LINGUIST List 14.317

Fri Jan 31 2003

Calls: Syntax&Semantics/LAUD Symposium

Editor for this issue: Karolina Owczarzak <karolinalinguistlist.org>


As a matter of policy, LINGUIST discourages the use of abbreviations or acronyms in conference announcements unless they are explained in the text.

Directory

  1. olivier.bonami, Syntax and Semantics Conference, France
  2. Puetz, LAUD Symposium: Empowerment Through Language, Germany

Message 1: Syntax and Semantics Conference, France

Date: Thu, 30 Jan 2003 14:19:16 +0000
From: olivier.bonami <olivier.bonamiuhb.fr>
Subject: Syntax and Semantics Conference, France


5th Syntax and Semantics Conference in Paris

Short Title: CSSP 03
Location: Paris, France

Date: 02-Oct-2003 - 04-Oct-2003 
Call Deadline: 30-Apr-2003

Web Site: http://www.llf.cnrs.fr/CSSP
Contact Person: Olivier Bonami
Meeting Email: cssp01linguist.jussieu.fr
Linguistic Subfield(s): General Linguistics 

Meeting Description: 

The fifth Syntax and Semantics Conference in Paris (CSSP 03) will take
place in Paris 7 University, on October 2-4, 2003. The Conference
welcomes papers combining empirical inquiry and formal
explicitness. It aims at favouring comparisons between diverse formal
theories of syntax and semantics. The domains of inquiry are syntax,
semantics, and the syntax-semantics interface.



CALL FOR PAPERS
 

THEMATIC SESSION The Syntax and Semantics of Number

INVITED SPEAKERS Nirit Kadmon (Tel Aviv University)
 Manfred Krifka (Humboldt University -- Berlin)
 Robert Levine (Ohio State University)
 Mark Steedman (Edinburgh University)
 Anne Zribi-Hertz (Paris 8 University)

SUBMISSION DEADLINE April 30, 2003
 

CSSP conferences combine a general session and a thematic session. The
theme for the CSSP 03 thematic session is the syntax and semantics of
Number.

Prospective speakers are invited to submit an abstract, no more than
two page long (including figures and references), written in French or
English. Abstracts should be sent by e-mail (plain ASCII, rtf, ps or
pdf) before April 30 to:

cssp01linguist.jussieu.fr 

Authors who are not able to send an electronic version should send two
hard copies (one anonymous, one non-anonymous) of the abstract to:

Colloque de Syntaxe et Semantique a Paris - Universite Paris 7 - UFRL,
Case 7003 - 2 Place Jussieu - 75251 Paris-Cedex 05 - France
 
 
For more information: 
Web site: http://www.llf.cnrs.fr/CSSP 
E-mail: cssp01linguist.jussieu.fr 
 
ORGANIZING COMMITTEE: Claire Beyssade (CNRS-J. Nicod), Olivier Bonami
(Chair, Rennes 2), Patricia Cabredo Hofherr (CNRS-Paris 8), Daniele
Godard (CNRS-Paris 7)

SCIENTIFIC COMMITTEE: Claire Beyssade (CNRS-J. Nicod), Olivier Bonami
(Rennes 2), Patricia Cabredo Hofherr (CNRS-Paris 8), Francis Corblin
(Paris 4), Daniele Godard (CNRS-Paris 7), Jean-Marie Marandin
(CNRS-Paris 7)
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Message 2: LAUD Symposium: Empowerment Through Language, Germany

Date: Thu, 30 Jan 2003 14:57:13 +0000
From: Puetz <Puetzuni-landau.de>
Subject: LAUD Symposium: Empowerment Through Language, Germany



30th International LAUD Symposium: Empowerment Through Language

Location: Landau i.d. Pfalz, Germany

Date: 19-Apr-2004 - 22-Apr-2004 
Call Deadline: 15-Apr-2003

Contact Person: Martin Puetz
Meeting Email: Puetzuni-landau.de
Linguistic Subfield(s): Sociolinguistics 

Meeting Description: 

Main Plenary Speaker
Joshua Fishman
Yeshiva University, New York
Stanford University, CA

Topic
What Exactly is Power in Sociolinguistics?

Other plenary speakers:

Neville Alexander (Cape Town, South Africa)
Ulrich Ammon (Duisburg, Germany)
Herman Batibo (Gaborone, Botswana)
Michael Clyne (Melbourne, Australia)
John Edwards (Antigonish, Canada)
Ali Mazrui (New York, USA)
Jiri Neustupny (Tokyo, Japan)
Bernard Spolsky (Tel Aviv, Israel)
Guadalupe Valdés (Stanford, USA)
Albert Weideman (Pretoria, South Africa)



Masses of people in the world are powerless because of language. Can
language also become an instrument for the empowerment of those
masses? And if so, how?

