Utilizing an ecological perspective of heritage language learner (HLL) identity (Hornberger &
Wang, 2008), this study investigates how an underexamined group within HLL studies—language
learners with diverse ties to the Arabic language—perceive the label of HLL and how they position
themselves and their classmates relative to this label during interviews and in an advanced Arabic
language classroom. I draw on interview, observational, and videotaped classroom interaction data
collected as part of a larger ethnographic study of this classroom community and show how a priori
educational labels assigned to these students did not always match with their self-concepts and
ignored the nuances of their relationship to the umbrella term “Arabic.” These labels also affected
students’ classroom roles, self-esteem, and participation in the classroom. I examine the
implications of educational classifications and assigned identities that are constructed by
stakeholders such as researchers, teachers, or administrators, rather than negotiated by the
language learners themselves, and critique Arabic HLL as an identity and educational
classification. Finally, I offer some suggestions for how to engage language learners (HLLs if they
choose to identify themselves as such) in critical discussions about their relationship with the
language of study.