ebulletin: May 2010

The monthly Subject Centre e-bulletin gives information on events, news items and newly available resources. Register if you would like to receive notification of future e-bulletins via email.

General interest

event
The LOC tool for teachers: authoring your own online learning materialsClick to expand arrow

Date: 21 June, 2010
Location: Language Lab 0/11, Craiglockhart Campus, Edinburgh Napier University
Event type: Workshop

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event
Supporting students’ learning outside the classroom: promoting independence and autonomy in LLAS disciplinesClick to expand arrow

Date: 27 May, 2010
Location: Leeds Metropolitan University, Rose Bowl
Event type: Conference

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news
Show your support for Subject CentresClick to expand arrow
As colleagues will know, there is currently a lively debate about the future shape of the HE Academy and the role of the Subject Centres within it.

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event
Languages for the 21st century: training, impact and influenceClick to expand arrow

Date: 1 September, 2010 - 2 September, 2010
Location: The Edge, University of Sheffield
Event type: Conference

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Languages

event
Assessment of the year abroad in modern language degreesClick to expand arrow

Date: 25 June, 2010 - 26 June, 2010
Location: University of Bath
Event type: Conference (supported by the LLAS guest speaker fund)

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event
Languages in higher education 2010: raising the standard for languagesClick to expand arrow

Date: 1 July, 2010 - 2 July, 2010
Location: Etc venues, London, SE1 1GA
Event type: Conference

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event
Planning for differentiation - regional networking event for teachers of languages to adultsClick to expand arrow

Date: 12 June, 2010
Location: York St John University, York
Event type: Seminar (supported by the LLAS guest speaker fund)

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news
Survey of 'non-specialist' language learnersClick to expand arrow

LLAS with support from UCML are carrying out a survey on the motivations of 'non-specialists' studying languages in UK higher education and the languages and types of study on offer. The survey has been funded by the Department of Business, Innovation and Skills (BIS).

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Linguistics

event
Teaching field linguistics: language variation and non-standard varieties in fieldworkClick to expand arrow

Date: 20 May, 2010
Location: Building 65 Mansfield Cooper (Room 2.02), The University of Manchester
Event type: Seminar

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Area Studies

event
Perspectives on Islamic Studies in higher educationClick to expand arrow

Date: 25 May, 2010 - 26 May, 2010
Location: Aston Business School, Birmingham
Event type: Conference

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news
Funding for Islamic Studies (deadline 21 May 2010)Click to expand arrow
The Islamic Studies Network invites applications for small project funding to enable the further development of good practice in teaching and learning within Islamic Studies and to facilitate wider sharing across the UK.

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Other news

news
Report on the first UK Linguistics OlympiadClick to expand arrow

Dear All,

I'm happy to report (on behalf of the UKLO committee) that the UK's first ever Linguistics Olympiad went even better than we expected. It's all over except the international competition in July, so here's how the UK event went. As you'll understand, we've been feeling our way this year, so our initial plans had to be adapted quite a bit. You'll find plenty of details on our website - we're now proud owners of the domain uklo.org, so you'll find us at www.uklo.org.

The hardest part of running an olympiad is producing the test material, so we're heavily dependent on a consortium of English-speaking Linguistics Olympiads (ELCLO) which was set up last year on the back of the North American Computational Linguistics Olympiad (NACLO). This has been a real godsend, because some members of the consortium are brilliant at this kind of thing. Maybe we'll eventually learn to do it ourselves but for the time being we depend on them.

We structured the competition in two rounds. Round 1 was taken in schools, so we supplied the test material and schools scheduled and invigilated the tests. We distinguished two levels: Foundation and Advanced. The two levels shared three questions, with two others unique to each level. Foundation papers were marked by teachers (using answers provided by us), with the option of forwarding papers and marks to us for moderation and recording. But we marked the Advanced papers. On the basis of the Advanced test we selected twelve candidates for Round 2, which was a two-day residential event hosted by Sheffield University's School of English Literature, Language and Linguistics. The event included a day's tuition as well as a three-hour test. The standard of these candidates was so high that we decided to select not one but two teams for the international event. The winners' names are on the UKLO website.

The most encouraging thing for us was the enthusiasm in the schools. Just over 600 pupils took part in round 1, of whom 200 took the Foundation level; and those 200 included some pupils as young as 11! The age-distribution can be seen in a graph on the UK Linguistics Olympiad website. This means that 600 school children have not only heard of linguistics, but enjoyed doing some analysis of language structure. The website also includes some feedback from teachers and we're hoping eventually to add comments from pupils (but not now - they're all too busy with exams).

With best wishes,

Dick Hudson

Prof Richard Hudson, FBA

www.phon.ucl.ac.uk/home/dick/home.htm