The symposium intends to discuss the (A) sociolinguistic situation of
large communities that are marginalised as a result of language, the
(B) socio-political factors perpetuating their exclusion from access
to knowledge and skills, the (C) pedagogical constraints under which
teachers work in the school systems imposed on them, and the (D)
didactic strategies that could reverse this process of individual and
collective minorization.

(A) Millions of children on all continents do not get instruction in
their first language. Thus there is a dramatic sociolinguistic
discontinuity between their pre-school cognitive categories and the
more abstract re-categorisation which the primary school normally
effectuates. The discontinuity follows from the clash between the
intuitive categories children have built up via their mother tongue
and those of the foreign language they are supposed to use both in
rethinking the intuitive categories built up from their experiences of
the world, and in transforming these into a network of more abstract
cognitive relations. This situation occurs with many, if not most,
children of immigrants in Europe, with Latinos in the U.S.A., with
most children learning via exocentric languages in Africa, with native
Americans on the American continent or Aborigines in Australia, and
with many similar victims of Western expansion all over the world.

(B) For the purposes of the symposium, we will focus on how the
challenge of empowering people through language normally comes to a
head in instructional arrangements. It is at this socio-political
juncture that the demands of, inter alia, parents and officialdom
force themselves upon those teachers and language instructors who are,
in turn, expected to make good the expectations of parents and the
body politic. Often, those who have political power impose an
inefficient language policy, which creates among parents the false
image that the exocentric language, be it English or French, is the
lever for upward social mobility for their children. Apparently,
teachers and language instructors themselves may have very little
control over a number of conditions that have created barriers for
their learners before they even arrive in their classes.

(C) One may look from several different angles at the pedagogical
problems that teachers and learners face when they are expected to
teach and learn in another language in such a context. The first
parameter is that teachers have to act against the wishes of parents
who, even if there is a choice, prefer a high status language (such as
English) for their children to learn than a low status language (often
the first language of their children). Secondly, especially in higher
grades, language teachers reap the doubtful rewards of learners who
have become enliterated in less than ideal ways. Thirdly, given the
lack of suitable and appropriate reading materials complementing
classroom learning, and, fourthly, given organisational arrangements
that further obstruct language learning, one indeed has a recipe for
low levels of language proficiency among learners. As regards the
latter, scholars have over the last decade begun to indicate that
there are discourse practices at institutions of learning that
socially construct illiteracy.

(D) Seen from a didactic point of view, how can and do teachers
respond to these challenges? The symposium cannot solve institutional
problems, but it can try to make a scientifically sound diagnosis of
the problems, and hopefully suggest remedies and ways of creating
conditions that are conducive to learning. It can also try to see what
the actors who are most likely to contribute to empowerment can
do. These are not the parents or government officials, but the
insiders, that is, both learners and teachers. Only they can bring
about changes within what is often a negative framework and a set of
conditions that is detrimental to learning and teaching.

Where do teachers turn for solutions? Post-modernist critiques of
methods have played an important part in making many language teachers
cynical about the effectiveness of selecting one method instead of
another. Within that component of applied linguistics that concerns
itself with language teaching, many are suggesting that it is probably
more useful to look at the strategies that language learners employ,
and even to teach good strategies consciously. There is indeed a new
wave of consciousness training or awareness raising. It might well be
that our own teaching strategies are at odds with learners�Euro(tm)
beliefs about language learning, and teachers have to deal with that
as well. Finally, there is a renewed interest in the beliefs that
teachers themselves hold with respect to language learning, beliefs
that are expressed in their own teaching style. The symposium will
therefore also concern itself with some of the latest developments in
how teachers meet the challenges of teaching language to those
learning languages or of teaching via languages other than their own
first language.


Papers that contribute to one of these themes are invited: 

Initial applications and submissions should reach the organisers
before April 15, 2003, in the form of an abstract of about 500 words,
and when accepted, a first draft version should be submitted by
November 1, 2003, which will be anonymously reviewed and, if accepted,
pre-published by LAUD and distributed to all participants before April
2004.

Please state for which of the 4 sections of the symposium your
contribution is intended:

A. Sociolinguistic aspects: language and thought; 1st, 2nd and foreign
languages.
B. Sociopolitical frame: attitudes, language policies, linguistic
imperialism.
C. Pedagogical problems: status, literacy level, materials,
demotivating context
D. Didactic solutions: strategies, styles and methods in learning and
teaching, conscious learning, awareness raising in learners and
teachers.



Please send an email version of your abstract to the attention of:

Martin Puetz
Puetzuni-landau.de

with copies to

Holger Schmitt
schmitthuni-landau.de
and
Rene Dirven
Rene.Dirvenpandora.be
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