From aliyah.morgenstern at gmail.com Sun Nov 1 23:10:30 2009 From: aliyah.morgenstern at gmail.com (Aliyah MORGENSTERN) Date: Mon, 2 Nov 2009 00:10:30 +0100 Subject: Workshop in Cambridge UK Message-ID: Dear Info Childes, We are pleased to announce a workshop on language acquisition intitled MULTIMODAL APPROACHES TO LANGUAGE ACQUISITION 26-28 November 2009, RCEAL, Cambridge UK Attendance is FREE. Please circulate the information. DESCRIPTION The study of language acquisition is of paramount importance for linguistics, psychology, cognitive science, communication, etc. Children produce forms that look or sound like sketches of adult forms. Those productions cannot be analyzed without special attention to gestures, gaze, mimics as well as the context, the positioning of interlocutors in space, and the specificity of discourse objects. The child language community shares tools and data through the Internet (especially, the childes database) that can be used as a basis for multimodal, multilingual and inter-disciplinary research. PROGRAMME The workshop will be organized over four half days, focusing on different aspects of language acquisition. Thursday 26 November (afternoon, room GR06/07) — Corpus, coding and multimodality • 2-3pm: Corpus, coding and metadata (Christophe Parisse, Modyco- Inserm, CNRS-U. Paris Ouest Nanterre) • 3-4pm: Pointing gesture and multimodality (Emmanuelle Mathiot, STL, UMR-CNRS 8163 and Univ. Lille 3; Aliyah Morgenstern, Univ. Sorbonne Nouvelle; Marie Leroy, CNRS-MoDyCo and Univ. Paris-Descartes) • 4-4:30pm: Coffee break • 4:30-5:30pm: Discussion Friday 27 November (morning, room GR05) — Child Language Argumentation • 9:30-10:30am: Argumentation as a motive for syntax development: a case study of the development of "parce que" in child language (Martine Sekali, Univ. Paris Ouest Nanterre) • 10:30-11am: Coffee break • 11:00-12:00am: From repairs to self-repairs in adult-child interactions (Marie Leroy, Univ. Paris Descartes; Stéphanie Caet, Univ. Sorbonne Nouvelle; Aliyah Morgenstern, Univ. Sorbonne Nouvelle) • 12-12:30am: Discussion Friday 27 November (afternoon, room GR05) — Contrastive studies • 2-3pm: Over-informative children: Production/comprehension asymmetry, or tolerance to pragmatic violations? (Cat Davies, Univ. of Cambridge) • 3:4pm: Acquiring tense and aspect in Tamil (Dr. Lavanya Sankaran, Univ. of London, Queen Mary) • 4-4:30pm: Coffee break • 4:30-5:30pm: Comparing processes in child L1 and child and adult L2 acquisition (Henriette Hendriks and Helen Engemann, Univ. of Cambridge). Saturday 28 November (morning, room GR06/07) — Reformulations • 10:11am: The acquisition and development of argumentative skills in children from 4-18: mechanisms underlying deductive and probabilistic reasoning (Jodi Tommerdahl, University of Birmingham) • 11:12am: General discussion Large periods of time will be devoted to discussion, with panelists introducing comments after paper presentation. Workshop Chairs • Henriette Hendriks (RCEAL, University of Cambridge, UK) • Aliyah Morgenstern (Univ. Sorbonne Nouvelle, France) • Thierry Poibeau (CNRS and Université Paris 13, France) The workshop will be held on the ground floor (rooms GR05, GR06 and GR07) of the Research Centre for English and Applied Linguistics 9 West Road, Cambridge, UK (Faculty of English). More information: http://www-lipn.univ-paris13.fr/~poibeau/acquisition.html or aliyah.morgenstern at gmail.com Aliyah MORGENSTERN Professeur de linguistique Université Sorbonne Nouvelle - Paris 3 Institut du Monde Anglophone 5 rue de l'Ecole de Médecine 75006 Paris --~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~ You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Info-CHILDES" group. To post to this group, send email to info-childes at googlegroups.com To unsubscribe from this group, send email to info-childes+unsubscribe at googlegroups.com For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/info-childes?hl=en -~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~--- From meredithrowe at yahoo.com Tue Nov 3 19:42:18 2009 From: meredithrowe at yahoo.com (Rowe, Meredith) Date: Tue, 3 Nov 2009 11:42:18 -0800 Subject: Research Assistant/Lab Manager Position at the University of Maryland, College Park Message-ID: Research Assistant – University of Maryland, College Park I am currently looking for a full-time Research Assistant/Lab Manager for my Language Development and Parenting Laboratory in the Department of Human Development at the University of Maryland, College Park. The Research Assistant’s duties will include: transcribing videos of parent-child interaction, developing and applying coding schemes to the transcripts, data entry, literature searches and reviews on related topics, assisting with IRB protocols, developing stimuli, and occasional data collection with toddlers and preschoolers. In addition, the Research Assistant will help to train and manage undergraduates working in the laboratory on various projects. Qualifications: The candidate must have a bachelor’s degree with a related major (psychology, human development, speech and hearing sciences, education, or linguistics). The position would be ideal for someone who wishes to go to on to graduate school but first desires some valuable research experience. The ideal candidate will have experience with the Child Language Data Exchange System (CHILDES); will have some research experience and experience with young children; and will be organized and independent and willing to make an 18 month (minimum) commitment to the position. This is a full-time job with excellent benefits and an anticipated start date in January 2010. To Apply: Interested applicants should send via email a cover letter detailing experience, a CV, and telephone numbers and e-mail addresses of two to three professional references to Dr. Meredith Rowe at mrowe at umd.edu. Review of applications begins immediately, but the search will remain open until the position is filled. The University of