Sunday, December 29, 2013

 


Take this dialect quiz!
"How Y'all, Youse, and You Guys Talk"
Based on research by Bert Vaux and Scott Golder and published in the New York Times on December 21, 2013

Sunday, December 1, 2013

Guest Speaker on Ojibwe

On November 20th, Dr. Meg Noodin, UWM professor of Ojibwe, came to talk to us about the Ojibwe language and people. One of the most fascinating things she talked about was how verb-centric the language is (she said about 80% of the language is verbs) and when you think about a language with so much focus on verbs, you think about how the emphasis on action, movement, motion affects how people perceive the world, as opposed to a language with a lot of emphasis on nouns, or things. I also was interested to learn that for the Ojibwe, the Great Lakes are conceptualized as more of a sea and that they have a different word for a smaller inland type of lake. We also learned that the name Chicago comes from an Ojibwe word for "skunk," and Wauwatosa was originally the Ojibwe "Waawaatese" meaning "firefly," Mequon was "Miigwan" meaning "feather," and Kenosha was "Genozhe" meaning "pike fish."

Sunday, June 30, 2013

Final Exam Essay Example



Thank you to Marina for allowing me to share her final exam essay on this blog.  The final exam essay prompt in Linguistics is very open-ended, essentially what have you learned in this class.   The first time I assigned such a broad question I was nervous about what kind of response I would get, but students have impressed me with their insights. 

Marina J.
Linguistics
Ms. Loosen
1 June 2013
In Linguistics
            It is rare in high school walk away from a class knowing what you have learned will stick with you and be applicable in the real world.  The knowledge I gained in linguistics extended beyond the classroom.  With the school year drawing to a close, I plan to seek other means of studying parts of linguistics, but just in this year I learned about the history of the English language, the acquisition of language, how body language is used, and sociolinguistics.  I also learned that I'm a bit of a descriptivist.  This class is proof that students can learn a lot from stepping back and analyzing what makes someone alive; their ability to understand and use language.     
            In the average English class, a student does not find the history of the language.  Linguists map out English as a branch of the Germanic language.  Developed in Britain, Germanic tribes brought with them what is now considered to be Old English.  Circa the 13th century, Britain was conquered by the Normans who spoke a sort of French.  This added many French words into the English language, such as bouquet and clique. Then, circa the 15th-16th century, began what is known as the Great Vowel Shift.  We saw that the long vowels shifted upwards.  Listening around, we know that language does not change much overnight but the English language is expanding and evolving constantly.  Here we are with what is called Late Modern English.  As young, creative thinkers, we were excited to learn, or more so, realize, that we have all the power to change the language we speak.  Seeing slang, throughout history, transitioning into common language was interesting because students are so often told that their language is "wrong".  I have learned that kids these days are not destroying the language.  It is simply evolving.  Linguistics taught me to appreciate English in its complexity and insanity.  
            This year I was fascinated by how a person acquires language.  A child listening to and learning language while still in the womb is almost frightening but it is truly amazing how children pick up on grammar and universal grammar.  A person's knowledge of language grows as fast as they do.  I could see this with Ben.  The first time in class, he spoke in broken sentences and mixed up letters.  Then in his second visit, I could hear him speaking with more confidence and responding in comprehensible sentences.  I learned and have seen outside of the class that young kids do either, over apply grammar rules, or don't use them at all.  The Wug test showed this.  I will likely never forget what a Wug looks like.  I now know the basics of language that maybe teachers should have been teaching to elementary school student.  Knowing a morpheme is a meaningful unit of a word that cannot be further divided, may have helped me on spelling tests.  Knowing that a phoneme is a distinct unit of sound may have helped as well.  Linguistics has made me wish I was bilingual, in the native-speaker sense but MSL has been a wonderful environment for building the bridges of language.  At this age, my classmates and I have little time to waste if we really wish to fully understand the mental structure of our foreign languages.
            Sociolinguistics was my favorite part of the year because the material was easiest to observe outside of the class.  I had realized it before, that I code-switch but I had not known before what it was called.  I have begun paying more attention to my dialect shifts.  However, I do not agree with what we learned on genderlects.  In my own environment, women and men speak far too familiar for them to claim different dialects.  Each person, rather, has their own way of communicating with their own dialect.  Learning to recognize the differences in the body language of men vs. women, was interesting though.  I agree, women are more personal in a conversation and men pose to face the room.  Walking with power makes a person appear to have authority and speaking sharply and confidently gives a person power as well.  I may take a class in college that further explores body language or sociolinguistics as a broader subject.  I have taken the time to read articles by Noam Chomsky and I wish I had more time in the day to study what he proposes.          
            A great class offers students more than lists of  facts, notes, and names.  Linguistics offers new perspectives on the way people work together in a society and gives a person an understanding of how and why people think differently from one another.  One of my favorite new words that I can remember off the top of my head is "aware".  In Japanese, "aware" is the word used for the bittersweet decline of something beautiful experienced in a brief moment.  I experienced a moment to use "aware" this week when I picked the last branch of lilacs from my yard and watched them wilt on my nightstand.  I am driven to learn new words and ways to express thoughts and feelings.  I have learned to appreciate all languages and recognize that no language is, or ever was, primitive.  I am increasingly aware of my language in all of its forms and the languages used around me by classmates compared to friends compared to people in other communities.  Linguistics opened up a new kind of learning, one which takes place in everyday life.  I have learned to love a high school class.    

