Free/ open source Indigenous language publications?
Mary Hermes
mhermes at D.UMN.EDU
Mon Sep 13 14:20:10 UTC 2010
My all time favorite for applied and useful is still the Green Book of Language Revitalization, Hinton and Hale.
I also found the online papers from the first international conference on language documentation and conservation in Hawaii very good, more recent. I think these are free, in print, but I couldn't find that link. I did find a link that has audio of all of these papers http://scholarspace.manoa.hawaii.edu/handle/10125/5961
Maybe someone else knows the link for the written versions?
Gidoojibwem ina?
Ge giin miigwech gagwejimiyan!
Waabishkimiigwan
--------------------------------------------
Mary Hermes, PhD
Associate Professor of Education
Eni-gikendaasoyang: Center for Indigenous Language and Culture Revitalization
University of Minnesota Duluth
715-462-4230
On Sep 13, 2010, at 7:29 AM, s.t. bischoff wrote:
> The "Teaching Indigenous Languages" website at NAU is very useful as well...it has an incredible amount of information and links covering a range of issues...here is the link
>
> http://jan.ucc.nau.edu/~jar/TIL.html
>
> Shannon
>
>
>
> On Mon, Sep 13, 2010 at 7:55 AM, Susan Penfield <susan.penfield at gmail.com> wrote:
> Sorry for the typo....-- Jon Reyhner (not Teyhner)...
>
> S.
>
> On Sun, Sep 12, 2010 at 7:47 PM, Haley De Korne <hal1403 at yahoo.com> wrote:
> Hello ILAT, aanii kina wiiya,
>
> I have a question that I would be grateful for your input on: As a student & young researcher in the area of Indigenous language education, I want to know where information that might be useful to educators and advocates can best be shared/ received. I am thinking mainly of written forms, but not exclusively... Any input is welcome!
>
> What kinds of resources a/o publications do you and your colleagues look at to learn about what's going on in the world of language reclamation, or to get ideas for Indigenous language teaching/ learning/ advocacy strategies?
>
> Are there open-source (free) journals or resources that are being used?
>
> I know of quite a few journals that are respected academically, but I'm wondering if they are useful a/o accessed by teachers and practitioners? (for example American Indian Quarterly, Bilingual Research Journal, Language and Education, Language Policy, etc.)
>
> Chii migwech, thank you for your input!
>
> Haley De Korne
>
>
>
>
>
> --
> **********************************************************************************************
> Susan D. Penfield, Ph.D.
> (Currently on leave to the National Science Foundation.
> E-mail: spenfiel at nsf.gov
> Phone at NSF: 703-292-4535)
>
>
> Department of English (Primary)
> Faculty affiliate in Linguistics, Language, Reading and Culture,
> Second Language Acquisition and Teaching (SLAT),
> American Indian Language Development Institute (AILDI)
> The Southwest Center
> University of Arizona,
> Tucson, Arizona 85721
>
>
>
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