To: Provost Maryanne Reed, President Gordon Gee, and the Board of Governors,
West Virginia University
We, the undersigned faculty of the Department of Linguistics at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, write with the deepest concern about the recommendation to close the Department of World Languages, Literatures, and Linguistics. If acted upon, this will have the effect of depriving future students at WVU of a fundamental educational opportunity, the ability to experience the world using a language other than English. This will not only diminish their ability to understand the broader world, but it will also diminish their future career prospects. Furthermore, the loss of Linguistics at WVU will mean the loss of an important bridge from the Humanities to STEM. We note that just one day after this possible cut was announced, an announcement of a major NSF grant to two of your Linguistics faculty members, Jonah Katz and Sergio Robles-Puente, appeared in the WVU College of Arts and Sciences News and Events.
We understand that you are in a financial crisis, but we urge you to seek alternative ways of dealing with it. It is hard to imagine that WVU will be able to recover if it abandons this core part of its mission, both in terms of its ability to recruit students, and in terms of its reputation as the flagship public university of West Virginia.
Faruk Akkus, Assistant Professor
Ana Arregui, Professor
Michael Becker, Associate Professor
Rajesh Bhatt, Professor
MarĂa Biezma, Assistant Professor
Seth Cable, Professor
Lyn Frazier, Professor Emerita
Lisa Green, Distinguished University Professor
Alice Harris, Professor Emerita
Vincent Homer, Associate Professor
Gaja Jarosz, Professor
Kyle Johnson, Professor
John Kingston, Professor
Angelika Kratzer, Profesor Emerita
John McCarthy, Distinguished University Professor Emeritus and Provost Emeritus
Shota Momma, Professor
Barbara Partee, Professor Emerita
Joe Pater, Professor and Department Chair
Thomas Roeper, Professor
Elisabeth Selkirk, Professor Emerita
Margaret Speas, Professor Emerita
Kristine Yu, Associate Professor