5.00 credits
15.0 h
Q1
Teacher(s)
Degand Elisabeth;
Language
English
Prerequisites
Introductory course to linguistics.
Main themes
This course gives an overview of what discourse analysis is and covers the main methodological questions. It will treat discourse analysis from different points of view, in particular: linguistics (texture and cohesion), psycholinguistics (coherence, processing), sociolinguistics (conversation analysis, critical discourse analysis,).
Learning outcomes
At the end of this learning unit, the student is able to : | |
1 |
Students will be able: - to develop global knowledge of the different domains covered by discourse analysis as a discipline - to apply the different theoretical concepts to concrete language situations - to acquire detailed knowledge of at least one domain of investigation of discourse analysis. |
Content
This class focuses on the study of Discourse Markers as a linguistic category illustrating how their study can give us insight into the discourse level as a specific level of linguistic analysis. Each session will be dedicated to a particular empirical approach to discourse markers (L1 acquisition, L2 learning, translation, contrastive corpus analysis, processing, ...), illustrated by the selected articles. These readings will be complemented by in-class hands-on demonstration of relevant analyses.
Teaching methods
Research seminar
Students attend classes prepared, i.e. they have read the selected readings (submission of reading notes) and prepared questions to discuss. They present the (preliminary) results of a research project. If possible, a psycho-linguistic experimental design is set up with the whole group. Special attention will go to the students' ability to extract methdological questions from the papers under review.
Students attend classes prepared, i.e. they have read the selected readings (submission of reading notes) and prepared questions to discuss. They present the (preliminary) results of a research project. If possible, a psycho-linguistic experimental design is set up with the whole group. Special attention will go to the students' ability to extract methdological questions from the papers under review.
Evaluation methods
The evaluation is performed through an individual written essay (70% of the grade) verifying the student's ability to resolve problems analogous to the ones presented in class. This project may take the form of a replication study. The research underlying this essay will be the input for an oral presentation in class (20%). 10% of the final grade is earned through the student's active participation in class (timely submission of reading notes and preparatory tasks).
Online resources
Articles available on the Moodle website LCLIG2230
Instructions concerning the written and oral presentation of research reports in linguistics will be made available on Moodle and will be explicitly addressed in class.
Instructions concerning the written and oral presentation of research reports in linguistics will be made available on Moodle and will be explicitly addressed in class.
Bibliography
cf. Moodle
Faculty or entity
ELAL
Programmes / formations proposant cette unité d'enseignement (UE)
Title of the programme
Sigle
Credits
Prerequisites
Learning outcomes
Master [120] in Linguistics
Master [120] in Modern Languages and Literatures : German, Dutch and English
Master [120] in Modern Languages and Literatures : General
Master [120] in Translation
Master [120] in Ancient and Modern Languages and Literatures
Master [120] in French and Romance Languages and Literatures : French as a Foreign Language