           

Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Our Youngest Guest Speaker Returns!

My son came in five months after his first appearance in Linguistics class so that we could discuss his growth during his "language explosion" period.  Ben was told that he would be coming in to teach the students about baseball.













Friday, May 10, 2013

Research Project Presentation Rubric


Linguistics Research Presentation Rubric
(5 minute presentation, 25 points)
 
5 pts. for Delivery (eye contact, organization, professional appearance, support for partner)
 
15 pts. for Content (background info, hypothesis, experiment, results, analysis)
 
5 pts. for Visual (hand-out, poster, powerpoint/prezi, graph, chart)
 

 

Friday, May 3, 2013

Research Project Requirements

Linguistics Research Project
Spring 2013
  • You may work with one partner.
  • Remember that linguists are scientists.  You will use the scientific method for your project.
The steps of the scientific method are to:
1.    Ask a Question
2.    Do Background Research
3.    Construct a Hypothesis
4.    Test Your Hypothesis by Doing an Experiment
5.    Analyze Your Data and Draw a Conclusion
6.    Communicate Your Results
Here’s how we’ll do that:
1.  Ask a Question   Picking your topic is a very important part of the process.  Start by asking a question that you have related to language.  Think about what you’ve written about in your Daily Language Observations as a starting point.  Select a question/ topic that is narrow enough so that you can say something significant about what you learn.  For example, “Sociolinguistics” is not an appropriate topic; it is a vast field about which hundreds of books have been written.  “How Often Spontaneous Conversations Happen in Elevators at West Allis Memorial Hospital on May 8, 2013” is a more manageable topic.
2. Do Background Research Look up your topic online and in books.  Have other linguists written about your topic?  Take notes on what you find, keeping careful track of your sources.
3.    Construct a Hypothesis What do YOU expect to find as the answer to your initial question?
4.    Test Your Hypothesis by Doing an Experiment  How will you test your hypothesis?  Through observation?  Through a survey?  By eliciting data similar to how William Labov did as he studied the relationship between social class and r-lessness in the three stores in New York City?
5.    Analyze Your Data and Draw a Conclusion  What have you learned?  What does your data show? 
6.    Communicate Your Results  What does your study teach us as linguists and as people?  What are the more far-reaching implications of your study?  
 
How to Present Your Research:
·       Write a 4-6 page essay in MLA format with in-text citations and a Works Cited page.   It would be appropriate to use headings to break up your essay to show the different parts of your study.

·       Plan a five minute presentation to the class with the assistance of a visual aide (ex:  poster, graph, hand-out, Power Point, Prezi).

 
 

Thursday, April 25, 2013

Etymology Assignment

Every word has a history.  Etymology is the study of the origin of words and how the means of words have changed over time.

Using a dictionary and the internet, research the ETYMOLOGY of the following words:
      1. Banana
      2. Tundra
      3. Bog
      4. Canyon
      5. Villain
      6. Sauna
      7. Buffalo
      8. Worm
      9. Sinister
     10. Yacht
Next research the etymology of five words you enjoy and are curious to learn more about.

 

 

Sunday, April 21, 2013

TED-Ed

I went to a conference on creativity and technology at the Milwaukee Art Museum yesterday where Logan Smalley, the director of TED-Ed, spoke.  TED-Ed provides hundreds of lessons created by teachers, animated by professionals.  Several great lessons related to Linguistics are available on the site.  My students are currently studying the History of English in our Linguistics class so below you will find some links to great videos relating to the history of English and word etymology.   Teachers have the ability to "flip" a lesson, which means to tailor the lesson for their own students.
 
"How did English evolve?"
http://ed.ted.com/lessons/how-did-english-evolve-kate-gardoqui 

"Why is there a 'b' in 'doubt'?"
http://ed.ted.com/lessons/beyond-the-shadow-of-a-doubt-gina-cooke

"Making sense of spelling?"
http://ed.ted.com/lessons/making-sense-of-spelling-gina-cooke



Saturday, April 6, 2013

Language Magazine Online


http://languagemagazine.com/online/

I just found this great magazine; their content is free on their website--tons of accessible articles for high school students!

Monday, February 25, 2013

Scones in Wisconsin: British English vs. American English



As an Anglophile and a teacher of Linguistics, I had to spend talking with my students about the differences between American and British English.  The Project Britain website provides wonderful resources on lexical differences between British and American language and culture.  I used their fill-in-the-blanks worksheet as a small group activity while we all enjoyed some tea and biscuits.  Then each group got a hand-out related to either food, people, places, clothing, or school and hand to come up with a sentence using as many British English words as possible.  

An example sentence students wrote and then "translated" for us is:  "My mate met a lollypop man and the lad turned out to be a nutter and wouldn't let my chum cross the lane even after a bobby came by."

http://www.projectbritain.com/activities.html


Saturday, February 16, 2013

Pidgin Dinner 2013

It's a funny thing to walk into an English classroom where English is not allowed, but that's what my students did yesterday.  MSL Linguistics students shared a feast seated next to fellow classmates who speak different native or second languages than they do.  Students spoke Spanish, French, German, Mandarin, Wolof, Hmong, and Serbian and managed to be able to get the chicken, egg rolls, tacos, noodles and desserts passed around the room.  We all recognized the importance of facial expressions and gestures in our communication.  

Enjoy some photos from the event!













Sunday, February 3, 2013

TED Talk on Language Acquisition




This TED talk is a great 10 minutes spent learning about language acquisition.  It's very accessible for high school students:
http://www.ted.com/talks/patricia_kuhl_the_linguistic_genius_of_babies.html

Saturday, February 2, 2013

NACLO 1/31/13

We participated in NACLO this year at Marquette University.  Thanks so much to organizational mastermind Dr. Joyce Tang Boyland whose efforts led to the Marquette/UWM sites having more students participating in NACLO than anywhere else in North America!

We also enjoyed meeting up with MSL (and Linguistics class) alumni and current Marquette freshmen Kylie Dolphin and Daniel Bernard.

In the afternoon, we had a chance to visit the Raynor Library to see their collection of J.R.R. Tolkien's manuscripts, including his original drafts of The Hobbit.








NACLO Practice

Our thanks to Dr. Steven Hartman Kaiser and his students from Marquette University for helping us to prepare for this year's North American Computational Linguistics Olympiad!