Emerging community-based methodologies call for collaboration with speech community members. Although motivated, community members may lack the tools or training to contribute actively. In response, many linguists deliver training workshops in documentation or preservation, while others train community members to record data. Although workshops address immediate needs, they are limited to what the individual linguist can teach. Speech community linguists may articulate goals beyond what one researcher can undertake. This creates a need for more advanced training than can be provided in the field. This paper uses a case study example to illustrate how the need for advanced training can be met through university-based workshops. It describes...
Current literature on best practices in documentary linguistics outlines priorities for language doc...
In the past decade, as attention to language documentation has increased, so too has discussion of t...
This paper examines several fieldwork situations from a community-based language revitalization proj...
I reflect upon four decades of language community training, treating Watahomigie & Yamamoto (1992) a...
As training in language documentation becomes part of the regular course offerings at many universit...
This paper addresses linguistic technical training of members of the community, under a Participator...
Collaboration is becoming the widely-accepted best practice in linguistic fieldwork (Grenoble 2010),...
We describe our own experience of linguist-community collaboration over the last ten years in our Ch...
Although language documentation calls for linguists, anthropologists, ethnomusicologists, and other ...
Academic linguists working to document and describe minoritized and endangered languages share with ...
Close collaboration between community members and visiting researchers offers mutual benefits, inclu...
The Language Documentation Training Center (LDTC) is a program initiated and run by graduate student...
This conference is called “Strategies for Moving Ahead.” I would like to address the pillars of the ...
This paper presents a model of collaboration, based on a Participatory Action Research (PAR) approac...
Collaboration is increasingly seen as desirable in linguistic field research, but scholarship in the...
Current literature on best practices in documentary linguistics outlines priorities for language doc...
In the past decade, as attention to language documentation has increased, so too has discussion of t...
This paper examines several fieldwork situations from a community-based language revitalization proj...
I reflect upon four decades of language community training, treating Watahomigie & Yamamoto (1992) a...
As training in language documentation becomes part of the regular course offerings at many universit...
This paper addresses linguistic technical training of members of the community, under a Participator...
Collaboration is becoming the widely-accepted best practice in linguistic fieldwork (Grenoble 2010),...
We describe our own experience of linguist-community collaboration over the last ten years in our Ch...
Although language documentation calls for linguists, anthropologists, ethnomusicologists, and other ...
Academic linguists working to document and describe minoritized and endangered languages share with ...
Close collaboration between community members and visiting researchers offers mutual benefits, inclu...
The Language Documentation Training Center (LDTC) is a program initiated and run by graduate student...
This conference is called “Strategies for Moving Ahead.” I would like to address the pillars of the ...
This paper presents a model of collaboration, based on a Participatory Action Research (PAR) approac...
Collaboration is increasingly seen as desirable in linguistic field research, but scholarship in the...
Current literature on best practices in documentary linguistics outlines priorities for language doc...
In the past decade, as attention to language documentation has increased, so too has discussion of t...
This paper examines several fieldwork situations from a community-based language revitalization proj...