Maryland is an Equal Employment Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. Women and Minorities are encouraged to Apply. --~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~ You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Info-CHILDES" group. To post to this group, send email to info-childes at googlegroups.com To unsubscribe from this group, send email to info-childes+unsubscribe at googlegroups.com For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/info-childes?hl=en -~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~--- From tomasello at eva.mpg.de Wed Nov 4 08:55:07 2009 From: tomasello at eva.mpg.de (Michael Tomasello) Date: Wed, 4 Nov 2009 09:55:07 +0100 Subject: Eleanor Maccoby Book Award Message-ID: Nominations are invited for the 2010 Eleanor Maccoby Book Award given by the APA Division 7 (Developmental). The award is made to the author or authors (not editor or editors) of a book that has had or promises to have a profound effect on the field of developmental psychology. Books published in 2008 and 2009 are eligible for this year’s award. Nominations should be sent to the chair of the Book Award Committee, Michael Tomasello (tomasello at eva.mpg.de), and must include: the author’s name and address, the name of the book, publication date, publisher’s name and address, and a brief description of the book’s content and contribution to the field. Self nominations are welcome. Nominations must be received by December 31, 2009. --~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~ You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Info-CHILDES" group. To post to this group, send email to info-childes at googlegroups.com To unsubscribe from this group, send email to info-childes+unsubscribe at googlegroups.com For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/info-childes?hl=en -~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~--- From monkeybusiness26 at GMAIL.COM Fri Nov 13 10:43:15 2009 From: monkeybusiness26 at GMAIL.COM (antje Van Oosten) Date: Fri, 13 Nov 2009 10:43:15 +0000 Subject: Digitial video cameras with good audio recordings In-Reply-To: <7AB6195D91E1CC4FADEBDEED07196D3528FA8A9933@ILS132.uopnet.plymouth.ac.uk> Message-ID: Hi Kirsten, I can give you quite some information on this. It will be sent to you by Mettje Hunneman. Hope it's of any use. All the best, Antje van Oosten On Fri, Nov 13, 2009 at 7:53 AM, Kirsten Abbot-Smith < kirsten.abbot-smith at plymouth.ac.uk> wrote: > Is anyone up-to-date on whether digital video cameras which record onto DVD > or even better straight onto some kind of memory stick / hard drive are now > also capable of the kind of quality of audio recording which we need as > child language researchers? I am loath to purchase yet another camera which > records onto mini video cassettes.... > > I had a quick look and many of these cameras do not seem to have an > external mic-in. > > Best, > Kirsten > ________________________________________ > From: info-childes group [noreply at googlegroups.com] > Sent: 05 August 2009 09:04 > To: info-childes digest subscribers > Subject: info-childes - 2 new messages in 2 topics - digest > > Info-CHILDES > http://groups.google.com/group/info-childes?hl=en > > info-childes at googlegroups.com > > Today's topics: > > * Pace of early language development - 1 messages, 1 author > http://groups.google.com/group/info-childes/t/d7f1b049cb009b19?hl=en > * Call for papers: Child Language Seminar, City University London, June > 24-25 > 2010 - 1 messages, 1 author > http://groups.google.com/group/info-childes/t/1b12a0b7b4d8b76c?hl=en > > > ============================================================================== > TOPIC: Pace of early language development > http://groups.google.com/group/info-childes/t/d7f1b049cb009b19?hl=en > > ============================================================================== > > == 1 of 1 == > Date: Mon, Aug 3 2009 2:34 pm > From: Margaret Fleck > > > > Ok, so then the generational split is between parents and caregivers in > their twenties (or even late teens) and academics/politicians with enough > experience to have strong opinions about long-term trends, which would make > them at least 40? > > Margaret Fleck > > --- On Mon, 8/3/09, Brian MacWhinney wrote: > > From: Brian MacWhinney > Subject: Re: Pace of early language development > To: info-childes at googlegroups.com > Date: Monday, August 3, 2009, 9:19 AM > > Matthew, > Actually, my analysis was based on this same assumption. The Doppler > effect should be clearest between adults and young teens. Labov also > emphasizes the role of women in their twenties, alongside young male teens, > but the general point is that young people in various social configurations > are the chief instigators of new sound patterns, grammaticalizations, > neologisms, and the rest. Toddlers are certainly not the sources. Although > younger children not innovators in this way, they can play another role in > terms of implementing cue hierarchy reconfiguration and leveling. > Regarding the famous working class/middle class split in the UK and Basil > Bernstein's ideas about a restricted code, you may find this analysis of UK > preschools interesting, if only historically: > MacWhinney, B., & Osser, H. (1977). Verbal planning functions in children's > speech. Child Development, 48, 978-985. > Of course that was all before the large expansion of immigrant populations > in the UK. When one factors in the role of having additional L1 sources, > then the Linguistic Special Relativity effect would be enhanced. Please > don't ask me to do the math. > -- Brian > On Aug 3, 2009, at 6:28 AM, Matthew Saxton wrote: > I think Brian’s suggestion is ingenious. However, to my knowledge, language > change is especially driven by young people in the teenage years – with the > introduction of new meanings, terms and phrases – rather than by toddlers. > The perception of a linguistic decline over successive generations is > sometimes driven