Bar Ilan University English Department LINGUISTICS Course Descriptions for 2010-11 184. Introduction to Linguistics The course begins from a perspective of general intellectual curiosity and expects to instill an understanding of modern scientific linguistics. Topics include: brain and language, morphology, syntax, semantics, pragmatics, phonetics, phonology, language acquisition, bilingualism, language processing, computational linguistics, reading, sociolinguistics, language and aging, and translation. The main goal of the course beyond the content material is to improve skills in written composition 286. Phonetics and Phonology Introduction to the study of systems and patterns of sounds and structures in human languages. 287. Syntax An introduction to the generative approach to understanding sentence structure. Elements of syntactic analysis are introduced: constituents and tree diagrams, X-bar theory, complements and adjuncts, theta roles and the theta criterion, movement and the Dstructure/S-structure distinction. This course provides the tools to understanding the source of phenomena such as structural ambiguities and the formation of interrogative sentences. 289. Semantics This course is an introduction to Semantics, i.e. to a theory of meaning in natural language. We will develop a theory of Semantics within the Chomskian framework of generative grammar. The theory we will focus on is formal (or – model theoretic) Semantics, which gives interpretation to natural language expressions by using formal tools of logic and philosophy of language, and which has proved to be extremely productive in accounting for a wide variety of semantic phenomena. Among other things, this theory will enable us (a) to “understand what we understand” in a precise and noncircular way, (b) to systematically predict the meaning of complex expressions on the basis of the meaning of their parts (c) to account for semantic productivity (the fact that we can create and understand the meaning of sentences we never hear before) (d) to account for a variety of other semantic phenomena such as entailment, synonymy, contradiction, semantic ambiguity, semantic infelicity, presuppositions, etc. 440.. Technical, Professional and Business Writing This course is an attempt to help our students who are getting degrees in English to gain further writing skills that will help them get jobs and make their degrees more attractive. 468. Spelling Acquisition The seminar will review current models of spelling acquisition with focus on English. Further, with a cross-linguistic lens, it will address cross-linguistic differences in orthographic structure and linguistic structure and their effect on spelling development in different languages. The relationship between reading and spelling development will be addressed. 500. First Language Acquisition The course will focus on the process of first language acquisition across languages, explaining various phenomena (such as the acquisition of word order, inflections and subordination) from the different theoretical perspectives: developmental psycholinguistics on the one hand and the generative (nativist) theory on the other hand. The course will also give some insight to research methodologies used in this field. 509. Language and Evolution The course aims to give both a broad overview and detailed analyses of the most important theories on the evolution of the brain and its ability for language - motor, cognitive and environmental theories. The course will cover new comparisons between communication in apes and monkeys and ethological studies of communication and language of humans, which bring quite new insights. In addition it will briefly cover the development of language in children for further comparison. Finally the course examines data on the evolution of language ability in birds and non-primate mammals which contradict many of the accepted models. Using the insights gained from all these approaches, the final aim is to reach a plausible new synthesis for a scenario on the evolution of language in humans. 517. Methodology/Research Methods in Linguistics The course provides background in research methodology, literature searches, statistics, academic publishing. 522-1 Psycholinguistics The course examines two main questions about the mind. The first is how children acquire language. Two main views about language acquisition will be discussed: the nativist (generative) and the empiricist approaches (in which we may include the connectionist approach, and the neural networks approach). The second question is how language is processed in the mind. Several models will be discussed that deal with such a question. In an attempt to answer both questions, the course will provide insight to research methodologies used in the field. 529. Sociolinguistics The purpose of the course is to explore facts about language use in social contexts. Main topics of interest and some practical methods of sociolinguistics will be introduced. 569. Linguistics of Literacy The course will address foundational issues in the linguistic processing of print. In particular, it will focus on the relevance of linguistic structure, linguistic units, and linguistic representations in the acquisition of word reading and spelling. The course will also provide a cross-linguistic perspective on the interaction between linguistic structure and the processing of printed words in different languages. 585. Applied Linguistics Applied linguistics uses linguistic theory to deal with real- world problems, mainly educational ones. The purpose of the course is to introduce students to the major topics in the field of applied linguistics: Bilingualism, first and second language acquisition, learning strategies, teaching methodologies, language education. 586. Advanced Phonology (Prerequisite 286) A continuing course which will deal with more abstract representations of speech sounds as well as the patterning and grouping of speech sounds into larger organizational units such as syllables. This course will present more formal devices such as rules and constraints to describe linguistic processes and larger sound systems. 587. Advanced Syntax (Prerequisite 287) Introduction to the central components of modern syntactic theory: functional projections in X-bar theory, Theat theory, Casetheory, Binding theory, locality and movement. Abstract notions such as empty categories (PRO,trace) and levels of representations are developed, with the goal of arriving at a systematic theory of syntax that can not only describe the language but also explain why it has the observed properties. Prerequisite: Grammatical analysis (287). 