) elementary schools-Laurel Ridge Elementary School (Spanish) and Colin Powell Elementary School (Korean)-and interviewed teachers, school administrators, parents, FCPS board members, and state administrators.
George Mason students Sarah Choudary and Sukyoung Yoon presented their Summer Impact project research on language immersion programs at the OSCAR Celebration. Photo provided"This is a student-led project," Moon said. "The students started from scratch coming up with the research questions and designing the research. They identified who the major stakeholders were in this program and interviewed them."
Graduate teaching assistant Teo Rogers Mendizabal, who is working on a degree in Cultural Studies, worked on the project with eight undergraduates: Campos, Hernandez-Becerra, English and foreign languages major Sarah Choudhary, global affairs Sukyoung Yoon, foreign languages major Chloe Davis, global affairs and foreign languages major Avery Rhoden, mathematics and foreign languages major Giselle Concepcion, and foreign languages major Roslyn Brown.
"It has been an eye-opening experience for me to learn about these programs.… I've learned a lot," said Hernandez-Becerra, who attended nearby Robinson High School. "It feels great to give back to my community and see what I can do to help them."
In addition to the STIP research, a handful of CHSS students also presented at the symposium as part of research conducted through the Undergraduate Research Scholars Program (URSP) from OSCAR.
"I'm so honored to have received this funding and this platform to share something that I believe deserves more visibility," Shallal said. "The fact George Mason offers this is incredibly telling of its values."
Check out more research from OSCAR