| Meeting times:
Tuesdays and Thursdays 3:30-5, KCB 107.
Professor.
Paul Hagstrom, 621 Commonwealth Ave.), Office 105. Email: hagstrom@bu.edu (likely to get a quick response). Phone: 617–353–6220 (x3–6220). Office hours: T 2:00-3:30, W 2-3, R 10:30-12.
Prerequisites. CAS
LX 522 (or consent of instructor).
Forty words. A general introduction to the study of first and second language acquisition within the framework of generative grammar, focused on the development of syntax. Topics include: the status/development of functional categories, verb-movement, finiteness, null subjects, binding, and questions. |
| General announcements, news, homework notes and trivia will be posted on the LX500 blog throughout the semester. It lives at: http://ling.bu.edu/blog/lx500a1f08/.
Homework scores (and discussion forums and chat rooms) will be available at the Blackboard page for LX500. (Link will be posted when the site is live)
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Course
goals. After a general introduction to the study of
language acquisition within the principles and parameters framework
of generative grammar (defining the central concepts and laying
out some of the theoretical issues), we will cover a number of
topics of current relevance to the field, including: the status
of functional categories, verb movement and finiteness, null subjects,
binding theory, and wh-questions. The course will cover both first and second language acquisition. We will also spend some time discussing issues of experimental design and argumentation. By the end of this course, you should be familiar
with the major concepts in the study of language acquisition from
a theoretical perspective.
Course Requirements. Readings.
There will be readings from one of the textbooks and/or from the literature for each class session. Homework. There will be weekly homework assignments, concentrated mostly in the first two-thirds of the course, including a lab exercise using the CHILDES database, and the design of a small experiment. Final project. There is a final project for this course, which involves desigining, running, and writing up a small experiment testing some property of language acquisition. The project is broken up into several milestones, during the last third of the course. In mid-November, a project proposal will be due, with the basic outline of the property to be investigated and the means by which it will be explored. At the beginning of December, a revised version is due (revised according to comments received on the initial proposal). The following week, data must be collected and a short status report is due, and then a complete (but short, around 10 pages) final project writeup will be due at the end of the course. There is no final exam.
Homework by email. Whenever
feasible, homework (or project proposals, or final papers) can be
emailed to me at hagstrom@bu.edu.
Be aware that if you use special fonts, they will sometimes not come through. PDF and text-only documents are safest, but Microsoft Word, RTF, Postscript, LaTeX files will work. Please don't send a WordPerfect file, I have never managed to find a way to open them properly. Or, you know, just hand in a paper copy. If I can't read the file you send me, it doesn't really count as having been handed in, so if there's a risk of a font problem, try to send it to me early so I can verify that I can read the file.
Late assignments.
Late assignments will be accepted only by prior arrangement with me.
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Grading scheme. |
Homework
(lowest homework score will be dropped) |
50% |
CHILDES lab |
10% |
Final project : proposal (all or nothing) |
5% |
Final project : data and status report (all or nothing) |
5% |
Final project: Writeup |
20% |
Course participation |
10% |
CAS Student Academic Conduct
Code. It is essential that you read and adhere to the
CAS Student Academic Conduct Code. In particular, several types
of plagiarism (any attempt to represent the work of another as
your own) are defined by this academic conduct code. A copy is
available in CAS 105.
Textbooks. There are two textbooks for this course. They are: Lydia White (2003) Universal grammar and second language acquisition, and Maria Teresa Guasti (2002) Language Acquisition. There will be additional readings in the form of articles from the academic literature as well. Note: These two textbooks are the same as those that have been assigned in recent versions of GRS LX 700, and so you may be able to find used copies.
Readings.
This course will sometimes rely on outside readings from the linguistics
literature (journal articles, manuscripts, and excerpts from books).
These readings will be available in the hallway outside my office, in a folder labeled LX500. You may take the readings
out for no more than an hour to make a personal photocopy,
and then they should be returned to the folder so that others may
photocopy them. |