Tag: undergraduate initiative

  • Tools of the Trade, 9: Meta-Tools: Networking in Undergrad (Without Faking It)

    One of the most frequent pieces of advice given to undergraduates is: “network.” But for students in the humanities—especially those who want to study ancient languages, inscriptions, or museum work—that advice often feels vague, awkward, or transactional. This is definitely a conceptual hurdle that I’ve had to overcome.

    This post is my attempt to reframe that word into something more grounded: building relationships, but not performatively. Rather, I strive to do so through shared questions, good conversations, and sustained curiosity. I’m not an expert on this at all, but I’ve built a small but meaningful network of scholars who know what I care about, who challenge and support me, and who have helped shape the work I do. This is how I’ve approached it, and what I’d tell someone starting out.

    Start Local, Then Reach Out

    The best place to start is with the people at your own institution. NYU, being so big, has been a wonderful place for this—with 60,000 students and some 6,000 instructors, it’s a goldmine for people who know what they’re talking about.

    But the following advice applies to any school. Go to office hours. Take professors’ classes—not just because the syllabus looks good, but because you’re genuinely interested in how they think. Even if the class isn’t squarely in your area, getting to know the professor might lead to mentorship, research opportunities, or simply perspective you didn’t know you needed. I talked about this in the last post, but it can’t be stressed enough.

    Before going to office hours, do your homework. I usually read at least two of a professor’s articles in advance—preferably recent, but not necessarily—and do a deep first pass early on, then a quick skim again right before the meeting to refresh my memory. I come with questions not just about the content, but about the field: how did this approach emerge? What debates is it part of? What’s happening at the edge of this subfield right now, and who’s leading it?

    If someone you’d like to connect with isn’t at your institution, email is a powerful tool—when used well. Keep it short, be deferential, have a clear purpose, and make it easy for them to see how they can help. Mention a mutual contact if you have one, such as if they were in the same PhD cohort as a professor at your school or have a student from your undergrad program in their graduate school. However, even a lighter connection—“I came across your work while reading X’s article on…”—can do a lot. You can also ask for an introduction from a professor, but I’ve even gently-warmed cold emails have worked just fine for me.

    Follow Up (without Hovering)

    It’s easy to get caught in the anxiety of “now what?” after a good meeting or email exchange. My best advice: space it out. A thank-you email goes a long way, especially if you reference something specific they shared. After that, I keep a simple handwritten list of who I’ve contacted, what we discussed, and whether they asked me to follow up.

    If you’re working on a long-term project—like my alphabet transmission project, APEX—then sending a short update every month or so when you hit a milestone is a great way to keep people in the loop without overwhelming them. Scholars are busy. Respect their time; this lets you build a slow, steady relationship.

    Bring Something to the Table

    This doesn’t mean showing off. It means coming into conversations with curiosity and initiative. If you’ve had an idea while reading someone’s work—an application, a parallel, a method they might not have used—bring it up gently and frame it as a question. “Have you ever tried applying X to your corpus?” can be a meaningful way to signal that you’re not just a reader, but a thinker too.

    One of the best questions I’ve learned to ask: “Are there any scholars or articles you’d recommend I look at to get a better sense of the field?” When you’re in multiple disciplines, the literature is bottomless. A suggestion from someone experienced can save you weeks of guesswork—and deepen the conversation at the same time.

    Use Clubs and Events to Build Connections

    One of the unexpected benefits of running the League of Linguistics is that it’s allowed me to reach out to scholars in a semi-official capacity. If you’re organizing an event, moderating a panel, or just planning a syllabus, you have an excuse to email someone you admire—not for yourself, but on behalf of a community. Sometimes they’ll help. Sometimes they’ll become contacts down the line.

    Just make sure you’re doing this in good faith. The event should serve your members first. But if it opens up a conversation with someone you’d like to work with, that’s a bonus worth nurturing.

    Know What You’re Asking For

    Always have a purpose when reaching out. Want to talk about their recent article? Ask for feedback on a related idea? Get advice about graduate programs? Whatever it is, make it clear in the first few lines. Don’t make them guess what you want. And don’t send them a novella. Long emails are a fast way to get ignored—not because professors are rude, but because they’re busy, and clarity is a form of respect.

    At the same time, everyone’s different. Some scholars love a detailed intro. Others would rather get three lines asking for a Zoom call and figure out the rest in conversation. When in doubt, start concise—and adjust based on the cues they give you.

    Etiquette

    Until you’re told otherwise, when you’re in undergrad, always address someone as Professor Lastname. If they sign off with initials, play it safe. Only switch to a first name if they clearly invite it—either in their signature, or later in the conversation. Respect for titles isn’t just about hierarchy—it’s about showing that you’ve taken care in reaching out.

    And if they don’t respond? It’s okay. Let it go. Especially if they’re at another institution, or heading multiple research projects, or simply overwhelmed, it’s not about you. If the connection’s meant to grow, you’ll have other chances. If not, trust that others will say yes. I’ve found academics on the whole to be extremely generous with their time, resources, and knowledge. You’ll find your people.