by political considerations. A recent U.K. example is the > Bercow Review (by the same John Bercow who is now Speaker of the House of > Commons). Without citing any specific sources, his report suggests that: > Approximately 50% of children in some socio-economically disadvantaged > populations have speech and language skills that are significantly lower > than those of other children of the same age. The implication is that a > steep decline is in train within the U.K., ascribable to socioeconomic > factors. One such factor is whether or not English is the child’s first > language. It has become increasingly common for very young children, who > have had little exposure to English, to be placed in English-language > Nursery settings. Such children will naturally depress average scores on > standardised language tests, especially in the early stages of their > exposure to English. But one could not argue from such data that the > language learning capacities of children had declined in any way. Regards, > Matthew Saxton. > ********************************************************************************************************* > Department of Psychology and Human Development,Institute of > Education,University of London,25 Woburn Square,London,WC1H 0AA. Tel: > 020-7612-6509Fax: 020-7612-6304 http://www.ioe.ac.uk > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > ============================================================================== > TOPIC: Call for papers: Child Language Seminar, City University London, > June > 24-25 2010 > http://groups.google.com/group/info-childes/t/1b12a0b7b4d8b76c?hl=en > > ============================================================================== > > == 1 of 1 == > Date: Tues, Aug 4 2009 1:27 am > From: Chloe > > > Dear Info-CHILDES members, > > The next Child Language Seminar will be held at City University > London, June 24-25 2010 (with registration and wine reception on the > evening of June 23). Please see our webpage for further details, > http://www.city.ac.uk/lcs/childlanguageseminar.html. These details > will be updated regularly. Meanwhile, the current details are > duplicated below: > > > > The Child Language Seminar (CLS) was first held in 1977. It is an > interdisciplinary conference attracting a diverse audience of, among > others, psychologists, linguists and speech and language therapists, > and provides a forum for research on first and second language > acquisition in typically and atypically developing children. > > > > Please follow the links below for further information. If you can't > find what you need, please e-mail Chloe Marshall at Chloe.Marshall. > 1 at city.ac.uk. > > > > Organising committee / Programme / Keynote speakers / Call for > papers / Key dates / Registration / Venue / Accommodation / > Travel > > > > Organising committee: > Nicola Botting, Shula Chiat and Chloe Marshall (co-chairs) > Lucy Dipper > Barbara Dodd > Andrea Dohmen > Natalie Hasson > Ros Herman > Hannah Hockey > Rachael Anne Knight > Abigail Levin > Wolfgang Mann > Gary Morgan > Lucy Myers > Michele Pettinato > Kamila Polisenska > Belinda Seeff-Gabriel > David Williams > Anne Zimmer-Stahl > > > Programme: > More details will follow soon... > > > > Keynote speakers: > Our keynote speakers will be: > > Professor Sue Gathercole (University of York) - "Working memory, > language and classroom learning" > Dr Ann Senghas (Barnard College of Columbia University, New York) - > "From gestures to grammar - How learners created Nicaraguan Sign > Language" > Dr Simon Fisher (Wellcome Trust Centre for Human Genetics at the > University of Oxford) - "Building bridges between genes, brains and > language" > There will also be an invited symposium on autism and language led by > Dr David Williams (City University London). > More details will follow soon... > > > > Call for papers: > Proposals are invited for papers and posters related to child language > acquisition and disorders. Proposals will be considered on any aspect > of children’s first or subsequent language development (e.g., grammar, > phonology, lexicon, pragmatics, discourse, literacy, bilingualism, > sign language, psycholinguistic processing) or on any aspect relating > to children with language difficulties (e.g., description, assessment, > remediation). The CLS is a peer-reviewed research conference and all > proposals will be reviewed blindly by members of the organising > committee. > > Presentation format > Proposals should indicate whether an oral presentation or poster is > preferred. The programme committee views both formats as having equal > value but reserves the right to switch formats to suit the programme. > Presenters will be notified about the final format of their > presentation at the time their proposal is accepted. > > Oral presentations will last 20 mins, plus 10 mins for discussion > Posters may be viewed all day, with a wine reception at which authors > will be present in the evening > Proposal format > Proposals must be written in English and include the following: > > Cover Page: > > Title of presentation > Authors’ names and affiliations > Name, address, telephone number and email address of contact person > Preferred presentation format (oral presentation or poster) > > > Abstract: > > Title of presentation > Summary of research undertaken (300 words maximum, single spaced) > Do not include authors’ names > Submitting proposals > Proposals must be composed in either MS Word or RTF format with paper > size set to A4 and submitted as an attachment to an email (not as part > of the mail body of the email) to: Chloe.Marshall.1 at city.ac.uk > > > > > Key dates: > Submission of abstracts: 31 December 2009 > > Notification of acceptance/rejection: 31 January 2010 > > Registration open: 1 February 2010 > > Programme published on website: 1 April 2010 > > Early registration deadline (reduced fee): 1 May 2010 > > Registration and wine reception: 23 June 2010 > > CLS meeting: 24-25 June 2010, with conference