589. Advanced Semantics (Prerequisite 289) This course is a continuation of “Introduction to Semantics” (289). I.e. it assumes knowledge of basic Predicate Calculus (PC) and ability to translate English expressions (with combinations of e.g. negation, disjunction, implication, universal and existential quantification) to PC, and vice versa. In the present course we will extend and improve the basic theory so (a) it is much more systematically compatible with the principle of compositional interpretation and (b) we are able to translate and define the meaning of more interesting constructions in English. We will look at Frege’s idea of functional application, the theory of semantic types, different types of modifiers, generalized quantifiers theory, etc. 591. Meaning and Use: Foundational Topics This course is an informal introduction to essential semantic and pragmatic conepts underlying linguistic analysis including definiteness, intensionality, counting and measuring, reference and quantification. It is intended not only as a background for students wanting to continue in semantics but also crucially for students wanting to pursue other areas of linguistic research for whom familiarity with these concepts is essential. 851. Fascinating Adverbials This seminar will deal with the semantics and pragmatics of several adverbials in English, and their (sometimes apparent) correlates in Hebrew and other languages, like simply and just ("pshut"), merely("stam"), really("mamash" and "beemet"), basically /roughly speaking ("begadol", "ba-klali"), the Hebrew davka (no real correlate in English) etc. We will look at ways to derive the variability of observations concerning the interpretation, felicity, focus sensitivity and context dependence of such adverbials from a unified definition of their semantics and pragmatics. This kind of examination will involve a study of more general questions concerning the division of labour between semantics and pragmatics, the precise characterization of scales, the nature of the interaction between intonational focus and interpretation etc. Such questions will be examined in light of recent theories concerning presuppositions, gradability and vagueness, context update etc. 872. Features in Syntax Grammatical features, such as number, gender, person and tense, play a central role in all contemporary approaches to syntax. This seminar focuses on some of the central issues related to features in syntactic theory, such as: analyzing agreement and its relation to other components of the grammar; feature geometrics and asymmetries in feature values; the role of morphosyntactic features at the syntax-semantics interface; and alternative views of the notion feature' itself and the kinds of feature values allowed by the grammar of human languages. 875. Linguistics of Narrative The study of narrative in linguistics has become a subfield in its own right, nurtured by research across the humanities (literature, philosophy) and social sciences (psychology, sociology). This seminar casts a wide net on the study of narrative, looking at structural approaches such as Story Grammars (Stein & Glenn 1979), work in Systemic Functional Linguistics (Martin & Rose 2008) as well as more functional/integrated approaches (Labov 1967, 1972, 2001) and Berman ("Ravid & Berman 2009). Narratives allow one to investigate multiple linguistic levels, particularly: lexis, grammar, discourse. In addition, they ground language use in the speaker's social world, where the pragmatics is an umbrella for linguistic features. Participants will analyze narrative data and write research papers based on: immigrant and minority narratives from English- Hebrew –Yiddish bilingual aphasics and Russian-Hebrew schizophrenics; retelling of familiar and unfamiliar stores among English-Hebrew and Russian-Hebrew bilingual preschool children; and children's Holocaust testimonies. 876. A Cross Linguistic Approach to Counting and Measuring: The Grammar of Classifier This course is an exploration of the syntax and semantics of counting and measuring constructions cross-linguistically. We assume that the conceptual distinction between counting and measuring is independent of language, and explore the mechanisms that different languages use to represent these operations linguistically. 877. Neurolinguistics and Psycholinguistics of Sentence Processing Humans assign structure and meaning to sentences on the fly, under conditions of great uncertainty. In this class we will present current models of human on-line sentence processing, and discuss recent findings that bear on these models. We will cover two classes of empirical data: (a) Psycholinguistic experiments, using methods such as self paced reading and eye tracking; (b) Neurolinguistic experiments, which utilize state-of-the-art brain imaging methods including ERP, MEG and MRI. We will discuss the mutual contribution between these two streams of studies and the theoretical and empirical benefit in combining psycholinguistic and neurolinguistic perspectives in the study of language processing. 922. Psycholinguistics and Research Methods for Graduate Students The course will focus on clinical aspects of psycholinguistics with a strong emphasis on language acquisition and language impairments (both developmental and acquired). The course will discuss both theoretical and empirical issues from different theoretical perspectives: developmental psycholinguistics, the generative (nativist) theory and the connectionist perspective. The course will explore methodological issues related to experimental design and statistical analysis of findings. 975. Challenges to Language Acquisition: Bilingualism and Language Impairment The course compares the process second language acquisition by sequential bilingual children with and without Specific Language Impairments, and that of monolingual children with SLI. The discussion will be limited to theoretical issues focusing on the acquisition of morphology and syntax by the three groups. 981. Language and Psychiatry The relationship between language and psychiatric disorders, based on systemic theory, theoretical issues and the analysis of texts. 987. Introduction to Syntax/Semantics This course gives the basics of syntactic and semantic theory within generative (Chomskian) semantics. In the syntax part we will develop tools to account for a variety of syntactic phenomena (such as ungrammaticality, ambiguity, infinite structures, etc.). We will look at the notion of syntactic constituents and use tree diagram representations to capture syntactic structures. In the semantic part we will learn how to use formal tools (adopted from logic and philosophy of language) to build compositional interpretations of complex expressions, and to account for semantic phenomena such as semantic ambiguity, infelicity, entailment, contradiction, tautology, etc. Lng_dscrp11