Black Language; African Languages, Literatures, and Cultures; Race, Language, Writing, and Literacies; Language Policies and Language Rights; Applied Linguistics; Rhetoric and Composition

Dr. Shenika Hankerson is an Assistant Professor of Applied Linguistics and Language Education in the Department of Teaching and Learning, Policy and Leadership at the 91做厙 in College Park. Her research explores the relationship between Black Language speakers linguistic identities and their writing, examining how this knowledge can inform and improve college composition practices and policies. In her research, she asks questions such as: How do Black Language speakers linguistic identities shape their written discourse practices? How can critical, Afrocentric, and anti-racist college composition practices and policies affirm Black Language speakers linguistic identities, and in what ways do these practices and policies promote their writing skills and overall well-being? She also has research expertise in African languages, literatures, and cultures. Her published scholarship can be found in peer-reviewed journals such as the Journal of Second Language Writing and Written Communication and edited collections published by Routledge, Oxford University Press, and Utah State University Press.

Dr. Hankerson has secured over $1.1 million in research grant funding as Principal Investigator through a highly competitive Institute of Education Sciences (IES) award and additional grants.

Dr. Hankerson is a member of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Inc.

Select Publications

Hankerson, S., & Obiri-Yeboah, M. A. (2025). What do Ghanaian teachers think about the language-in-education policy in Ghana? Exploring teachers attitudes, practices, and perceptions. International Multilingual Research Journal, 1-17.  

Hankerson, S., Martin, K., Charity Hudley, A., & Mallinson, C. (2024). Critical metalinguistic engagement of Black language users in writing instruction. In R. Jones and C. Proctor (Eds.), Pursuing Language and Metalinguistic Awareness in K-12 Classrooms: A Framework for Critical Engagement (pp. 67-82). Routledge.

Hankerson, S., & Obiri-Yeboah, M. A. (2024). Language, ideologies, discrimination, and Afrocentric-focused, critical language awareness writing curricula for African American Language and Akan Language speakers. In C. Shei & J. Schnell (Eds.), The Routledge Handbook of Language and Mind Engineering (pp. 404-417). Routledge.  

Charity Hudley, A., Mallinson, C., Clemons, A., Randolph, L., Bucholtz, M., Calhoun, K., Hankerson, S., Peltier, J., Thomas, J., & Seidel, K. (2024). Solidarity and collectivity in decolonizing linguistics: A Black diasporic perspective. In A. Charity Hudley, C. Mallinson, and M. Bucholtz (Eds.), Decolonizing Linguistics (pp. 323-360). Oxford University Press. DOI: Open Access Copy: 

Hankerson, S. (2023). The world has to stop discriminating against African American language (AAL): Exploring the language ideologies of AAL-speaking students in college writing. Written Communication, 40(2), 587619.    

Hankerson, S., & Williams, O. (2023). Mentoring underrepresented racially minoritized undergraduate students in an education research apprenticeship program: strategies for success. International Journal of Mentoring and Coaching in Education, 12(2), 162-176.  

Hankerson, S. (2022). Why cant writing courses be taught like this fo real: Leveraging critical language awareness to promote African American Language speakers writing skills. Journal of Second Language Writing58, 100919. 

Hankerson, S. (2020). I love my African American language. And yours.: Toward a raciolinguistic vision in writing studies. In N. Elliot & A. Horning (Eds.), Talking back: Senior scholars deliberate the past, present, and future of writing studies (pp. 321-325). Utah State University Press.  

Hankerson, S. (2017). Black Voices Matter. Language Arts Journal of Michigan, 32(2), 34-39.  

Select Digital Presentations of Publications

Mentoring underrepresented racially minoritized undergraduates in an education research apprenticeship program: Strategies for success. AERA i-Presentation Gallery. (2023). 

Select Media Contributions:

"Its Not an Error, Its a Language." TERP Magazine. (2021). Online:

Select Grants & Projects:

Principal Investigator

2024-2025: 91做厙 Graduate School, Faculty-Student Research Award: Teachers' Attitudes, Practices, and Perceptions Toward the Language-in-Education Policy in Ghana. 

2019-2022: US Department of Education Institute of Education Sciences: Project RISE (Research Institute for Scholars in Education)

Research Collaborator

2022-2024: National Science Foundation: Collaborative Research: Linguistic Production, Perception, and Identity in the Career Mobility of Black Faculty in Linguistics and the Language Sciences. Christine Mallinson, UMBC (Principal Investigator) & Anne H. Charity Hudley, Stanford University (Co-Principal Investigator).