dinner 24 June > > > > Registration > We are currently working out the costings for the conference, and will > endeavour to keep the registration fee as low as possible, with a > discount for students. As a guide, when the CLS was last held > (University of Reading, 2007), the fees were £185 for early > registration (and only £135 for students). We do not envisage the fees > being higher than that this time round, although we will have to > charge separately for the conference dinner. > > > > Venue > The CLS will be held at City University London. Founded in 1894 as the > Northampton Institute on its present site and awarded full university > status in 1966, City University London has special links with the City > of London and plays an active role in the business and professional > life of the capital. We pride ourselves on our close contacts with the > leading professional institutions and with business and industry, both > at home and abroad. Our success is demonstrated by our graduate > employment record, which is one of the best in the country. We are > also the sixth most popular university in the UK for student > applications. Our reputation extends worldwide: of almost 10,000 City > University London students, more than 40 per cent are international, > the majority of these from outside the European Union. > > The Department of Language and Communication Science is a member of > the School of Community and Health Sciences. We have been providing > education to Speech and Language Therapists for over 50 years. We > developed from the London Hospital School of Speech Therapy, founded > by Winifred Kingdon Ward in 1942. In 1982 we linked with City > University London, becoming a full Department in 1986. > > We are the largest teaching, research and clinical department in the > UK, providing courses leading both to registration as a practitioner > in speech and language therapy and post-registration opportunities for > a range of professionals working in communication disability. > > We are a dynamic and forward-thinking department in which > contributions to professional developments, teaching and learning, > research and clinical application are flourishing. > > The Department of Language and Communication Science is located in the > Social Science Building, part of the main university campus in > Northampton Square. You can find more information about the Department > here, and maps of City University London here. > > > > Accommodation > We are asking delegates to kindly book their own conference > accommodation, as there are lots of hotels near to City University > London. Some that we recommend are: > > Harlingford Hotel > > Hilton Hotel Islington > > Holiday Inn Kings Cross > > Jurys Inn Islington > > Thistle Hotel Barbican > > Travelodge Kings Cross > > > > Travel > City University London is located only 15 minutes by foot from St > Pancras International, making us easily accessible to delegates who > wish to arrive by Eurostar. > > If you prefer to fly, trains from Luton Airport and Gatwick Airport > run direct to St Pancras International. The nearest tube stations to > City University London are Angel, on the Northern Line, and > Farringdon, on the Circle/Hammersmith & City/Metropolitan lines. If > you arrive at Stansted Airport there's a train to Liverpool Street > Station which is a quick tube journey away from Farringdon, and if you > come in to Heathrow Airport the tube journey is under an hour to Kings > Cross, which is then one stop away from Angel. You can get further > details on travelling in London here. > > You can find all sorts of useful travel information at > http://www.travelinlondon.org/. > > > We look forward to seeing you at CLS in 2010! > > > > > > ============================================================================== > > You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups > "Info-CHILDES" > group. > > To post to this group, send email to info-childes at googlegroups.com or > visit http://groups.google.com/group/info-childes?hl=en > > To unsubscribe from this group, send email to > info-childes+unsubscribe at googlegroups.com > > To change the way you get mail from this group, visit: > http://groups.google.com/group/info-childes/subscribe?hl=en > > To report abuse, send email explaining the problem to > abuse at googlegroups.com > > > ============================================================================== > Google Groups: http://groups.google.com/?hl=en > > -- > > You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups > "Info-CHILDES" group. > To post to this group, send email to info-childes at googlegroups.com. > For more options, visit this group at > http://groups.google.com/group/info-childes?hl=. > > > -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Info-CHILDES" group. To post to this group, send email to info-childes at googlegroups.com. For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/info-childes?hl=. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From macw at CMU.EDU Fri Nov 13 17:00:13 2009 From: macw at CMU.EDU (Brian MacWhinney) Date: Fri, 13 Nov 2009 12:00:13 -0500 Subject: Digitial video cameras with good audio recordings In-Reply-To: Message-ID: Yes, this model is the next step down from the Canon HFS100 that we are recommending on the TalkBank page at http://talkbank.org/dv. In France they call this LEGRIA HF200. In the States, it is VIXIA HF200. Both the HFS100 and the HF200 have external mike input so you can use the JuicedLink and also have manual volume control. -- Brian MacWhinney On Nov 13, 2009, at 6:26 AM, Christophe Parisse wrote: > http://www.canon.fr/For_Home/Product_Finder/Camcorders/High_Definition_HD/LE > GRIA_HF_200/index.asp -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Info-CHILDES" group. To post to this group, send email to info-childes at googlegroups.com. For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/info-childes?hl=. