Linguistics 3102 Syntax Course Home (Spring 2013)


Table of Contents:


 

Instructor: Chongwon Park, Ph.D. (TA: Patrick Nikelson)

Office Hours: 10:00 - 10:55AM, WF (H 431)

Class Time: 9:00 - 9:50, MWF (H 468)

Required Text:

Syntax, 3rd Edition (Andrew Carnie, Wiley-Blackwell)

Course Description:

In this course, we investigate the syntactic (sentence) structures of natural language (with emphasis on the English language) from the Generative linguistics perspective, discussing major issues within the theory, such as tree drawing, constituency, movement, binding, raising, and control, among others. The learning outcomes of this class will be [1] the acquisition of the ability to analyze complex sentence structures in English, [2] the acquisition of the analytical thinking skills that can be extended to a similar type of problem solving, and [3] the acquisition of the ability to critically compare and evaluate competing hypotheses that deal with various syntactic phenomena.

Requirements:

You will have a total of 10 assignments and 3 exams. All the assignments and the exams are problem-solving questions.

Attendance and Evaluation:

It is important for you to be present for every class. Every homework assignment should be turned in on the due date (or before the due date) in class. Evaluation will be based on the following weight. IMPORTANT: I DO NOT accept late assignments (no exceptions). E-mail submissions WILL NOT be accepted.

Total Number
Perfect Points
Total points
Homework
10
5 (per homework)
50
Exam 1
1
10
10
Exam 2
1
15
15
Exam 3
1
25
25
Total
100

While students are expected to attend every single class period, there are circumstances that lead to excused absence from the classroom. Excused absences are defined at http://www.duluth.umn.edu/vcaa/ExcusedAbsence.html. To be eligible for an excused absence, students must provide written documents such as doctor's notes and advisor's letters. To encourage your attendance, for each class you miss 1 point will be deducted, but if your attendance is perfect (any absences being excused) you will receive 3 bonus points.

Final Grades:

Course Schedule for Spring 2013:

Date
Topic
Assignments and Due Dates
Required Reading
Jan. 23 (W)
Introduction


Jan. 25 (F)
Preliminaries
Carnie, Ch. 1
Jan. 28 (M)
Preliminaries
 
Carnie, Ch. 1
Jan. 30 (W)
Parts of speech
 
Carnie, Ch. 2
Feb. 1 (F)
Parts of speech
Assignment 1, Due Feb. 8 (F)
Carnie, Ch. 2
Feb. 4 (M)
Constituency, Trees, Rules
 
Carnie, Ch. 3
Feb. 6 (W)
Constituency, Trees, Rules
Carnie, Ch. 3
Feb. 8 (F)
Constituency, Trees, Rules
Carnie, Ch. 3
Feb. 11 (M)
Structural Relations
 
Carnie, Ch. 4
Feb. 13 (W)
Structural Relations
Assignment 2, Due Feb. 20 (W)
Carnie, Ch. 4
Feb. 15 (F)
Binding Theory
 
Carnie, Ch. 5
Feb. 18 (M)
Binding Theory
Assignment 3, Due Feb. 25 (M)
Carnie, Ch. 5
Feb. 20 (W)
X-bar theory
 
Carnie, Ch. 6
Feb. 22 (F)
X-bar theory
 
Carnie, Ch. 6
Feb. 25 (M)
X-bar theory
Carnie, Ch. 6
Feb. 27 (W)
X-bar theory
Assignment 4, Due Mar. 8 (F)
Carnie, Ch. 6
Mar. 1 (F)
Exam 1
Ch. 1 ~ Ch. 5
Mar. 4 (M)
Functional categories
Carnie, Ch. 7
Mar. 6 (W)
Functional categories
Carnie, Ch. 7
Mar. 8 (F)
Theta theory
Carnie, Ch. 8
Mar. 11 (M)
Theta theory
Carnie, Ch. 8
Mar. 13 (W)
Theta theory
Assignment 5, Due Mar. 25 (M)
Carnie, Ch. 8
Mar. 15 (F)
Auxiliaries
Carnie, Ch. 9
Mar. 18 (M)
No class!
Spring Break
 
Mar. 20 (W)
No class!
Spring Break
 
Mar. 22 (F)
No class!
Spring Break
 
Mar. 25 (M)
Auxiliaries
Carnie, Ch. 9
Mar. 27 (W)
Auxiliaries
Carnie, Ch. 9
Mar. 29 (F)
Exam 2
Carnie, Ch. 6 ~ Ch. 9
Apr. 1 (M)
H-to-H movement
 
Carnie, Ch 10
Apr. 3 (W)
H-to-H-movement
 
Carnie, Ch. 10
Apr. 5 (F)
H-to-H movement
Assignment 6, Due Apr. 12 (F)
Carnie, Ch. 10
Apr. 8 (M)
DP movement
 
Carnie, Ch. 11
Apr. 10 (W)
DP movement
Carnie, Ch. 11
Apr. 12 (F)
DP movement
Assignment 7, Due Apr.. 19 (F)
Carnie, Ch. 11
Apr. 15 (M)
Wh movement
 
Carnie, Ch. 12
Apr. 17 (W)
Wh movement
Carnie, Ch. 12
Apr. 19 (F)
Wh movement
Assignment 8, Due Apr. 26 (F)
Carnie, Ch. 12
Apr. 22 (M)
A unified theory of movement
 
Carnie, Ch. 13
Apr. 24 (W)
Expanded VPs
Carnie, Ch. 14
Apr. 26 (F)
Expanded VPs
Assignment 9, Due May 3 (F)
Carnie, Ch. 14
Apr. 29 (M)
Rasing and Control
Carnie, Ch. 15
May 1 (W)
Rasing and Control
 
Carnie, Ch. 15
May 3 (F)
Rasing and Control
Assignment 10, Due May 8 (W)
Carnie, Ch. 15
May 6 (M)
Ellipsis
Carnie, Ch. 16
May 8 (W)
Ellipsis
 
Carnie, Ch. 16
May 10 (F)
Binding redux

 

Carnie, Ch. 17
May 13 (M)
Final Exam (8:00-9:55am)

 

Academic Dishonesty:

Academic dishonesty tarnishes UMD's reputation and discredits the accomplishments of students. UMD is committed to providing students every possible opportunity to grow in mind and spirit. This pledge can only be redeemed in an environment of trust, honesty, and fairness. As a result, academic dishonesty is regarded as a serious offense by all members of the academic community. In keeping with this ideal, this course will adhere to UMD's Student Academic Integrity Policy, which can be found at http://www.d.umn.edu/conduct/integrity. This policy sanctions students engaging in academic dishonesty with penalties up to and including expulsion from the university for repeat offenders.

Appropriate Classroom Conduct:

The instructor will enforce and students are expected to follow the University's Student Conduct Code (http://www.d.umn.edu/conduct/code). Appropriate classroom conduct promotes an environment of academic achievement and integrity. Disruptive classroom behavior that substantially or repeatedly interrupts either the instructor's ability to teach, or student learning, is prohibited. Disruptive behavior includes inappropriate use of technology in the classroom. Examples include ringing cell phones, text-messaging, watching videos, playing computer games, checking email, or surfing the Internet or Facebooking (or facebooking) on your computer instead of note-taking or other instructor-sanctioned activities.