    Final Thoughts

    The best conversations I’ve had didn’t come from trying to impress someone; they came from being honest about what I care about, what I don’t know, and what I’m trying to figure out. Humility, curiosity, and gratitude are perhaps the most winning combination—especially when you’re early in your career. You don’t need to have all the answers, you just need to be a person worth talking to again.

    And one last thing: projects help. If you’re working on something—an independent research blog, a digital tool, a language revitalization game—it gives you a way to reach out that feels natural, not forced. “I’m building something, and I thought of you” is often a more compelling opener than a plain “Can we talk?”

    If you’re trying to build up these kinds of contacts, I hope this helps. If you’ve already started, I’d love to hear what’s worked for you. And if you’re not sure where to begin—reach out. I’m still learning too.

  • Linguistics for All, 3: How to Run a Linguistics (or Any Academic) Club

    NYU League of Linguistics logo

    This is a longer post, as I’m documenting my journey in running the NYU League of Linguistics. Herein I give some pretty extensive advice on how to do outreach and build an extracurricular community. When I first joined the club’s leadership team, it had gone quiet. There were myriad challenges involved that required tenacity, creativity, and a willingness to ask for help, and I want to pass on what I’ve learned. This post is aimed at undergrads who find themselves responsible for an academic club and want to deepen its impact.

    It was not a fresh start for us—it was a resurrection. The club had existed for at least 15 years, but by the time I got involved, it had gone relatively quiet. So quiet, in fact, that we were placed on probation for failing to meet the university’s minimum event requirement: three per semester. The bones were there—name, charter, social accounts—but the pulse was faint.

    What I wanted, at first, was simply a place to talk about language in the company of others who cared. So I asked around: friends in psych, econ, classics, CS. People said yes. So: we made flyers. Secured pizza. Helped to coordinate room logistics, the A/V, a slide deck. We opened with something light and collaborative, and the enthusiasm was immediate.

    This year’s schedule is the fullest in the club’s memory, and what’s emerged is more than a club. It’s a project in public linguistics: a way of gathering, questioning, and bringing language to the fore.

    A Year in Events

    Our calendar this year reflects the range we’re trying to cultivate. We’ve hosted discussion groups, lectures, mixers, and games—all with an eye toward accessibility and intellectual curiosity.

    Some of our events have been exploratory and collaborative, like our endangered language discussion series, which combined typology with revitalization ethics. I shaped the curriculum with input from several external linguists, including one whose fieldwork perspective framed the questions we asked. We’re still refining the discussion group format, but we’ve gotten strong feedback from attendees and are working to ensure each one invites curiosity and makes participants feel like they have something to contribute. We’re also developing a language revitalization simulation game, where players role-play as linguists trying to support an endangered language community—combining strategy, theory, and storytelling. We plan to launch that either this month or early next semester.

    Other events were more formal, like our public lecture with forensic linguist Robert Leonard, and our guest lecture + Q&A with Adam Aleksic (aka @EtymologyNerd) back in March. That last one was quite the logistical feat: over 300 people showed up, 130 of them from outside NYU. We got so much interest within 4 hours of announcing the event that we were forced to pivot fast—changing venues, coordinating multiple livestreams, and ensuring a high-quality recording. It worked. The room was packed, and people stuck around to talk with Adam and amongst themselves for more than an hour after the event ended.

    We’ve also leaned into social and community-building events—social hours, study sessions, and, upcoming on April 22nd, an IPA spelling bee. These are playful, but not throwaway: they keep people coming back.

    Across all of these, we’ve maintained steady turnout (10–20 people per event, usually), and have been lucky to host guest speakers who’ve generously agreed to visit—many over Zoom, some in person—just because we asked. Cold emails, it turns out, go a long way. Many have responded with striking generosity and curiosity.

    The Work Behind the Scenes

    Running a linguistics club isn’t just event planning. The role’s orchestration demands have taught me as much as the events themselves. It’s been a lot, but more than worth it to see the community grow.

    We’ve gathered feedback both informally and through structured surveys to shape our events around what people actually want: depth without gatekeeping, playfulness with genuine exploration. The results have been overwhelmingly positive. People have told us they’re enjoying the comeback we’re making. What was recently a dormant club is now, again, a hub.

    I don’t know exactly what the League will look like in five years. But I do know this: the appetite is there. For conversation, for community, for the kind of language work that feels alive.

    And if you’re thinking about starting—or reviving—an academic group at your own university, here’s what I’d offer: start small, but pitch a big tent.
    • Mix types of events throughout the term to maintain balance. Social events are more important than some club heads think. Don’t underestimate how much people crave intellectual community, especially at big schools and city campuses.

    Theo Avedisian hosting NYU League of Linguistics trivia night, September 2024.

