SYLLABUS: LANGUAGE,
CULTURE, AND S OCIETY
Course Description: An introduction to the world of language and
linguistics. Students explore the great diversity of world languages and
develop an understanding of the genetic and geographical ties among them. They
learn to appreciate language as an object of scientific study and to apply
their new knowledge to everyday social interactions in their own lives and
communities. They examine the relationship of linguistic variation to social
and cultural identity. Topics include multilingualism, language learning and
preservation, spelling reform, and language policy.
3 Units, 3 class hours.
Prerequisite
Course text : Crystal, David. 2010. The Cambridge
Encyclopedia of Language. Third edition. Cambridge University Press. ISBN:
978-0-521-73650-3 A college-level English dictionary.
Supplementary texts : DeFrancis. John. 1989. Visible Speech.
ISBN: 978-0-82-481-207-2. Holmes, Janet. 2008. An Introduction to
Sociolinguistics. Third edition.
ISBN: 978-1-4058-2131-5 Grosjean, François. 1982. Life with
Two Languages. ISBN: 0-674-53092-6 Ramsey, S. Robert. 1987. The Languages of
China. ISBN: 0-691-01468-X Sapir, Edward. 1921. Language. Harcourt, Brace and
World. Trudgill, Peter. 2001. Sociolinguistics: An introduction to language and
society. Fourth edition.
Grading System:
Prelim, 30 %,Midterm exam: 30 %.
Final exam: 40%. Weekly quizzes (online), and written and oral homework
assignments: 35%.
What you will need:
Each student must own his/her own copy of the course textbook, The Cambridge Encyclopedia of Language. You will be told when to bring this to class. On an open-book quiz, you may use only your own copy of this book, not somebody else’s.
You will need a bound notebook or
composition book to use for your journal and log. You will be learning to keep
your eyes and ears open for language-related data, and the log is the place
where you will enter your notes and keep them all together.
You will also need a folder with
pockets to keep any handouts (like this one). Second copies of handouts cannot
be provided.
You should be equipped with
several pens and pencils, including a pen or marker of a special color to
highlight new vocabulary that you will learn, both in your log and in your
class notes.
What is expected of you:
ATTENDANCE: Class attendance is
extremely important. According to College policy, you may miss no more than 10%
of class meetings, for any reason, including illness. In our class, that means
no more than three absences. This policy will be adhered to very strictly. A
lateness counts as one-half absence. A perfect attendance record will certainly
enhance your control of the course material and, under certain circumstances,
may even bolster your final grade.
ASSIGNMENTS: You will have an
assignment for every class. It is very important not to fall behind in the
assignments. There will be frequent short online quizzes on assigned readings
to make sure you have understood the important points. From time to time, you
will also be called upon to report to the class on data you have gathered, and
you must be ready to give your report on the assigned day. On written
assignments, you may be allowed a rewrite, but only if the assignment is turned
in on time. Full credit will be granted only for assignments turned in on time.
NOTETAKING: Note taking is a
basic and essential college skill. The quality of your notes will correlate
directly with the quality of the grades you receive. At the beginning of every
class, a list of vocabulary and terminology will be put on the board. Make sure
that you are clear on the meaning of every item on this list before we move on
to the next unit in our syllabus.
GRADES: In accordance with College policy, a minimum average
of 70% is required for a satisfactory course grade.
CONSULTATION: Please take
advantage of my office hours (listed above) to speak to me privately about any
difficulties or issues you may have with this course. If those hours are not
convenient for you, please ask me for a special appointment, and I will try to
accommodate you.. Accordingly, academic dishonesty is prohibited in the
College.
LANGUAGE, CULTURE AND SOCIETY Schedule of Topics and Readings
This schedule is tentative and may be modified at any time
during the semester.
Week Topics Chapters to read:
1.The social functions
of language.
Language and
geographical, ethnic, national identity.
Students will be able to explain how language, whose primary
function is to serve as an instrument of communication, serves secondarily to
help establish aspects of the social identity of its speakers. They will be
able to list aspects of social identity that correlate with linguistic
identity—national, ethnic, class, geographical, sexual, educational—and give
specific examples of how these aspects of social identity are supported or
reinforced by language use.
Assignment: Listening and reporting.
2 Dialects, sociolects, registers.
Students will be able to explain the status of geographical
variations in a language—dialects, as well as the social equivalent of such variation.
