Ling 001     Course syllabus, Spring 2005

This page describes the requirements and other details for the Spring 2005 offering of Linguistics 001: Introduction to Linguistics at the University of Pennsylvania. Specific questions should be directed to Prof. Gene Buckley. See also other courses in linguistics. (Note that the organization of this course is somewhat different from the Fall 2004 offering.)

The other basic pages for Ling 001 are the course schedule, which includes links to the online lecture notes and the homework assignments, and the readings, with links to required materials beyond the textbook.


Ling 001 is a general introduction to the scientific study of language structure, history, and use. Topics include notions of "grammar"; written versus spoken (and signed) language; the structure of sounds, words, sentences, and meanings; language in culture and society; language change over time; language acquisition and processing; comparison with non-human communication systems. It is appropriate for any Penn undergraduate interested in language or its use.

The course has no prerequisites, and satisfies the General Requirement in Living World (Sector V). Although accessible to a general audience, Ling 001 is also recommended as an introduction for students considering a major or minor in linguistics.

Meetings

 Lectures
(Buckley)

  Monday & Wednesday 12-1
College Hall, room 200

Recitation 201
(Sundaresan)

  Thursday 3-4
Williams Hall
, room 23

 Recitation 202
(Wallenberg)

  Friday 11-12  
McNeil Building, room 110

 Recitation 203
(Wallenberg)

  Friday 12-1  
McNeil Building, room 103

 Recitation 204
(Mesbur)

  Thursday 3-4  
McNeil Building, room 309

 Recitation 205
(Mesbur)

  Thursday 4-5
McNeil Building, room 309

 Recitation 206
(Sundaresan)

  Friday 12-1
Nursing Education Building, room 119-20

Contact Information
Prof. Gene Buckley

 Office 
Phone 
Office Hours 
E-mail 

606 Williams Hall
215-898-2834
Monday 2-3

T.A. James Mesbur

 Office 
Office Hours 
E-mail 

401–402 Williams Hall
Monday 3-4, Tuesday 11-12
T.A. Sandhya Sundaresan

 Office 
Office Hours 
E-mail 

401–402 Williams Hall
Monday 1-3
T.A. Joel Wallenberg

 Office 
Office Hours 
E-mail 

401–402 Williams Hall
Monday 11-12, Tuesday 4:30-5:30

Readings

There is one required textbook, available at the Penn Bookstore (at the corner of 36th and Walnut Streets). This is also on reserve at Rosengarten; the call number is P106.P476.

The Language Instinct: How the Mind Creates Language, by Steven Pinker, c. 1994, Perennial Classics edition published 2000.

There are also required supplementary readings, available in various forms on the web. Check the readings page every week for updates.

Requirements

You are expected to do the assigned readings and regularly attend lectures and recitations, since these are necessary for you to understand the material tested by written work. Graded assignments fall into three categories.

Homework

There will be frequent homework assignments (distributed most Wednesdays, due the following Wednesday in class); they give practice in applying the principles studied in class and in analyzing particular linguistic phenomena. The assignments will only be available on the web, from the links on the course schedule; but they must be submitted in paper form. They are graded on a scale of 0-10. When possible, the corrected assignments will be returned a day or two later in the recitation section.

There will not be any extra-credit assignments; instead, your lowest homework grade will automatically be dropped at the end of the semester, and will not figure in the calculation of your final grade. If you skip any homework, that grade of zero will be dropped.

Rules for homework submission:

  1. Your assignment is due at the beginning of class on Wednesday, 12 noon. It's your job to leave enough time to deal with any printing or other technical glitches that may arise.
  2. Email submissions are not accepted unless you have prior permission due to illness, school-related travel, or other extenuating circumstances. Make arrangements through your TA, and (upon approval) email the assignment directly to him or her.
  3. Make-up assignments will be provided only for students with proof of a medical or personal emergency.
  4. Assignments that are submitted after the end of class, or that are emailed after 12 noon on Wednesday, will be penalized one point. Assignments that arrive after midnight on Wednesday will be penalized two points. No late assignments will be accepted after 12 noon on Thursday, because that is when the answer sheet will generally be posted.
  5. Always include your recitation section number (201-206) on your assignment so that we can quickly distribute the homeworks to the appropriate TA. Assignments without a section number may be penalized 1 point.

Midterm

An in-class midterm exam on Monday, February 28th, will test knowledge of basic facts and concepts covered in the first half of the course (weeks 1-7). It will take the form of multiple-choice, matching, and short-answer questions requiring you to explain or illustrate a particular concept in linguistics. See the study guide for topics to be covered.

Final

A cumulative final exam will cover material from the entire course, with more emphasis on the second half (since it is not included on the midterm). It is scheduled for Wednesday, May 4th, 8:30 am – 10:30 am. Like the midterm, it will consist of multiple-choice, matching, and short-answer questions.

While attendance and participation are not a formal part of the grade, regular attendance in recitation sections (especially with an active role in discussions) may affect whether your grade is rounded up to the next higher level in borderline cases.

Grading

The final grade for the course will be determined as follows.

Homework assignments
40%
Midterm exam
20%
Final exam
40%

Interim grades will be circulated by email at various points in the semester.