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From aliyah.morgenstern at gmail.com Sun Nov 1 23:10:30 2009 From: aliyah.morgenstern at gmail.com (Aliyah MORGENSTERN) Date: Mon, 2 Nov 2009 00:10:30 +0100 Subject: Workshop in Cambridge UK Message-ID: Dear Info Childes, We are pleased to announce a workshop on language acquisition intitled MULTIMODAL APPROACHES TO LANGUAGE ACQUISITION 26-28 November 2009, RCEAL, Cambridge UK Attendance is FREE. Please circulate the information. DESCRIPTION The study of language acquisition is of paramount importance for linguistics, psychology, cognitive science, communication, etc. Children produce forms that look or sound like sketches of adult forms. Those productions cannot be analyzed without special attention to gestures, gaze, mimics as well as the context, the positioning of interlocutors in space, and the specificity of discourse objects. The child language community shares tools and data through the Internet (especially, the childes database) that can be used as a basis for multimodal, multilingual and inter-disciplinary research. PROGRAMME The workshop will be organized over four half days, focusing on different aspects of language acquisition. Thursday 26 November (afternoon, room GR06/07) ? Corpus, coding and multimodality ? 2-3pm: Corpus, coding and metadata (Christophe Parisse, Modyco- Inserm, CNRS-U. Paris Ouest Nanterre) ? 3-4pm: Pointing gesture and multimodality (Emmanuelle Mathiot, STL, UMR-CNRS 8163 and Univ. Lille 3; Aliyah Morgenstern, Univ. Sorbonne Nouvelle; Marie Leroy, CNRS-MoDyCo and Univ. Paris-Descartes) ? 4-4:30pm: Coffee break ? 4:30-5:30pm: Discussion Friday 27 November (morning, room GR05) ? Child Language Argumentation ? 9:30-10:30am: Argumentation as a motive for syntax development: a case study of the development of "parce que" in child language (Martine Sekali, Univ. Paris Ouest Nanterre) ? 10:30-11am: Coffee break ? 11:00-12:00am: From repairs to self-repairs in adult-child interactions (Marie Leroy, Univ. Paris Descartes; St?phanie Caet, Univ. Sorbonne Nouvelle; Aliyah Morgenstern, Univ. Sorbonne Nouvelle) ? 12-12:30am: Discussion Friday 27 November (afternoon, room GR05) ? Contrastive studies ? 2-3pm: Over-informative children: Production/comprehension asymmetry, or tolerance to pragmatic violations? (Cat Davies, Univ. of Cambridge) ? 3:4pm: Acquiring tense and aspect in Tamil (Dr. Lavanya Sankaran, Univ. of London, Queen Mary) ? 4-4:30pm: Coffee break ? 4:30-5:30pm: Comparing processes in child L1 and child and adult L2 acquisition (Henriette Hendriks and Helen Engemann, Univ. of Cambridge). Saturday 28 November (morning, room GR06/07) ? Reformulations ? 10:11am: The acquisition and development of argumentative skills in children from 4-18: mechanisms underlying deductive and probabilistic reasoning (Jodi Tommerdahl, University of Birmingham) ? 11:12am: General discussion Large periods of time will be devoted to discussion, with panelists introducing comments after paper presentation. Workshop Chairs ? Henriette Hendriks (RCEAL, University of Cambridge, UK) ? Aliyah Morgenstern (Univ. Sorbonne Nouvelle, France) ? Thierry Poibeau (CNRS and Universit? Paris 13, France) The workshop will be held on the ground floor (rooms GR05, GR06 and GR07) of the Research Centre for English and Applied Linguistics 9 West Road, Cambridge, UK (Faculty of English). More information: http://www-lipn.univ-paris13.fr/~poibeau/acquisition.html or aliyah.morgenstern at gmail.com Aliyah MORGENSTERN Professeur de linguistique Universit? Sorbonne Nouvelle - Paris 3 Institut du Monde Anglophone 5 rue de l'Ecole de M?decine 75006 Paris --~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~ You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Info-CHILDES" group. To post to this group, send email to info-childes at googlegroups.com To unsubscribe from this group, send email to info-childes+unsubscribe at googlegroups.com For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/info-childes?hl=en -~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~--- From meredithrowe at yahoo.com Tue Nov 3 19:42:18 2009 From: meredithrowe at yahoo.com (Rowe, Meredith) Date: Tue, 3 Nov 2009 11:42:18 -0800 Subject: Research Assistant/Lab Manager Position at the University of Maryland, College Park Message-ID: Research Assistant ? University of Maryland, College Park I am currently looking for a full-time Research Assistant/Lab Manager for my Language Development and Parenting Laboratory in the Department of Human Development at the University of Maryland, College Park. The Research Assistant?s duties will include: transcribing videos of parent-child interaction, developing and applying coding schemes to the transcripts, data entry, literature searches and reviews on related topics, assisting with IRB protocols, developing stimuli, and occasional data collection with toddlers and preschoolers. In addition, the Research Assistant will help to train and manage undergraduates working in the laboratory on various projects. Qualifications: The candidate must have a bachelor?s degree with a related major (psychology, human development, speech and hearing sciences, education, or linguistics). The position would be ideal for someone who wishes to go to on to graduate school but first desires some valuable research experience. The ideal candidate will have experience with the Child Language Data Exchange System (CHILDES); will have some research experience and experience with young children; and will be organized and independent and willing to make an 18 month (minimum) commitment to the position. This is a full-time job with excellent benefits and an anticipated start date in January 2010. To Apply: Interested applicants should send via email a cover letter detailing experience, a CV, and telephone numbers and e-mail addresses of two to three professional references to Dr. Meredith Rowe at mrowe at umd.edu. Review of applications begins immediately, but the search will remain open until the position is filled. The University of