Links for LING 566

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Some Links for LING 566
Spring 2015
Klein
The LSA Website
http://www.lsadc.org
The AAAL Website
http://www.aaal.org/
The APA Style site
http://www.apastyle.org/
The LSA Style Guide
http://www.linguisticsociety.org/files/style-sheet.pdf
Bibliography link
http://philpapers.org/browse/methodology-of-linguistics-misc
A textbook
http://www.bloomsbury.com/us/research-methods-in-linguistics-9780826489937/
A course in Kentucky
http://linguistics.as.uky.edu/courses/2012/Fall/LIN/601
Critical view by Margaret Magnus 1995
http://www.trismegistos.com/magicalletterpage/method/index.html
Keren Rice Linguistics Institute: The Ken Hale Talk
Linguistics Institute 2013
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jX36sTLC4Cwhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j
X36sTLC4Cwhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jX36sTLC4Cw
The AAAL Conference Archives
http://www.aaal.org/content.asp?contentid=153
https://app.box.com/s/2772oofxkg6jyzmd3l7j
Glossary for Corpus Linguistics
http://appling.kent.edu/resources/glossary/corpus-glossary.cfm
Stanford Lx 203 “Bibliography and Resources” [2003]
http://web.stanford.edu/class/linguist203/resources.html
UCLA Library links to Linguistic Corpora
http://guides.library.ucla.edu/c.php?g=180293&p=1189870
Corpora4Learning (English corpora)
http://corpora4learning.net/resources/corpora.html
A companion website for a text addressing educational research, with a not unhelpful outline
of what is involved in various forms of quantitative/quantifiable research designs—including
terminologies and alternate descriptions. Might be a nice companion to chapters 3 and 4 in
Litosseleiti. There are unhelpfully broken links in the outline. But the very fact that the
elements (mostly terminology) are highlighted as links suggests that they’re terms to develop
an understanding of, and eventual facility with.
http://wps.ablongman.com/ab_mcmillan_edresearch_4/16/4150/1062474.cw/
American Sign Language Linguistic Research Project Site (Boston University)
http://www.bu.edu/asllrp/
Center for Gesture, Sign, and Language (University of Chicago)
http://gslcenter.uchicago.edu/
Critical Discourse Analysis
http://discourses.org/
The TESOL Quarterly Research Guidelines (with internal links to descriptions and
associated references)
http://www.tesol.org/read-and-publish/journals/tesol-quarterly/tesol-quarterly-researchguidelines
Action Research
An Introduction in the context of STEM (but generalizable)
http://www.nefstem.org/teacher_guide/intro/index.htm
A site with “free” materials (advertising supported)—but there are some helpful links with
good description and some instructive examples of projects.
http://www.freeeslmaterials.com/action_research.html
The LinguistList “Projects and Research Sites” page—with lots of links to all sorts of goings
on in the various fields and approaches.
http://linguistlist.org/sp/GetWRListings.cfm?WRAbbrev=Projects
The Cascadilla Press site for Surviving Linguistics.
http://www.cascadilla.com/surviving/surviving-links.html
University of North Carolina: Writing a Grant Proposal
http://writingcenter.unc.edu/handouts/grant-proposals-or-give-me-the-money/
The University of Wisconsin Writing Center: The Writer’s Handbook
http://writing.wisc.edu/Handbook/
The Ohio State University Linguistics Department:
Tips for OSU linguistics students on writing a grant proposal
http://www.ling.ohio-state.edu/events/grants_and_jobs/Grant_Proposal_Tips.html
Making Posters (an LSA site)
http://www.linguisticsociety.org/resource/lsa-poster-guidelines
And an anthropology site—the American Folklore Society—with reference to the LSA and
with more detail.
http://www.afsnet.org/?page=2012AMPosterGuide
For no really relevant reason—but for access to a wonderful resource—the LSA YouTube
Channel: (Plenary lectures from the 2013 Linguistics Summer Institute are here, as well.
Scroll down.
https://www.youtube.com/user/LingSocAm
Some other texts
Wäichli, Bernhard, Adrian Leemann, Andrea Ender. 2012. Methods in Contemporary Linguistics.
Trends in Linguistics: Studies and monographs. Berlin: De Gruyter Mouton. eBook in the
Oviatt.
Podesva, Robert J. and Devyani Sharma, eds. 2014. Research Methods in Linguistics.
Cambridge University Press.
Newman, Paul and Martha Ratliff, eds. 2001. Linguistic Fieldwork. Cambridge University
Press.
Crowley, Terry. 2007. Field linguistics: A beginner’s guide. Oxford University Press.
Andrews, Richard. 2003. Research Questions. Continuum Press. [electronic book, Oviatt]
Labov, William. 1972. Some Principles of Linguistic Methodology. Language in Society 1: 97120.
Rickford, John. 1986. The Haves and Have Nots: Sociolinguistic Surveys and the
Assessment of Speaker Competence. Language in Society 16: 149-78.
Eckert, Penelope. 1997. Why ethnography? In Ulla-Britt Kotsinas, Anna-Brita Stenstrom
and Anna-Malin Karlsson (eds.) Ungdomssprak i Norden. Stockholm: Stockholm University,
52-62.
Eckert, Peneolpe. 2000. Linguistic Variation as Social Practice . Malden, Mass and Oxford, UK:
Blackwell Publishers Ltd, 1-45.
Hale, Ken. 2001. Ulwa (Southern Sumu): the beginnings of a language research project. In
Paul Newman and Martha Ratliff (eds.) Linguistic Fieldwork. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge
University Press.
Hyman, Larry M. 2001. Fieldwork as a state of mind. In Paul Newman and Martha Ratliff
(eds.) Linguistic Fieldwork. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
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