http://psych.colorado.edu/~colunga/P4521-07
| People | Course Goals | Coursework fallacy & summary assignments | Grading | Other Information | Schedule this week |
11/13/07: Presentation guidelines.
10/05/07: Check out some past final project topics.
09/13/07:The fallacy & summary assignments are available now.
Join our Online Discussion Forum
| Instructor: | Eliana Colunga Office: Muenzinger Room D447-B Office Phone: 303-492-4282 Email: colunga@psych.colorado.edu Office Hours: M 1:15-2:30 and by appointment |
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Discussion Questions. To facilitate discussions and encourage doing the readings on time, you will post three discussion questions inspired by the assigned reading and/or answers to other people's posted questions. The questions may range from somewhat "superficial" questions about the content of the reading to truly "deep" questions about the implications of the reading; integrating other sources from your own life, introspection, experiences; or plain speculation. These questions/answers should be posted by 9AM the day we are due to discuss the corresponding reading.
Quizzes. On most class days, there will be a 1 pt multiple choice quiz covering the reading for that day. These quizzes are not meant to be tricky, just to make sure that you're learning the basics you'll need to participate in discussions and to get the most out of the course. There will be more than 15 of these quizzes, so that you can score more than 15 points total. As a result, you should not be penalized in your quiz score if you must miss a class. Anything above 15 points will count as extra credit toward your final grade.
Assignments. During the course of the class there will be four group assignments. The purpose of these assignments is to integrate or apply what we have discussed during the preceding section of the course. Before each of these assignments you will be given a series of questions to think about or exercises to complete in preparation for the group assignment to come. Your grade for these assignments will composed by the grade of your individual prep work and the evaluation of your group work as a whole.
Fallacy and Summary. To keep in mind the issue of critical thinking and to expand our vocabulary, we will begin each class by explaining and discussing common logical fallacies. During the semester, each of you will be responsible for choosing and explaining one common fallacy. You will bring handouts explaining your chosen fallacy and including one or two examples, as well as post this information in the dedicated topic in our online discussion forum. You can choose one from wikipedia (this one also has good examples).. Soon we will be able to accuse one another of committing the fallacy of converse accident or whatnot. (Note: Using obscure terminology is not a sanctioned way of arguing a point in this class (in fact, it is a logical fallacy), but go ahead and use it to impress your friends.)
In addition, once during the semester, each of you will be responsible for posting a short one-paragraph summary of what we discussed in class in the dedicated thread in our online discussion forum. At the beginning of the class we will review this summary to help us integrate the material discussed from class to class.
Final paper and Presentation. The final paper (8-12 typed, double-spaced pages) and presentation (about 15-20 minutes) should be on a topic of interest to you that is related to the content of the course. We will discuss this in more detail later in the course. Preparing these papers will require much work, thought, and outside research, so you will do well to start early. The following timeline is designed to ensure that you make progress on your paper (4 of the 45 points for the paper will come from simply making each of the 4 deadlines before the final due date) and that you receive feedback on it before turning in the final version.
| Deadline | Assignment |
|---|---|
| Oct 18 | Paper topic |
| Oct 25 | References |
| Nov 1 | Outline |
| Nov 27 | Paper draft |
| Dec 13 | Final paper |
| Participation | 10 |
| Discussion Questions | 15 |
| Quizzes | 15 |
| Assignments | 10 |
| Fallacy & Summary | 5 |
| Final Paper | 45 |
| Total | 100 |
Letter grades will be assigned as follows.
| A+ = 98-100 | B+ = 88-89 | C+ = 78-79 | D+ = 68-69 |
| A = 92-97 | B = 82-87 | C = 72-77 | D = 62-67 |
| A- = 90-91 | B- = 80-81 | C- = 70-71 | D- = 60-61 |
| F < 60 | |||
Remember that requests for assignments must be done by email, not in person before or after class. And if they are not turned in during class, they must be sent before class by email. This is so that we can keep records correctly.
| The Issues | |||
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| Week 1 | Aug 28 | Introduction | |
| Aug 30 | Language and Human Nature
Premack, 04 |
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| Week 2 | Sep 4 | Language and Intelligence
Clark, 06 |
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| Sep 6 | Language and Cognition
Carruthers, in press |
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| Not-so-controversial Language Effects | |||
| Week 3 | Sep 11 | Labeling effects on categorization - babies
Xu, 02 |
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| Sep 13 | Labeling effects on categorization - adults
Lupyan et al, in press |
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| Week 4 | Sep 18 | Verbal mediation
Emerson & Miyake, 03 |
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| Sep 20 | Assignment - mechanisms
No reading, but please answer this in preparation for class activity. |
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| Different languages - Cross-cultural research | |||
| Week 5 | Sep 25 | Gender
Boroditsky, Schmidt, & Phillips, 2003 |
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| Sep 27 | Space
Majid et al, 2004 |
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| Week 6 | Oct 2 | Time
Borodistky, 01 |
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| Oct 4 | Assignment: methods
No reading, but please answer this in preparation for class activity. |
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| More than one language - Bilingualism | |||
| Week 7 | Oct 9 | Bilingual Brains
Kim et al, 97 |
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| Oct 11 | Flexibility
Bialystok et al, 04 |
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| Week 8 | Oct 16 | Self-construal
Marian & Kaushansakya, 04 |
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| Oct 18 | Discuss final paper | Topic due | |
| Week 9 | Oct 23 | Education
Lesaux & Siegel, 03 |
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| Oct 25 | Assignment: policy
Read this and this for a class activity. |
References due | |
| Any language at all - Special cases | |||
| Week 10 | Oct 30 | Chimps: Symbols and relations
Thompson et al, 97 |
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| Nov 1 | Chimps: Theory of Mind
Tomasello et al, 03 |
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| Week 11 | Nov 6 | Dogs: Word learning
Kaminski et al, 04, Markman & Abelev, 04 |
Outline due |
| Nov 8 | NSL:Theory of Mind
Morgan and Kegl, 06 |
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| Week 12 | Nov 13 | Late Talkers:Word Learning
Jones, 03 |
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| Nov 15 | Assignment: application | ||
| Week 13 | Nov 20-Nov 22 | ||
| Putting it all together | |||
| Week 14 | Nov 27 | Language and Society
Sexism: A Person Paper on Purity in Language by William Satire (Douglas Hostsadter) Guidelines for the Use of Nonsexist Language, University of New Hampshire | Paper draft due |
| Nov 29 | Presentations: Nikita, Maria, Chad M., Chanel | ||
| Week 15 | Dec 4 | Presentations: Rachel, Deanna, Melanie, Jenny, Noah | |
| Dec 6 | Presentations: Amy, Amanda, Chad S., Victoria, Rebecca | ||
| Week 16 | Dec 11 | Presentations: Jessica, Christina, Lauren, Haleh, Anna | |
| Dec 13 | Presentations: Elizabeth, Natalie, Scott | Final paper due
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