The SLA Ph.D Program at Carnegie
Mellon
The primary goal
of this program is to educate and prepare future researchers and leaders
in the field of Second Language Acquisition. Program graduates will
have developed a strong interdisciplinary approach to the investigation
of the development, use and maintenance of second languages along with
the knowledge and skills needed to conduct high-quality empirical investigations.
They will learn to critically integrate old and new knowledge to produce
real world applications in the areas of language teaching, language
learning, language policy and language maintenance.
Characteristics
of the program:
The first defining characteristic of the program is
a strong commitment to cross-linguistic and cross-cultural factors
in second language learning. The program emphasizes research in the
context of multiple languages. Admission to the program requires an
advanced level of proficiency in at least one of the languages taught
by the department (i.e., Chinese, French, German, Italian, Japanese,
Russian, Spanish) in order to carry out research and teach in that
language.
The second defining characteristic of the program is the
strong interdisciplinary emphasis supported by a network of related
programs in cognitive sciences, linguistics, social sciences, cultural
studies and education. These interdisciplinary connections draw on
the strengths of faculty in Modern Languages, English, Philosophy and
Psychology in the College of Humanities and Social Sciences as well
as those in the Language Technologies Institute of the School of Computer
Science and faculty at the University of Pittsburgh in the departments
of Linguistics, Instruction and Learning, and the Learning Research
and Development Center (LRDC).
The third defining characteristic is
the program’s combination of a broad academic experience with an active
apprenticeship within a community of researchers. Beginning in the
first year, students engage in hands-on research training through collaboration
with faculty. In addition, they participate in a supervised language
teaching experience across a range of levels, teaching one course every
semester under the supervision of a language program coordinator.
The
fourth defining characteristic of the program is the formulation of
an individualized course of study that builds on the student’s prior
knowledge and experience. Over the course of a complete program, students
gradually assume greater control and responsibility over their research
activities and course work, culminating in the dissertation.
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Modern Languages Ph.D. in Second Language Acquisition
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