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LINGUISTICS 101: Introduction to Language             Winter 2002

Research project topics

You are required to do two of the following projects. (If you have an idea for something you'd really like to do that's not on this list, come and talk to me about it). These will be due Monday, February 9, and Monday, March 1. Don't even think about trying to turn one in late. Each project is worth 20% of your grade. This means that missing one project will result in your final grade for the course being lowered by at least one letter grade. Each project should be from a different section (A,B,C,D); don't do two projects from the same section. A. 1) If you are from North, Central, or South America, find out the language spoken by the original Native inhabitants of the area where your hometown is. Write a short (1,000-1,500 word) report on this language, including information about what family it belongs to and what other languages it is related to, how many (if any) people still speak it, and where, or if no one still speaks it, when it died out. 2) Write a short (1,000-1,500 word) report on a minority language within the U.S or your native country. This can be a Native language such as Nez Perce or Navajo, a remnant of early European settlement such as Louisiana French, an older immigrant community such as Yiddish or Cantonese, or a recent immigrant community such as Hmong or Assyrian, as long as some people still speak or recently still spoke it on a day-to-day basis. Concentrate on the history of the community--how did it come to be where it is today--and the social and political situation of the language relative to English (or the majority language of your country). Who still speaks the language? What pressures affect people's choice about what language to use when? B. 3) Record a short conversation between two native speakers. (I assume you will be looking at English, but if you can handle another language and find speakers that's fine). Transcribe 1-2 minutes of conversation (i.e. write down exactly what each speaker says. This is harder and will take a lot longer than you think). Now list each utterance in your transcript, and identify its grammatical form. Is it a complete sentence? Just one word? (What kind? Noun, verb, odd conversational noise?) A phrase? BE SURE AND GET PERMISSION FOR THIS--NEVER, EVER, RECORD ANYONE WITHOUT THEIR WRITTEN PERMISSION. A SAMPLE CONSENT FORM IS ATTACHED TO THIS HANDOUT. DON'T SUBMIT THIS PROJECT UNLESS YOU HAVE A SIGNED CONSENT FORM READY TO SHOW US IF WE ASK FOR IT. C. 4) Find someone who is a native speaker of a language which you don't know at all. Collect a list of 50-75 words in the language. Do this by a) asking for the translation of an English word, b) trying to pronounce it correctly (keep trying at least until your informant stops laughing at your attempts), and then c) writing it down. Now make a list of all the different sounds in your data. Give a description of how each sound is pronounced, that is, what you need to do with your tongue, lips, etc., to articulate the sound correctly. Many of the sounds will probably be pretty similar to sounds of your own language, but you will inevitably encounter some sounds which are unfamiliar to you, which you will have trouble pronouncing, and will have no clear idea how to write. Work with your informant to try and figure out how these sounds are made. Also make a list of any combinations of sounds which seem strange to you. For example, in Ancient Greek (which you won't be doing for your project), you would find words like tmesis; all the sounds in the word are familiar to an English speaker, but the combination of t and m at the beginning of a word is not. 5) If your native language is not English, but you are using English everyday, keep a week'sjournal of problems in expression you encounter, frustrating error patterns & pronunciation problems that won't go away, etc. Try to explain how these result from differences between your native language and English. 7) If you are currently studying a foreign language (one foreign to you, that is), keep a two-week journal of things you find particularly difficult about the language. Sort them out into problems of pronunciation, problems of morphology (different forms of words), problems of syntax (how words are put together), and problems of meaning (words or sentences whose meaning you can't quite get, or things you can easily say in your native language that you can't figure out how to say in the new one). Try to explain how these result from differences between the two languages. C. For one of these topics, do a Web and/or periodicals search for articles on the topic. Read them. Write a one-paragraph description of each. 8) Find articles on particular dying languages. I'm not looking for general articles about problems of language death, or how many languages around the world are dying, but articles particularly about one language, or a few languages in a particular area. (Though general articles might be good places to start. They're not hard to find, and when they mention particular examples, it's probably because somebody else has written about that particular language; so if one of these articles mentions, say, Udi, then there are probably articles somewhere of the kind you need about Udi). What you want are articles like Death of Red Cloud, Last Speaker of Menomini or Tribe Fights To Save Their Ancestral Language. Articles which are primarily about some group's adaptation to the modern world, but which tell something specific about how the language is dying out, are OK too. Or you may research a language which is dying only in one particular community (e.g. French in Louisiana). Find at least ten articles about at least five different languages. (That is, a TOTAL of 10 articles, covering at least 5 different languages--NOT 50 articles). 9) Find articles on inter-community or international arguments or conflicts that concern language or language differences, or that are sometimes expressed in terms of language issues. Find at least ten articles about at least three different situations. (That is, a TOTAL of 10 articles, dealing with at least 3 different situations-- NOT 30 articles). 10) Find articles on officially bi- or multi-lingual nations (e.g. Canada, Belgium, Switzerland, South Africa, Tanzania, Paraguay, India, etc.) Find at least ten articles about at least five different countries. (That is, a TOTAL of 10 articles, dealing with at least 5 different countries--NOT 50 articles). Sample consent form: I am conducting a research project for a linguistics class. This project involves recording a short conversation. Part of the conversation will be written down and grammatically analyzed; the transcript and analysis will be turned in for grading. The participants in the conversation will not be identified (except for general information about age, gender, and student status) in the written report. If you are willing to help me with this project and have your conversation recorded, please indicate your consent by signing below. I hereby indicate my consent to participate in a linguistic research project carried out by [your name]. I understand that this will involve recording a conversation in which I am a participant. I am willing to be recorded and to have my conversation used for analysis in this project. (Signed) ________________________________________