Maryland is an Equal Employment Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. Women and Minorities are encouraged to Apply. --~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~ You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Info-CHILDES" group. To post to this group, send email to info-childes at googlegroups.com To unsubscribe from this group, send email to info-childes+unsubscribe at googlegroups.com For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/info-childes?hl=en -~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~--- From tomasello at eva.mpg.de Wed Nov 4 08:55:07 2009 From: tomasello at eva.mpg.de (Michael Tomasello) Date: Wed, 4 Nov 2009 09:55:07 +0100 Subject: Eleanor Maccoby Book Award Message-ID: Nominations are invited for the 2010 Eleanor Maccoby Book Award given by the APA Division 7 (Developmental). The award is made to the author or authors (not editor or editors) of a book that has had or promises to have a profound effect on the field of developmental psychology. Books published in 2008 and 2009 are eligible for this year?s award. Nominations should be sent to the chair of the Book Award Committee, Michael Tomasello (tomasello at eva.mpg.de), and must include: the author?s name and address, the name of the book, publication date, publisher?s name and address, and a brief description of the book?s content and contribution to the field. Self nominations are welcome. Nominations must be received by December 31, 2009. --~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~ You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Info-CHILDES" group. To post to this group, send email to info-childes at googlegroups.com To unsubscribe from this group, send email to info-childes+unsubscribe at googlegroups.com For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/info-childes?hl=en -~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~--- From monkeybusiness26 at GMAIL.COM Fri Nov 13 10:43:15 2009 From: monkeybusiness26 at GMAIL.COM (antje Van Oosten) Date: Fri, 13 Nov 2009 10:43:15 +0000 Subject: Digitial video cameras with good audio recordings In-Reply-To: <7AB6195D91E1CC4FADEBDEED07196D3528FA8A9933@ILS132.uopnet.plymouth.ac.uk> Message-ID: Hi Kirsten, I can give you quite some information on this. It will be sent to you by Mettje Hunneman. Hope it's of any use. All the best, Antje van Oosten On Fri, Nov 13, 2009 at 7:53 AM, Kirsten Abbot-Smith < kirsten.abbot-smith at plymouth.ac.uk> wrote: > Is anyone up-to-date on whether digital video cameras which record onto DVD > or even better straight onto some kind of memory stick / hard drive are now > also capable of the kind of quality of audio recording which we need as > child language researchers? I am loath to purchase yet another camera which > records onto mini video cassettes.... > > I had a quick look and many of these cameras do not seem to have an > external mic-in. > > Best, > Kirsten > ________________________________________ > From: info-childes group [noreply at googlegroups.com] > Sent: 05 August 2009 09:04 > To: info-childes digest subscribers > Subject: info-childes - 2 new messages in 2 topics - digest > > Info-CHILDES > http://groups.google.com/group/info-childes?hl=en > > info-childes at googlegroups.com > > Today's topics: > > * Pace of early language development - 1 messages, 1 author > http://groups.google.com/group/info-childes/t/d7f1b049cb009b19?hl=en > * Call for papers: Child Language Seminar, City University London, June > 24-25 > 2010 - 1 messages, 1 author > http://groups.google.com/group/info-childes/t/1b12a0b7b4d8b76c?hl=en > > > ============================================================================== > TOPIC: Pace of early language development > http://groups.google.com/group/info-childes/t/d7f1b049cb009b19?hl=en > > ============================================================================== > > == 1 of 1 == > Date: Mon, Aug 3 2009 2:34 pm > From: Margaret Fleck > > > > Ok, so then the generational split is between parents and caregivers in > their twenties (or even late teens) and academics/politicians with enough > experience to have strong opinions about long-term trends, which would make > them at least 40? > > Margaret Fleck > > --- On Mon, 8/3/09, Brian MacWhinney wrote: > > From: Brian MacWhinney > Subject: Re: Pace of early language development > To: info-childes at googlegroups.com > Date: Monday, August 3, 2009, 9:19 AM > > Matthew, > Actually, my analysis was based on this same assumption. The Doppler > effect should be clearest between adults and young teens. Labov also > emphasizes the role of women in their twenties, alongside young male teens, > but the general point is that young people in various social configurations > are the chief instigators of new sound patterns, grammaticalizations, > neologisms, and the rest. Toddlers are certainly not the sources. Although > younger children not innovators in this way, they can play another role in > terms of implementing cue hierarchy reconfiguration and leveling. > Regarding the famous working class/middle class split in the UK and Basil > Bernstein's ideas about a restricted code, you may find this analysis of UK > preschools interesting, if only historically: > MacWhinney, B., & Osser, H. (1977). Verbal planning functions in children's > speech. Child Development, 48, 978-985. > Of course that was all before the large expansion of immigrant populations > in the UK. When one factors in the role of having additional L1 sources, > then the Linguistic Special Relativity effect would be enhanced. Please > don't ask me to do the math. > -- Brian > On Aug 3, 2009, at 6:28 AM, Matthew Saxton wrote: > I think Brian?s suggestion is ingenious. However, to my knowledge, language > change is especially driven by young people in the teenage years ? with the > introduction of new meanings, terms and phrases ? rather than by toddlers. > The perception of a linguistic decline over successive generations is > sometimes driven