    • Make your extracurricular extracurricular—broach topics that undergrads (and linguists generally) don’t get much exposure to in the ordinary course of their studies. This tends to attract more interest than, say, a rehash of the first lecture of Linguistics 101.
    • You can pick niche topics—but frame them with an inviting, curiosity-first question. For example, instead of “Historical Phonology in Armenian,” try “Why Do Some Languages Keep Letters No One Pronounces?”
    • Talk to clubs at other schools to get ideas and learn best practices, especially if they have similar contexts—e.g., same school size, size of program, campus type, region. We’ve gotten great ideas from looking at other clubs’ Instagrams and consulting their presidents, such as Adam Aleksic, a.k.a. etymologynerd. An amazing centralized resource is a list of clubs and their Instagrams by Josue Estrada-Cordoba. You can find that here.
    • Learn names and get contact info. This really helps people feel known and welcomed.
    • Be generous with food—undergrads love a pizza night, and seem unable to resist snacks.
    • Document reflections after every event. I use a spreadsheet, you can also use a text document—whatever you prefer. Record expenditure, turnout (projected and actual), and all feedback, positive and negative alike. I also recommend writing down what went unexpectedly well or what fell flat—things you’ll forget six months later but which are so helpful when planning the next iteration.

    My spreadsheet for the Spring 2025 semester documenting the status of various tasks and the outcome of events, as well as notes on what worked and what didn’t.

    • Another use for spreadsheets in running a club: track your tasks by event and keep your team in the loop. My template is available here—feel free to copy it and adapt to your events. I also recommend adding a column for who’s responsible, if you have formal delegation of tasks.

    Sample event workflow for our Arrival movie night, where linguist and consultant Jessica Coon Zoomed in to speak with us.

    • Part of the importance of documentation: the more you can demonstrate to your college’s club life board that you’re making an impact on campus, the more likely they are to increase your budget when you apply for the next year.
    • Learn your school’s bureaucracy. How do you book rooms, and which are you permitted to use? Who are your points of contact in the administration? What’s your budget? What are you allowed to expense? How often do you have to meet? How does the audio/visual tech work? Can non-affiliates attend, and what’s the process for them accessing your facilities?
    • A well-timed cold email holds great power. Aim for the least busy points in a term if you’re reaching out to an academic. This tends to be the first month, and then a few weeks before finals, once midterms are graded and final projects are in the works but not yet submitted. Consult their school’s academic calendar to find out when these points fall.
    • Similarly, time events with your own school’s pace, avoiding when turnout is likely to be lowest (midterms, finals, before spring break). The major exception would be hosting a catered study session ahead of an exam period.
    • Be sure to advertise: post on Instagram (and promote the account among your members to keep them in the loop), put up conspicuous flyers, and text your friends about upcoming events. You can also ask the department head to circulate events via their email list, and ask professors to tell their classes about upcoming events if it connects to the course they’re teaching.

    NYU’s resources helped us with a coherent visual identity.

    • For design, two tips: 1) Canva Pro ($15/month) has been a godsend for quickly making attractive and attention-getting promotional materials. If it’s in the budget, it’s worth it. 2) Your university may have a design package with a precise guide to logos, colors, proportions, and fonts. Here’s NYU’s. Brown University’s is here, as another example. As the one handling event promotion, I’ve found it invaluable, as it gives something to start from rather than requiring I do everything from scratch.
    • Consider making a website like we did, as it’s a great place to centralize your resources, calendar, and follow-up content such as reflections and recordings. However, always ask if all participants are comfortable with both the recording and the posting—transparency is essential. If possible, make events accessible afterward—through recordings, transcripts, or even just slide decks. It lets people engage on their own time, which really matters at large or commuter-heavy schools, or when you have significant alum or non-affiliate interest. I’d recommend WordPress for a clean and accessible template; we upgraded to the personal plan ($36/year, plus a free domain name for the first year) to unlock features such as advanced analytics.

    Our homepage.
    The analytics for our website.
    A sample of a resource-heavy discussion group.
    Our folder with pre-event resources.

    There are also some things we’re considering:
    • Making a central onboarding document to build a sort of institutional memory. This would help future board members understand the workings of the club and broader university. I had a protracted learning curve because I didn’t know the answers to the types of questions I listed above in the advice section. I hope to avoid that for next year’s board members, as half of our leadership is graduating.
    • Structuring roles clearly. This should prevent anyone from taking on too much responsibility and burning out. It also helps with the awkwardness of more junior members having to delegate tasks to other board members. Defined roles also help newer members know where they can plug in and feel like their contributions matter.
    • Having a cleaner system for tracking our budget. We currently don’t have a spreadsheet or any centralized document. Also, this will help with onboarding the event coordinator and treasurer the following year, as they’ll have a sense of what an event costs to put on, and can budget accordingly.

    But the most important thing, I think, is to keep asking broad questions that people can relate to—help them connect language to life. Language belongs to everyone, after all, so this is eminently possible. As such, our second discussion group asked: What makes a language worth saving? What languages has your family lost, and why?—questions that sparked conversation across majors, backgrounds, and personal stakes. Many, for example, had grandparents who refused to teach their children their native languages, so no one in the room spoke their ancestral tongue, and many felt a sense of loss for it. Building personal connection to language is a great avenue for exploration, reflection, and discovery. Best of all, everyone is capable of it, no matter who they are or where they come from.

    And from there, if the ground is good, your community grows.