Celeste Kinginger
· Kirby Professor in Language LearningVerifiedPennsylvania State University · Teaching English as a Second Language (TESOL)
Active 1990–2024
About
Celeste Kinginger is a Professor in Language Learning and a Professor of Applied Linguistics at Penn State University, where she also serves as the Director of Graduate Studies. Her scholarship focuses on environments for the development of meaningful world language abilities among Anglophone learners. She played a pioneering role in establishing the viability of Internet-mediated, telecollaborative approaches to classroom language instruction and has published works on second language pragmatics and multilingual life writing. In recent years, her research has concentrated on understanding the processes and outcomes of language learning in study abroad contexts. She has authored or edited five book-length works on language learning in study abroad, including 'Language learning in study abroad: Case studies of Americans in France' (2008), 'Language learning and study abroad: A critical reading of research' (2009), and 'Social and cultural aspects of language learning in study abroad' (2013). Her current work includes qualitative studies examining the home stay dinner table as a context for learning French and Chinese language and culture, as well as a nationwide mixed-methods investigation of career paths for language-focused graduates titled 'The Professional Lives of Language Study Abroad Alumni' (2023). She regularly teaches courses in applied linguistics and second language acquisition, including advanced seminars such as Pragmatics in Language Learning and Teaching and Qualitative Research in Applied Linguistics.
Research topics
- Sociology
- Political Science
- Psychology
- Linguistics
- Pedagogy
- Social psychology
- Gender studies
- Medicine
- Philosophy
- Public relations
- Medical education
- Anthropology
- Biology
Selected publications
Long‐term language use by US‐based study‐abroad alumni: Activity types and program effects
Modern Language Journal · 2024-02-07 · 2 citations
articleOpen accessSenior authorAbstract This article presents selected results from a large‐scale, mixed‐methods, federally funded investigation of US‐based language study‐abroad alumni of all ages, which included a nationwide survey ( N = 4,899) followed by professional life history interviews with 54 participants. Here, we focus on three questions heretofore unaddressed: (a) How do these alumni continue to use their additional languages? (b) How is long‐term language use associated with various study‐abroad program features? and (c) How is the role of program features reflected in life history narratives? We found that 79% of participants use their languages in at least one of the activities listed on the survey, though this use is generally confined to informal, interactive tasks. Our examination of program features using multiple regression revealed that while all features were statistically significant predictors for long‐term language use, those involving engagement with local communities (e.g., close personal relationships) showed more relative importance. Contextualized with a sample of our qualitative data, findings from this study offer a macrolevel confirmation that local engagement during study abroad retains its significance for language use over the long term and provide implications for designing study‐abroad programs that involve language learning.
The Professional Lives of Language Study Abroad Alumni
2023 · 1 citations
1st authorCorresponding- Political Science
- Sociology
- Pedagogy
This book investigates the impact of language learning and study abroad on the career options and choices of US-based alumni of all ages. International education experiences are shown to exert considerable influence on the aspirations and career paths of individuals, and the long-term benefits are clearly demonstrated in participant narratives.
1 Introduction and Literature Review
Multilingual Matters eBooks · 2023-04-06 · 3 citations
book-chapter1st authorCorrespondingMixed methods research on language learning in study abroad
Research methods in applied linguistics · 2023-01-10 · 1 citations
book-chapter1st authorCorrespondingAbstract Although research involving the theorized, principled, systematic integration of quantitative and qualitative approaches – mixed methods – is relatively rare in the literature on study abroad, there have been seminal, interesting, and impactful multiple methods contributions to this literature. This chapter first explores extant research on language learning in study abroad that involves both quantitative and qualitative data. The chapter will then present the key feature of mixed methods research: the principled integration of quantitative and qualitative data and analysis. Worked examples of these moments of integration – termed ‘points of interface’ – are drawn from our own current research and a published study. The chapter closes with reflection on how mixed methods might strengthen and extend the empirical case for study abroad.
The Professional Lives of Language Study Abroad Alumni
Channel View Publications eBooks · 2023-04-05 · 1 citations
book1st authorCorrespondingThe Professional Lives of Language Study Abroad Alumni
Multilingual Matters eBooks · 2023-04-03 · 2 citations
book1st authorCorrespondingThis book investigates the impact of language learning and study abroad on the career options and choices of US-based alumni of all ages. International education experiences are shown to exert considerable influence on the aspirations and career paths of individuals, and the long-term benefits are clearly demonstrated in participant narratives.
Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development · 2022 · 3 citations
Senior authorCorresponding- Sociology
- Political Science
- Psychology
What drives provincial students in Korea to choose a college in Seoul? What role does English language learning play in their choices? This study focuses on two young academic migrants to Seoul, Joon and Lynn, to explore how macrocultural phenomena shaped their psychology and contributed to their language education. Previous studies have focused on how the culture of English learning in Korea encourages study abroad. Less understood are nation-level migration trajectories and what drives this form of mobility. Participants’ narratives showed different values and opportunities assigned to different regions. ‘In-Seoul’ discourse and a sense of belonging in the imagined communities impacted their college choices and learning experiences. Both shared that their final goal of moving between regions was to expand their horizons: Joon perceived Seoul as a propitious place for his occupation, and Lynn saw it as an interim place where she could communicate freely with people from different cultural backgrounds. Joon showed voluntary alignment with the ideals sought by colleges in Seoul. Lynn negotiated her way into communities of fluent language speakers and academic pursuits within her major. This study shows how these migrants made sense of English language learning within their broader regional migration and learning experiences.
Journal of Pragmatics · 2021 · 15 citations
Senior authorCorresponding- Sociology
- Psychology
- Linguistics
Eureka! or, How I learned to stop worrying and love the survey
Language Teaching · 2020-08-19
articleOpen access1st authorCorrespondingTwo decades ago, a personally-addressed ten-page survey printed on salmon-colored stock appeared in my campus mailbox. An accompanying letter explained that the sender was a student collecting data for a graduate-level thesis and included contact information for the thesis advisor … in marketing. It was the one and only ‘Consumer Durable Goods Study’ I would ever receive as an applied linguist.
Second Language Concept-Based Pragmatics Instruction:
2019-02-22 · 1 citations
book-chapterSenior author
Frequent coauthors
- 7 shared
Sheng-Hsun Lee
University of Queensland
- 5 shared
Qian Wu
Zhejiang University of Science and Technology
- 5 shared
Vanessa Simpson
Children's Medical Center
- 5 shared
Alison Gourvès-Hayward
- 4 shared
Jingyuan Zhuang
Pennsylvania State University
- 4 shared
Dali Tan
- 4 shared
Rémi A. van Compernolle
- 3 shared
Julie A. Belz
Infas Institut für Angewandte Sozialwissenschaft (Germany)
Awards & honors
- Best of MLJ 2024
- Resume-aware match score
- Save to shortlist
- AI-drafted outreach
See your match with Celeste Kinginger
PhdFit ranks faculty by your research interests, methods, and publications — grounded in their actual work, not templates.
- Free to start
- No credit card
- 30-second signup