Anth 246 Spring 2024: Field Research in Linguistic Anthropology

Praxis I Course: Anth 246 Spring 2024: Field Research in Linguistic Anthropology

Instructor: Amanda Weidman

Community Partner: Science Leadership Academy (SLA) at Beeber

Explore Professor Amanda Weidman’s scholarship, student-led research, and methodology for ethnographic analysis here: https://brynmawranthro.wixsite.com/linguisticanthro/courses-at-bryn-mawr

Course Description:

This course provides hands-on experience in linguistic anthropological methods of data collection and analysis. We will explore various methods employed by linguistic anthropologists, including: ethnographic observation of language use in context; audio-recording of spoken discourse; working with a linguistic corpus; online research methods; conducting linguistic and ethnographic interviews; and learning how to create a transcript to use as the basis for ethnographic analysis. This is a Praxis 1 course. For the praxis component of the course, in the first half of the semester, the class will work with a high school language arts teacher to design a lesson and project for a high school language arts class that incorporates linguistic-anthropological concepts and student-driven research on language. The purpose of this is to move beyond the prescriptivist approach to language commonly taken at the high school level, toward a more descriptive, ethnographic approach that learns from young people’s creativity and agency as speakers of language. In the second half of the semester, the class will work collaboratively on a research project that we develop as a class. Class time will be used to discuss the results of student work, read and discuss relevant literature in linguistic anthropology, synthesize insights that develop from bringing different ethnographic contexts together; and work collaboratively on a way of presenting the findings.