| Offered By: |
School of Language Studies |
| Academic Career: |
Undergraduate |
| Course Subject: |
Linguistics |
| Offered in: |
Second Semester, 2010 |
| Unit Value: |
6 units |
| Course Description: |
The course works through in detail how to construct a formal syntactic theory that can accommodate the central syntactic phenomena of a typologically diverse range of grammar. Lexical-Functional Grammar is the theory most often developed, but certain others might be, instead. |
| Learning Outcomes: |
On completing the course, students should have the ability to: - Understand how the theory considered applies to the grammatical structure of English and a range of other languages
- With help, read professional literature that applies the theory considered to grammatical phenomena
- With guidance, apply the theory to the grammatical phenomena of an unfamiliar language
- Identify phenomena that might be either problematic or espcially supportive for the theory
|
| Indicative Assessment: |
Three assessed problem-sets illustrating the application of theoretical ideas to concrete data (60% outcomes 1,3)
- A research essay, 2500-3000 words, which can either be an original investigation and analysis of some aspect of the syntax of a language, or a comparison of the way in which two different syntactic theories would handle some kind of syntactic phenomenon (40%, outcomes 2,4)
|
| Workload: |
2 lectures, 1 tutorial, plus approximately 5 hrs/week study |
| Areas of Interest: |
Linguistics and Applied Linguistics |
| Requisite Statement: |
LING2003, Introduction to Syntax |
| Incompatibility: |
LING2006 Generative Grammar |
| Prescribed Texts: |
A brick to be made available |
| Majors/Specialisations: |
Linguistics |
| Academic Contact: |
Dr Wayan Arka and Dr Mark Donohue |