Jacqueline Cordes 鈥25 lives in a Japanese world, even though she鈥檚 never yet been to the Land of the Rising Sun. When she visits there someday, she hopes that when she speaks the language, locals will answer back in Japanese. In the meantime, Cordes, a music major, lives on the Japanese language hall at 色中色鈥檚 Oldenborg Center, where she is immersed in a culture and language she鈥檚 loved since junior high school.
In another wing of maze-like Oldenborg, sociology major Nate Rubin 鈥26 lives on a Spanish language hall. 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 really like Spanish that much in high school,鈥 he admits. When he took a class during his first year at Pomona to meet the language requirement, though, the professor required the students during the semester to participate at least ten times in the Oldenborg language tables held weekdays at lunch. 鈥淎fter going once or twice, I decided to go every single day. It鈥檚 really fun,鈥 he says. By the end of his first year he had decided to move into Oldenborg for his sophomore year, and he鈥檚 found 鈥渁 really warm community.鈥
Early in the pandemic, Xuehuai He 鈥25, an international student from China double-majoring in linguistics and mathematics, was stuck for two long days in the airport in Helsinki, Finland. Bored, they began to notice the signs in Finnish, a Uralic language most akin to Estonian and Hungarian. 鈥淚 had nothing to do, so I might as well try to figure out what鈥檚 happening in this language,鈥 He recounts. 鈥淎nd then I got serious and kept learning it,鈥 becoming fluent enough to spend a week in 2022 in the country speaking only Finnish. This semester He, who lives in a Friendship Suite with three other students and is a part of the German language community, introduced a Finnish language table at Oldenborg.
Building community through language
For many students, language tables at Oldenborg help increase fluency in a target language. Depending on the day, conversation opportunities include Arabic, Swahili, Persian, Haitian-Creole, Turkish and Greek, to name a few. It鈥檚 a supportive environment, and beginners are welcome. Rubin enjoys getting to know faculty and staff who frequently join students. 鈥淚t鈥檚 nice to have a community and people to check in on me,鈥 he says, and it鈥檚 鈥渁lso just really cool forming relationships in Spanish.鈥
For students who want to go deeper in language acquisition, Oldenborg includes language immersion halls in Chinese, Russian, French, Spanish, Japanese and German. A native-speaker language resident lives in each hall and organizes culturally related activities for the students, such as cooking authentic regional foods. Another advantage of living in Oldenborg is very practical, says He: 鈥淭he dining hall is literally downstairs. It takes me one and a half minutes to get there.鈥
Cordes moved into Oldenborg鈥檚 Japanese language hall as a sophomore鈥攖he first year she was eligible鈥攁nd plans to stay until she graduates next year. 鈥淚 really love my hall,鈥 she says. 鈥淚f you see someone in the hall, usually we鈥檙e speaking Japanese.鈥
A career advantage
Carolina De la Rosa Bustamante is the staff director of Oldenborg. 鈥淟earning languages helps us understand other worldviews, a skill that is more crucial now than ever,鈥 she says. 鈥淲hether it's going into the corporate world, politics, research, or academia, there is no downside to knowing more than one language.鈥
It's too soon to tell if the language skills these Oldenborg residents are mastering will turn into a primary career. He might spend some time before graduate school possibly teaching English as a foreign language. Cordes is minoring in Japanese and is currently translating a Japanese novel into English. 鈥淚t鈥檚 really, really interesting,鈥 she鈥檚 finding. 鈥淚t鈥檚 like an art form.鈥
Rubin, who is pursuing a pre-med track, is now conversationally fluent in Spanish thanks to his Oldenborg experience. He believes it will be helpful in his future medical career, possibly as a pediatrician. 鈥淚t鈥檚 so important, especially in Southern California, to speak Spanish,鈥 he says. And 鈥渋t鈥檚 so rewarding to be able to talk to more people and connect.鈥
A supportive environment
Regardless of their ultimate career directions, living in Oldenborg has helped the students to find a community on campus. 鈥淚n the age of social media and AI, community is more important than ever,鈥 notes Eileen J. Cheng, professor of Chinese and faculty director of Oldenborg. 鈥淭he spirit of Oldenborg is to bring together, in community, language learners and those curious about the world.鈥
鈥淚 have a lot of friends in my hall,鈥 says Rubin. 鈥淲e hang out in the lounge a lot on Friday nights, we do board games or watch tv. It鈥檚 a very close community.鈥
He鈥檚 Friendship Suite includes students who speak Chinese, German and Spanish. Three of the four have already signed up for a Friendship Suite again next year. He spends time with fellow German hall colleagues as well as with suitemates. 鈥淲e have events, German gatherings in the lounge. We have movie nights sometimes,鈥 and, He adds, 鈥渢he German language resident is awesome.鈥
Cordes says that the Oldenborg community is very supportive of language learners. 鈥淕iven that we鈥檙e speaking in a language that鈥檚 not our primary language, there are going to be miscommunications, but that鈥檚 actually part of the fun,鈥 she says. 鈥淚f you鈥檙e passionate about a language and you鈥檙e wanting that immersive experience, absolutely move in. There will be a community of people who support you every step of the way.鈥