May 14, 2024  
2015-2016 Catalog 
    
2015-2016 Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Linguistics


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Introduction

Linguistics, the science of language, is an interdisciplinary field that relates to the diversity of the cultures and languages of the world. It is an integral part of most serious pursuits dealing with aspects of language study and/or analysis. As the boundaries of the world change, an understanding of individual languages and cultures becomes increasingly more important. Communication in this complex society requires knowledge of the workings of languages as well as their interrelationship with their respective cultures. All linguistics majors are expected to acquire a rudimentary knowledge of the functions of language at various levels and knowledge of the techniques/methods used in language analysis. A student of linguistics will thereby significantly advance his/her appreciation of linguistic and cultural diversity.

Students interested in pursuing a major or minor in linguistics should contact Kristin Denham, Humanities 357, 360-650-3217, email kristin.denham@wwu.edu. Website: chss.wwu.edu/linguistics.

Faculty

KRISTIN DENHAM, Director. English. Syntactic theory, linguistics in education, psycholinguistics, Native American languages.
EVA BAHARAV, Communication Sciences and Disorders. Language acquisition, language analysis, language disorders.
MASANORI DEGUCHI, Modern and Classical Languages. Japanese linguistics, syntax and semantics.
SHANNON DUBENION-SMITH, Modern and Classical Languages. Germanic linguistics, variationist, linguistics, dialect and regiolect syntax, historical syntax, Pennsylvania Dutch.
JENNIFER GREEN, Director ELL Endorsement. English linguistics for educators, academic language, teaching methodologies.
SHAW N. GYNAN, Modern and Classical Languages. Hispanic linguistics, sociolinguistics, second language acquisition, syntax and phonology.
TODD HASKELL, Psychology. Psychology of language, visual and auditory perception, cognition.
JAMES W. HEARNE, Computer Science. General linguistics, computational linguistics, narratology.
BRIAN HUTCHINSON, Computer Science. Speech and language processing, machine learning, optimization.
McNEEL JANTZEN, Psychology. Cognition, speech perception, language acquisition.
CHRISTINA KEPPIE, Modern and Classical Languages. Applied French linguistics, sociolinguistics, general linguistics.
YUDONG LIU, Computer Science. Statistical natural language processing, eye-tracking applications.
ANNE LOBECK, English. Syntactic theory, language and gender, language ideology and discrimination, language and identity.
JUDITH M.S. PINE, Anthropology. Linguistics anthropology, semiotics, language and identity.
JORDAN SANDOVAL, Linguistics. Semantics, phonology, phonetics.
DWAN SHIPLEY, Linguistics. General linguistics, sociolinguistics.
TRISH SKILLMAN, TESOL. Language, teaching methodologies, sociolinguistics, second language acquisition.
EDWARD J. VAJDA, Modern and Classical Languages. Morphology, language typology, historical-comparative linguistics.
KATHRYN VULIC, English. History of the English language, Old English in translation, medieval literatures and cultures.
RYAN WASSERMAN, Philosophy. Metaphysics, philosophy of language, epistemology, ethics.
SUZI WRIGHT, TESOL. Second language acquisition, language/education policy, First People’s language revitalization, psycholinguistics, discourse analysis, functional linguistics.
JANET ZHIQUN XING, Modern and Classical Languages. Chinese linguistics, historical linguistics, discourse analysis, second language acquisition.

Linguistics Area Advisors:

English — Kristin Denham, Anne Lobeck
Anthropology — Judy Pine
Communication Sciences and Disorders — Eva Baharav
Computer Sciences — James W. Hearne
Modern and Classical Languages — Shaw N. Gynan
Philosophy — Ryan Wasserman
Psychology — Todd Haskell
TESOL — Trish Skillman

Programs

    Undergraduate MajorUndergraduate Minor

    Courses

      Linguistics

      Courses numbered X37; X97; 300, 400 are described in the University Academic Policies 

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