They will gather data from their own speech and that of their families and
peers, of how individual speakers switch among varieties, and report on these
examples to the class.
Assignment: Report on
bi-dialectalism.
3 Multilingualism.
Students will be able to give specific examples of how a
large portion of the world’s population live and function with more than one
language in their everyday lives.
Assignment: Report on observation of a bilingual.
4 Language policy and
planning.
Students will be able to list
some of the societal issues that arise when more than one language is widely
spoken in a country. They will learn about the role of governments in
establishing language policies— such as bilingual education and language
immersion—and in protecting endangered languages.
5. Prescriptivism and the equality of languages.
Students will be able to explain
the difference between approaching human linguistic behavior as an object of
scientific study (linguistics), and approaching it with the view that some ways
of speaking are “good” and some are “bad” and attempting to impose a “better”
variety on a speech community (prescriptivism). They will be able to articulate
the fact that all languages develop to serve the needs of their speakers, who
are members of particular societies and practitioners of particular cultures,
and that languages can therefore not be compared in terms of their inherent
superiority or inferiority.
[OPTIONAL TOPIC: Pidgins and creoles.
Students will be able to define and give specific examples
of: a) standard languages, b) pidgins, c) creoles. They will be able to
describe how a creole develops from a pidgin and list specific criteria needed
for a language variety to be considered standard. They will give examples
showing that pidgins and creoles may fill a need in situations where no
standard language is available.]
6.Written and spoken
language.
Students will be able to state what the characteristic
structural differences between written language and spoken language are. They
will learn that, from the standpoint of linguistic science, spoken language is
primary and written language derivative.
Students survey various writing systems used across the
world and study the origins and historical development of the alphabet. They will
be able to identify several major world writing systems on sight.
7 Spelling and
spelling reform.
Students will consider the relation between speech and
spelling and the origins of spelling conventions. They will be able to describe
the advantages of a good spelling system as well as the consequences of an
inadequate one (e.g. modern English) and evaluate proposals for reform, with
their potential advantages and disadvantages.
8. Language change and reconstruction.
Midterm Exam.
Students will examine evidence of
language change by comparing samples of languages at different stages in their
histories, such as texts in Latin compared to Spanish, or Old English, Middle
English, and Modern English. They will learn that the reason languages diverge
from a common ancestor is the constantly ongoing process of linguistic change.
They will be able to list some of the reasons for language change. They learn
that linguists can reconstruct the ancestors of related, attested languages,
even though no records of the ancestor language may survive.
Assignment: Documenting language change.
9. The languages of
the world
Students will be able to answer such questions as: How many
languages are there in the world? How many speakers do these languages have?
Where are they spoken?
10. Language
families.
Students learn how linguists have determined that certain
groups of languages are all descended from a common ancestor. They will be able
to name the major families and the genetic affiliations of the world’s major
languages.
[OPTIONAL TOPIC:
Theories of the origin of language.
Having learned something about the great number and
diversity of languages, students proceed to consider questions like: How did
this multiplicity originate? How did language itself originate?]
11.First-language
learning
Students survey some of the ongoing research on the process
of children’s learning of their first languages.
[OPTIONAL TOPIC: Foreign language learning and teaching.
Students learn some of the basics of the process of learning
and teaching a foreign language. They will compare, in writing, this process to
the process of learning one’s first language.]
12. Language as an
object of scientific study.
Students learn of the existence of the science of
linguistics. They will be able to list some of the goals and methods of this
science. They will demonstrate the ability to differentiate between notions and
statements representing a layman’s view of language and others that approach
language as an object of scientific study.
13. Language and other
communication systems:
In light of what they have learned so far about the
structure and function of human language, students gain a basic understanding
of some important features of animal communication systems and computer
“languages”. They will list, in writing, specific features that make these
systems qualitatively the same as or different from human language.
[OPTIONAL TOPIC: Sign language.
Students will be able to describe some salient features of
the sign language of the deaf and they will be asked to evaluate to what extent
sign language is qualitatively the same as or different from ordinary
language.]
Students consider the role of language and the challenge
posed by the great diversity of languages in an increasingly globalized world
society. They will be able to list and describe some attempts to address this
situation with the creation of international artificial languages and the
possible use of existing languages as international languages.
14 Review and special
topics as per student interest. articles
15.Final exam
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