by political considerations. A recent U.K. example is the > Bercow Review (by the same John Bercow who is now Speaker of the House of > Commons). Without citing any specific sources, his report suggests that: > Approximately 50% of children in some socio-economically disadvantaged > populations have speech and language skills that are significantly lower > than those of other children of the same age. The implication is that a > steep decline is in train within the U.K., ascribable to socioeconomic > factors. One such factor is whether or not English is the child?s first > language. It has become increasingly common for very young children, who > have had little exposure to English, to be placed in English-language > Nursery settings. Such children will naturally depress average scores on > standardised language tests, especially in the early stages of their > exposure to English. But one could not argue from such data that the > language learning capacities of children had declined in any way. Regards, > Matthew Saxton. > ********************************************************************************************************* > Department of Psychology and Human Development,Institute of > Education,University of London,25 Woburn Square,London,WC1H 0AA. Tel: > 020-7612-6509Fax: 020-7612-6304 http://www.ioe.ac.uk > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > ============================================================================== > TOPIC: Call for papers: Child Language Seminar, City University London, > June > 24-25 2010 > http://groups.google.com/group/info-childes/t/1b12a0b7b4d8b76c?hl=en > > ============================================================================== > > == 1 of 1 == > Date: Tues, Aug 4 2009 1:27 am > From: Chloe > > > Dear Info-CHILDES members, > > The next Child Language Seminar will be held at City University > London, June 24-25 2010 (with registration and wine reception on the > evening of June 23). Please see our webpage for further details, > http://www.city.ac.uk/lcs/childlanguageseminar.html. These details > will be updated regularly. Meanwhile, the current details are > duplicated below: > > > > The Child Language Seminar (CLS) was first held in 1977. It is an > interdisciplinary conference attracting a diverse audience of, among > others, psychologists, linguists and speech and language therapists, > and provides a forum for research on first and second language > acquisition in typically and atypically developing children. > > > > Please follow the links below for further information. If you can't > find what you need, please e-mail Chloe Marshall at Chloe.Marshall. > 1 at city.ac.uk. > > > > Organising committee / Programme / Keynote speakers / Call for > papers / Key dates / Registration / Venue / Accommodation / > Travel > > > > Organising committee: > Nicola Botting, Shula Chiat and Chloe Marshall (co-chairs) > Lucy Dipper > Barbara Dodd > Andrea Dohmen > Natalie Hasson > Ros Herman > Hannah Hockey > Rachael Anne Knight > Abigail Levin > Wolfgang Mann > Gary Morgan > Lucy Myers > Michele Pettinato > Kamila Polisenska > Belinda Seeff-Gabriel > David Williams > Anne Zimmer-Stahl > > > Programme: > More details will follow soon... > > > > Keynote speakers: > Our keynote speakers will be: > > Professor Sue Gathercole (University of York) - "Working memory, > language and classroom learning" > Dr Ann Senghas (Barnard College of Columbia University, New York) - > "From gestures to grammar - How learners created Nicaraguan Sign > Language" > Dr Simon Fisher (Wellcome Trust Centre for Human Genetics at the > University of Oxford) - "Building bridges between genes, brains and > language" > There will also be an invited symposium on autism and language led by > Dr David Williams (City University London). > More details will follow soon... > > > > Call for papers: > Proposals are invited for papers and posters related to child language > acquisition and disorders. Proposals will be considered on any aspect > of children?s first or subsequent language development (e.g., grammar, > phonology, lexicon, pragmatics, discourse, literacy, bilingualism, > sign language, psycholinguistic processing) or on any aspect relating > to children with language difficulties (e.g., description, assessment, > remediation). The CLS is a peer-reviewed research conference and all > proposals will be reviewed blindly by members of the organising > committee. > > Presentation format > Proposals should indicate whether an oral presentation or poster is > preferred. The programme committee views both formats as having equal > value but reserves the right to switch formats to suit the programme. > Presenters will be notified about the final format of their > presentation at the time their proposal is accepted. > > Oral presentations will last 20 mins, plus 10 mins for discussion > Posters may be viewed all day, with a wine reception at which authors > will be present in the evening > Proposal format > Proposals must be written in English and include the following: > > Cover Page: > > Title of presentation > Authors? names and affiliations > Name, address, telephone number and email address of contact person > Preferred presentation format (oral presentation or poster) > > > Abstract: > > Title of presentation > Summary of research undertaken (300 words maximum, single spaced) > Do not include authors? names > Submitting proposals > Proposals must be composed in either MS Word or RTF format with paper > size set to A4 and submitted as an attachment to an email (not as part > of the mail body of the email) to: Chloe.Marshall.1 at city.ac.uk > > > > > Key dates: > Submission of abstracts: 31 December 2009 > > Notification of acceptance/rejection: 31 January 2010 > > Registration open: 1 February 2010 > > Programme published on website: 1 April 2010 > > Early registration deadline (reduced fee): 1 May 2010 > > Registration and wine reception: 23 June 2010 > > CLS meeting: 24-25 June 2010, with conference