Degree | Type | Year |
---|---|---|
3500084 English Studies: Linguistic, Literary and Sociocultural Perspectives | OT | 1 |
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- A C1 level of the Common European Framework of Reference for Languages (CEFRL) is required. Knowledge of oral and written academic English is also requires.
- Knowledge of basic linguistic concepts is required.
This subject has as a main objective to train students onto the acquisition of a foreign language or second language (L2), in immersion or instruction contexts. The acquisition of the different components of the grammar will be analysed (structure of words and sentences, structure of sounds and the lexicon). The main theories of language acquisition will be presented.
27/09 to 05/11 (Montse Capdevila)
08/11 to 13/12 (Celia Gorba)
Title | Hours | ECTS | Learning Outcomes |
---|---|---|---|
Type: Directed | |||
Classes pràctiques | 20 | 0.8 | CA21, CA22, SA30, SA32 |
Classes teòriques | 30 | 1.2 | CA20, CA22, KA22, KA23, KA24, SA31 |
Type: Supervised | |||
Assignments | 27.3 | 1.09 | CA20, CA21, CA22, KA22, KA23, SA30, SA31, SA32 |
Lectures i discussió | 20 | 0.8 | CA20, CA21, KA22, KA23, SA32 |
Type: Autonomous | |||
Exercicis a casa, lectures i estudi personal | 20 | 0.8 | CA21, KA22, SA30, SA32 |
Theoretical and practical classes, readings and discussion, homework and class exercises, comments on exercises and papers, in-class presentation, data collection.
Annotation: Within the schedule set by the centre or degree programme, 15 minutes of one class will be reserved for students to evaluate their lecturers and their courses or modules through questionnaires.
Title | Weighting | Hours | ECTS | Learning Outcomes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Assignment 1 | 30 | 1.85 | 0.07 | CA20, CA21, CA22, KA22, KA23, KA24, SA30, SA31, SA32 |
Assignment 2 | 30 | 1.8 | 0.07 | CA20, CA21, CA22, KA22, KA23, KA24, SA30, SA31, SA32 |
In-class practice | 10 | 0.85 | 0.03 | CA20, CA21, CA22, KA23, SA30, SA31, SA32 |
Oral presentation 1 | 15 | 1.6 | 0.06 | CA20, KA22, KA24, SA32 |
Oral presentation 2 | 15 | 1.6 | 0.06 | CA21, KA22, SA30, SA32 |
Continuous assessment
Assignment 1 - On a topic related to sessions 1 to 11 (30%)
Assignment 2 - On a topic related to sesions 12 a 21 (30%)
Presentació oral 1 - On assignment 1 (15%)
Presentació oral 2 - On assignment 2 (15%)
Practice (10%)
The student will get the mark "No avaluable" if she/he has not handed in 40% of the evaluation activities.
Single Assessment
Handing in of the 2 assignments on a date provided at the beginning of the course (Assignment 1, 30%; Assignment 2, 30%) and the respective oral presentations (15% i 15%) and practical exercises (10%).
The student will get the mark "No avaluable" if she/he has not handed in 40% of the evaluation activities.
Procedure for the review of marks
At the moment of the making each evaluation activity, the professor will inform students about the procedure and the revision date of qualifications.
Reassessment (for both types of evaluation)
The reassessment of this subject will be done item by item under the following conditions:
- Students will need to have presented a minimum of 2/3 of the evaluation items
- Items with a mark inferior to 4 will be reassessed. Those items with a 4 or a mark higher than 4 will average with the rest of items
- The maximum mark of reassessed items is 5.
VERY IMPORTANT: Total or partial plagiarism of any of the exercises will automatically be considered "fail" (0) for the plagiarised exercise.If plagiarism occurs for a second time, the entire course will be failed. PLAGIARISM is copying one or more sentences from unidentified sources, presenting it as original work (THIS INCLUDES COPYING PHRASES OR FRAGMENTS FROM THE INTERNET AND ADDING THEM WITHOUTMODIFICATION TO A TEXT WHICH IS PRESENTED AS ORIGINAL). Plagiarism is a serious offense. Students must learn to respect the intellectual property of others, identifying any source they may use, and take responsibility for the originality and authenticity of the texts they produce.
Those evaluation items with irregularities (copy, misuse of AI, etc...) cannot be reassessed.
- General readings on the acquisition of an L2 and the acquisition of the L2 morphology, syntax and the Lexicon
Archibald, John (ed) (2000) Second Language Acquisition and Linguistic Theory, Oxford: Blackwell.
Cattel, Ray. (2000) Children’s Language: Consensus and Controversy, London: Cassell.
