Aims
Aims
This course aims to support and foster advanced independent innovative research in all aspects of language variation and change (including forensic phonetics), and to provide you with professional-level research and presentation skills. The particular focus of research will vary from year to year.
By the end of this module, you will be able to:
- Identify and frame a research question in the context of relevant literature
- Analyse data within a theoretically defensible framework
- Present data as evidence in support of a theoretical argument
- Manage workload on an independent research project
Note that a Research Extension module can be taken alongside this module, for students who wish to write a dissertation.
This module will be capped at 35.
Prerequisites
Prerequisites
Students must have successfully completed:
- L10I Intermediate language variation and change (LAN00010I)
Programme
Programme
Contact hours
One hour per week in Spring and Summer Terms, alternating between plenary lectures and seminars.
Teaching programme
The programme is arranged around topics in Language Variation and Change which are currently the subject of intense research. The format is a plenary lecture followed by a seminar in the following week during which students do oral presentations based on readings they have covered. The topics may vary from year to year, but will typically be selected from the following:
- Motivations of variation and change
- External motivation for variation and change: contact
- Current issues in modelling the speech community
- High-contact speech communities: youth language in multiethnic urban centres
- Sociolinguistic typology
- Sociolinguistic perception
- Historical sociolinguistics
Teaching materials
Relevant readings and course materials will be made available to students via the VLE.
Assessment and feedback
Assessment and feedback
Feedback on formative work
- Student presentations in the seminars serve as formative work.
Oral feedback will be provided during the seminars.
Summative assessment and feedback
- A 4000-word essaydue in Week 5 of the summer term
- Weight: 100%
- Written feedback available at the end of the summer term.
Skills
Transferable skills developed in this module
All modules provide an opportunity to work on general oral/written communication skills (in class and in assessments) and general self management (organising your studies), alongside the specific skills in language or linguistics that the module teaches.
In addition, this module will allow you to particularly develop skills in:
- the application of data analysis skills: you will read primary sources of literature, and critically evaluate them to formulate your own opinions, both orally and in writing, in collaboration with and gaining feedback from others; you will find different interpretations of data, and come to appreciate the contingent nature of much knowledge: an important part of decision-making.
- self-management: this module is delivered through seminars, and you are expected to plan much of your own work in order to meet deadlines.
Follow this link to hear how past students use transferable skills from their degree in their current jobs.