Augusta University Professor Honored by French Consulate in Atlanta
Thursday, April 13th, 2023
French is spoken on every continent in the world and is the official language in 29 countries, such as France, Belgium, Canada, Luxembourg, Switzerland, Congo, Mali and Senegal, according to the United Nations.
Currently, there are more than 320 million French speakers worldwide, and that number is expected to reach 700 million, mostly in Africa, by 2050.
With French thriving around the world, it is increasingly becoming a language used by cyber attackers. Fortunately, the world has a new ally in the fight against these cyber threats in E. Nicole Meyer, PhD.
Late last year, Meyer, a professor of French at Augusta University, learned she was a 2022 recipient of Label FrancEducation accreditation and was awarded the prestigious Empowering French and Francophone Studies grant by the French Embassy of the United States.
“What I proposed was basically to integrate cyber science, information technology, cybersecurity and military security into the French program from French 1001, all the way through the four-semester program because, the fact is, French is the most useful world language outside of English for those fields.”
E. Nicole Meyer, PhD, a professor of French at Augusta University
With this $6,700 grant, Meyer will collaborate with faculty from the School of Computer and Cyber Sciences and the Master of Arts in Intelligence and Security Studies program at Augusta University to increase French enrollment through the infusion of cyber-related French materials and activities into its four-semester language sequence.
Meyer, who was appointed a chevalier, or knight, in the Ordre des Palmes Académiques by the Republic of France in 2021, also plans to design an upper-level cyber and French course that will be offered to students wanting to use French to fight cyber terrorism.
“The location of the Georgia Cyber Center here in Augusta will appeal to students’ desire to use French to combat cyber terrorism,” Meyer said. “This grant will permit me valuable time for training with cyber-related faculty, to invite compelling speakers and to access books and materials to further my goals. I believe this program will put Augusta University on the map and make us a role model for many other universities because this is the only French, cyber-related program like this in the United States.”
The French Embassy in the United States and the French-American Cultural Exchange (FACE) Foundation have joined forces to support innovation in French and Francophone Studies as part of their initiative to promote French in higher education.
On Thursday, Meyer will be recognized and honored as a recipient of the 2022 FACE grant at the Residence of the French Consulate in Atlanta.
According to the French Embassy and the FACE Foundation, Meyer’s proposal exemplified “how dynamic, resilient and useful learning French is today.”
“It is very prestigious to receive this grant, and I am so incredibly pleased with the support provided by my chair, Dr. Seretha Williams, as well as my dean, Dr. Kim Davies, and the Summerville Research office. This commitment was pivotal to receiving the grant,” Meyer said. “Pamplin College’s faculty, as well as many cyber faculty, shared syllabi to help me start my research into integrating useful knowledge into our French program. I am truly honored to receive this grant.”
Williams, chair of English and World Languages at Augusta University, said Meyer is committed to embracing interdisciplinary programs across the campus.
“Dr. Meyer is a champion of interdisciplinarity, and her work across disciplines, departments and schools models the type of collaboration the university needs,” Williams said.
Davies, dean of Pamplin College of Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences, said she admires Meyer’s drive to explore new programs that integrate French into the curriculum.
“Dr. Meyer continues to impress, and this time she has used her skills to bring faculty together for the unique but important French cyber program,” Davies said. “I look forward to learning from those she brings to campus.”