dinner 24 June > > > > Registration > We are currently working out the costings for the conference, and will > endeavour to keep the registration fee as low as possible, with a > discount for students. As a guide, when the CLS was last held > (University of Reading, 2007), the fees were ?185 for early > registration (and only ?135 for students). We do not envisage the fees > being higher than that this time round, although we will have to > charge separately for the conference dinner. > > > > Venue > The CLS will be held at City University London. Founded in 1894 as the > Northampton Institute on its present site and awarded full university > status in 1966, City University London has special links with the City > of London and plays an active role in the business and professional > life of the capital. We pride ourselves on our close contacts with the > leading professional institutions and with business and industry, both > at home and abroad. Our success is demonstrated by our graduate > employment record, which is one of the best in the country. We are > also the sixth most popular university in the UK for student > applications. Our reputation extends worldwide: of almost 10,000 City > University London students, more than 40 per cent are international, > the majority of these from outside the European Union. > > The Department of Language and Communication Science is a member of > the School of Community and Health Sciences. We have been providing > education to Speech and Language Therapists for over 50 years. We > developed from the London Hospital School of Speech Therapy, founded > by Winifred Kingdon Ward in 1942. In 1982 we linked with City > University London, becoming a full Department in 1986. > > We are the largest teaching, research and clinical department in the > UK, providing courses leading both to registration as a practitioner > in speech and language therapy and post-registration opportunities for > a range of professionals working in communication disability. > > We are a dynamic and forward-thinking department in which > contributions to professional developments, teaching and learning, > research and clinical application are flourishing. > > The Department of Language and Communication Science is located in the > Social Science Building, part of the main university campus in > Northampton Square. You can find more information about the Department > here, and maps of City University London here. > > > > Accommodation > We are asking delegates to kindly book their own conference > accommodation, as there are lots of hotels near to City University > London. Some that we recommend are: > > Harlingford Hotel > > Hilton Hotel Islington > > Holiday Inn Kings Cross > > Jurys Inn Islington > > Thistle Hotel Barbican > > Travelodge Kings Cross > > > > Travel > City University London is located only 15 minutes by foot from St > Pancras International, making us easily accessible to delegates who > wish to arrive by Eurostar. > > If you prefer to fly, trains from Luton Airport and Gatwick Airport > run direct to St Pancras International. The nearest tube stations to > City University London are Angel, on the Northern Line, and > Farringdon, on the Circle/Hammersmith & City/Metropolitan lines. If > you arrive at Stansted Airport there's a train to Liverpool Street > Station which is a quick tube journey away from Farringdon, and if you > come in to Heathrow Airport the tube journey is under an hour to Kings > Cross, which is then one stop away from Angel. You can get further > details on travelling in London here. > > You can find all sorts of useful travel information at > http://www.travelinlondon.org/. > > > We look forward to seeing you at CLS in 2010! > > > > > > ============================================================================== > > You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups > "Info-CHILDES" > group. > > To post to this group, send email to info-childes at googlegroups.com or > visit http://groups.google.com/group/info-childes?hl=en > > To unsubscribe from this group, send email to > info-childes+unsubscribe at googlegroups.com > > To change the way you get mail from this group, visit: > http://groups.google.com/group/info-childes/subscribe?hl=en > > To report abuse, send email explaining the problem to > abuse at googlegroups.com > > > ============================================================================== > Google Groups: http://groups.google.com/?hl=en > > -- > > You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups > "Info-CHILDES" group. > To post to this group, send email to info-childes at googlegroups.com. > For more options, visit this group at > http://groups.google.com/group/info-childes?hl=. > > > -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Info-CHILDES" group. To post to this group, send email to info-childes at googlegroups.com. For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/info-childes?hl=. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From macw at CMU.EDU Fri Nov 13 17:00:13 2009 From: macw at CMU.EDU (Brian MacWhinney) Date: Fri, 13 Nov 2009 12:00:13 -0500 Subject: Digitial video cameras with good audio recordings In-Reply-To: Message-ID: Yes, this model is the next step down from the Canon HFS100 that we are recommending on the TalkBank page at http://talkbank.org/dv. In France they call this LEGRIA HF200. In the States, it is VIXIA HF200. Both the HFS100 and the HF200 have external mike input so you can use the JuicedLink and also have manual volume control. -- Brian MacWhinney On Nov 13, 2009, at 6:26 AM, Christophe Parisse wrote: > http://www.canon.fr/For_Home/Product_Finder/Camcorders/High_Definition_HD/LE > GRIA_HF_200/index.asp -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Info-CHILDES" group. To post to this group, send email to info-childes at googlegroups.com. For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/info-childes?hl=. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: