linguistic with cultural relativity

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Linguistic with cultural relativityProblem Statement1. To what extent speakers with different cultural and linguistic backgrounds think and perceive the world differently?2. Instructed and naturalistic foreign language learners.

Interpersonal pragmatics and impoliteness.(sociopragmatics, polieneess theory, speech act theory)

Sociql dynamis of interaction

Conceptual and ideological import of grammatical construction.-mapping between meaning elements in language andimage

Bilingual cogntion-what role do individual difference (working memory, intelligence) play in implicit and explicit learning.Examining the contribution of procedural learning to grammar and literacy acquisition in childrenChildren acquire language in their early years of life without explicit or formal instruction to the rules of their language. A mechanism that potentially facilitates this is the ability to discover rules without explicit awareness to those rules and to store these in long-term memory. This is known as procedural learning. Deficiencies in this ability have been observed in children with specific language impairment (SLI) and in children with problems in learning to read and spell (developmental dyslexia). However, the extent to which procedural learning contributes to the acquisition of grammar and literacy and its impairments is not known. Also, children with SLI and developmental dyslexia show overlap in the grammatical and literacy problems that they experience, but the cognitive nature of this overlap is not understood. This project therefore addresses three outstanding questions on the relation between procedural learning and grammar and literacy in typically developing children and in children with developmental language disorders. First, does procedural learning ability predict acquisition of grammar and literacy longitudinally. Second, are deficiencies in procedural learning associated with the linguistic problems of children with SLI and developmental dyslexia. Third, does the overlap between SLI and developmental dyslexia stem from a shared deficit in procedural learning? To answer the first question, a longitudinal study will be carried out which is novel in the field. The second question will be answered by assessing several measures of procedural learning in children with SLI and in children with developmental dyslexia. The results will be related to their grammar and literacy scores. The results of the two groups will be compared to answer the final question and these will provide novel insight into the overlap between SLI and developmental dyslexia. In all, the results will determine the relative contributions of procedural learning to grammar and literacy acquisition

Race and LanguageA student of sociolinguistics might focus on how a particular racial group uses a certain language. A famous and commonly studied example is African-American Vernacular English, known as both AAVE and Ebonics. Possible Ph.D. topics could focus more closely on the linguistic aspects of Ebonics, such as the tones, rhythms and sounds that distinguish AAVE from standard American English. Alternatively, students could focus on the social and economic impact of Ebonics in American society.Social Class and LanguageA commonly studied sociolinguistics topic is the intersection of language and social class. There are numerous examples within the English language where a person's social class impacts his style of speaking. In Britain, for example, the "Cockney" accent is famously the language of the urban working class in London, and so a student could study how and why the working classes uses this style of English. Within the United States, similar examples abound, and students could even focus narrowly on a single detail, like the class implications of using the word "ain't."How Language ChangesSociolinguistics does not by definition need to focus on the present. Students, for example, could focus on how the English language has changed over history. Students could choose to go back very far in history, and focus on the origins of English, and the Norman invasion of Britain's impact on language formation. In a topic like this, students might explore the relationship between English and French. Alternatively, students might instead focus on something contemporary, like gradual decline of the Boston accent in New England, or the causes of regional accent differences within the United States.Teaching and Education of LanguageStudents hoping to focus on a more methodological project could focus on the teaching and education of a language. An interesting topic might be the different styles of learning English as a second language. Students could closely examine how certain cultural backgrounds affect a student's ease of learning a language, and why this is the case. Alternatively, students could analyze new ways of teaching the language more effectively to overcome hurdles that are common in ESL teaching.