Corder, Pit. (1967) The Significance of Learner's Errors. De Gruyter Mouton.
Crain, Stephen. & Diane Lillo-Martin (1999) An Introduction to Linguistic Theory and Language Acquistion, Oxford: Backwell.
Ellis, Rod. (2004) Individual Differences in Second Language Learning.The Handbook of Applied Linguistics.
Guasti, Maria Teresa (2002) Language Acquisition. The Growth of Grammar, Cambridge, Mass: MIT Press.
Hawkins, Roger (ed) (2001) Second Language Syntax. A Generative Introduction, Oxford: Blackwell.
Radford, Andrew (2004) Minimalist Syntax. Exploring the Structure of English, Cambridge, C.U.P
Slabakova, Roumyana (2016) Second Language Acquisition, Oxford: O.U.P.
White, Lydia (2003) Second language acquisition and Universal Grammar. (2nd edition) Cambridge: CUP.
-General readings on general English phonetics and phonology and speech analysis
Ladefoged, Peter. 1993. A Course in Phonetics. Boston, MA: Thomson Wadsworth. -Chapter 8. Acoustic phonetics.
Spencer, Andrew. (1996). Phonology. Oxford: Blackwell. -Chapter 1. Preliminaries to Phonology
-Specialized articles on the acquisition of phonetics and phonology
Bohn, Ocke-Schwen. 2002. On phonetic similarity. In P. Burmeister, T. Piske and A. Rohde (Eds.). An Integrated View of Language Development: Papers in Honor of Henning Wode. Trier: Wissenschaftlicher Verlag, pp.191-216.
Cebrian, Juli. 2006. Experience and the use of non-native duration in L2 vowel categorization. Journal of Phonetics 34, 372-387.
Celce-Murcia, Marianne, Donna Brinton & Janet Goodwin. 1996. Teaching pronunciation: A reference for teachers of English to speakers of other languages. New York: Cambridge University Press. Chapters 1 & 2.
Flege, James Emil. 1987. The production of new and similar phones in a foreign language: Evidence for the effect of equivalence classification. Journal of Phonetics, 15, 47-65.
Ju, Min & Paul Luce, P. A. 2004. Falling on sensitive ears: Constraints on bilingual lexical activation. Psychological Science, 15, 314–318.
Leather, Jonathan. 1999. Second language speech research: an introduction. In J. Leather (ed.), Phonological Issues in Language Learning. Oxfod: Basil Blackwell, pp. 1-58.
Logan, John S. & John S. Pruitt. 1995. Methodological issues in training listeners to perceive non-native sounds. In W. Strange (Ed.). Speech perception and Linguistic Experience: Theoretical and Methodological Issues. Timonium, MD: York Press, pp. 351-378.
Marian, Viorica & Marian Spivey. 2003. Competing activation in bilingual language processing. Bilingualism: Language and Cognition 6, 97–115.
Munro, Murray J. & Ocke-Schwen Bohn. 2007. The study of second language speech. In Bohn, O-S. & M. J. Munro (eds.). Language Experience in Second Language Speech Learning. In honor of James Emil Flege (pp.3-11). Amsterdam / Philadelphia: John Benjamins.
Munro, Murray J. & Tracey Derwing. 1999. Foreign accent, comprehensibility, and intelligibility in the speech of second language learners. Language Learning 45:1, pp. 73-97.
Munro, Murray J. & Tracey Derwing. 2020. Foreign accent, comprehensibility and intelligibility, redux. Journal of Second Language Pronunciation, Volume 6, Issue 3, Nov 2020, p. 283 – 309.
Piske, Thorsten, Ian R.A. MacKay & James Emil Flege. 2001. Factors affecting degree of foreign accent in an L2: a review. Journal of Phonetics, 29, 191-215.
Trofimovich, Pavel, & Paul John, 2011. When three equals tree: Examining the nature of phonological entries in L2 lexicons of Quebec speakers of English. In P. Trofimovich & K. McDonough (Eds.), Applying priming methods to L2 learning, teaching and research: Insights from psycholinguistics. Amsterdam: John Benjamins, pp. 105-129.
Wayland, Ratree (Ed.). 2021. Second language speech learning: Theoretical and empirical progress. Cambridge University Press.
Weber, Andrea, & Cutler, Anne. 2004. Lexical competition in non-native spoken-word recognition. Journal of Memory and Language, 50(1), 1-25.
See also: http://liceu.uab.es/~joaquim/applied_linguistics/L2_phonetics/Fonetica_L2_Bib.html
It does not apply.
Name | Group | Language | Semester | Turn |
---|---|---|---|---|
(TEm) Theory (master) | 1 | English | first semester | morning-mixed |