Linguistics for English Language Teaching

  • Teaching

    Details

    Faculty Faculty of Humanities
    Domain English
    Code UE-L06.01121
    Languages English
    Type of lesson Seminar
    Level Bachelor
    Semester SP-2022

    Schedules and rooms

    Summary schedule Thursday 12:15 - 13:00, Hebdomadaire (Spring semester)

    Teaching

    Teachers
    • Schaller-Schwaner Iris
    Description

    Introduction

    What is language? What is linguistics? What is English? And what is it like? All of these questions are relevant at the start of the semester, but in this second part of a combined very short introduction to Phonetics and Linguistics for English Language Teaching, we will be focusing mostly on what English is (like). The course will provide individual glimpses into the linguistic study of English and the discipline of linguistics. These are relevant with a view to the subject matter of our teaching, the E in ELT, and its form, meaning and use.

    Training objectives

    Aims and rationale

    The short-term aim of this course is to help students understand and apply metalanguage used to describe and analyse English and to reflect on some concepts of language and linguistic analysis that have informed ELT. The long-term aim of this course is to start a process of discovery of different approaches to the study of English that teachers (and other language professionals) can draw on as needed. This should help to make your choices more informed and your practice more principled and to develop your knowledge base and skills repertoire for promoting foreign language learning in the classroom. Another rationale for this course is that every (future) language teacher, consciously or unconsciously, already has an informal, implicit theory of language (i.e. ideas and conceptualisations of what language is, what it consists of, how it works etc.) and that every textbook or grammar is, more or less explicitly, based on linguistic intuitions/analyses and descriptions/prescriptions. Since ELT is thus never purely practical it is useful to acquire some basic ‘tools’ with which to examine our own and other people’s ideas and idealisations about English critically.

    Comments

    Evaluation

    Will be based on homework, active contributions to class work, active observations of your linguistic landscape, an informal data-collection assignment and a successful written test.

    Softskills No
    Off field No
    BeNeFri No
    Mobility No
    UniPop No

    Documents

    Bibliography

    Required textbook:

    Bieswanger & Becker 52021. Introduction to English linguistics. 5th rev. ed. (UTB basics) Tübingen: Francke. ISBN 978-3-8252-5663-0 ISBN. With VPN on your computer, this is available via the BCU at https://elibrary.utb.de/doi/book/10.36198/9783838556635

    Recommended:

    Yule, George 72020. The study of language. 7th ed. Cambridge etc. CUP Paperback ISBN: 9781108730709 Online ISBN: 9781108582889 doi:10.1017/9781108582889

    Other readings and reference books:

    Aitchison, Jean 42012. Language change. Progress or decay. (Cambridge Approaches to Linguistics) 4th ed. Cambridge: CUP

    Aitchison, Jean 92010. Aitchinson’s Linguistics. Teach yourself. 9th ed. London: Hodder Educ.

    Bauer, Laurie 2007. The linguistics student’s handbook. Edinburgh University Press.

    Bauer, Laurie 2012. Beginning linguistics. Houndsmill, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.

    Collins, Peter; Hollo, Carmella 32016. English grammar: An introduction. 3rd ed. Palgrave.

    Crystal, David. 32018. The Cambridge encyclopaedia of the English language. Cambridge CUP.

    Kortmann, Bernd 2005. English linguistics: Essentials (studium kompakt Anglistik. Amerikanistik) Cornelsen

    Leech, G. & Svartvik, J. 32002. A communicative grammar of English. 3rd ed. London etc. Longman.

    Mair, Christian 32015. English linguistics (Bachelor Basiswissen). 3rd. ed. Tübingen:Narr

    Plag, Ingo; Braun, Maria; Lappe, Sabine; Schramm, Mareile. 32015. Introduction to English linguistics. 3rd revised & enlarged ed. (Mouton Textbook). Berlin/New York: Mouton.

  • Dates and rooms
    Date Hour Type of lesson Place
    24.02.2022 12:15 - 13:00 Cours MIS 10, Room 3.16
    03.03.2022 12:15 - 13:00 Cours MIS 10, Room 3.16
    10.03.2022 12:15 - 13:00 Cours MIS 10, Room 3.16
    17.03.2022 12:15 - 13:00 Cours MIS 10, Room 3.16
    24.03.2022 12:15 - 13:00 Cours MIS 10, Room 3.16
    31.03.2022 12:15 - 13:00 Cours MIS 10, Room 3.16
    07.04.2022 12:15 - 13:00 Cours MIS 10, Room 3.16
    14.04.2022 12:15 - 13:00 Cours MIS 10, Room 3.16
    28.04.2022 12:15 - 13:00 Cours MIS 10, Room 3.16
    05.05.2022 12:15 - 13:00 Cours MIS 10, Room 3.16
    12.05.2022 12:15 - 13:00 Cours MIS 10, Room 3.16
    19.05.2022 12:15 - 13:00 Cours MIS 10, Room 3.16
    02.06.2022 12:15 - 13:00 Cours MIS 10, Room 3.16
  • Assessments methods

    Examen - SP-2022, Session d'été 2022

    Assessments methods By rating, By success/failure

    Examen - SP-2022, Autumn Session 2022

    Assessments methods By rating, By success/failure

    Examen - SA-2022, Session d'hiver 2023

    Assessments methods By rating, By success/failure

    Examen - SP-2023, Session d'été 2023

    Assessments methods By rating, By success/failure
  • Assignment
    Valid for the following curricula:
    English Language and Literature 50
    Version: SA15_BASI_ang_V01
    Module 02: Linguistics and Applied Linguistics

    Ens. compl. en Lettres
    Version: ens_compl_lettres

    Lettres [Cours]
    Version: Lettres_v01