Standard English and AAVE This lesson borrows heavily from Peter Trudgill’s paper “Standard English: What it isn’t” (in Trudgill, P. (2002). Sociolinguistic.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
3.5 Context, culture and style. Features of context: 1-Deictics: All languages have deictics which are words that identify objects, persons, and events.
Advertisements

Key to Variation  “No two people speak exactly the same.” (Holmes, 127 c)  AND no one person speaks exactly the same all the time. 1/14.
What is the difference??? Try to read the following sentence in as many accents as you can… Hi, my name is ………and I love…….. YouTube - harry-enfield Scousers.
Descriptive vs. Prescriptive Language Instruction created by Emilia Sens.
Chapter 8 Sociolinguistics
Language Variation Dr. Katie Welch LING Listening Exercise When listening.
Dialect n Form of a language distinctive of a region or social group n Includes pronunciation, grammar, vocabulary n Accent: only refers to differences.
Black on White: African American Vernacular English What is it? What is its origin? Why are debates about it significant?
Language Varieties  Dialects: distinct and consistent differences within a language system used by a specific group of speakers Mutually understandable.
Unit One: Parts of Speech
Reported Speech Roll No Presented By:- Class: Ixth “A”
Issues at Home Last Updated: May 14, Linguistic tensions in the US are primarily home grown. Not uniquely to our culture, there are more conflicts.
Varieties, Dialects, Accents Based in part on Childs, Wolfram & Schilling-Estes, Smith, and Rickford.
Today What is sociolinguistics? Language variation Dialects
The Basics of Sentence Structure
Language & Communication Professor Janaki Natalie Parikh
Language and Dialect.
Unit 6: The Culture of Communication
The Real West Virginia By Ashley Carroll And Ashley Hobbs.
Concepts About Language & Grammar Study. Concept #1  Modern biolinguists find compelling evidence to suggest that language acquisition is strongly intuitive;
Department of English Introduction To Linguistics Level Four Dr. Mohamed Younis.
Regional and Social Dialects
Present Perfect and Present Perfect Progressive Unit 3.
Reviewing Prof. Isora Enríquez O´Farrill PhD. We use the present simple to talk about permanent states, repeated actions and daily routines.
LING 400 Winter 2010 Language attitudes. Overview Standard vs. nonstandard Language attitudes African-American Vernacular English Attitudes towards AAVE.
Myth and Reality: The Nature of Language and Linguistic Variation Myth: Other people speak dialects. Reality: Everyone who speaks a language speaks some.
Do Now: Monday 12/20 What language do you think I am speaking? How many of you speak more than one language? How do you think English sounds to non-English.
African American English (AAE). Language vs. Dialect dialect as subset/variety of language (with its own distinct structures) dialect as subset/variety.
Sociolinguistics Standard language: idealised, official language for education and broadcasting. Dialect: varieties of a language that have noticeable.
1 Language and Social Variation. 2 1.Introduction: In the previous lecture, we focused on the variation in language use in different geographical areas.
Ebony + Phonics By Corrine Wetherbee.  Originally defined by Dr. Robert Williams in 1973  His definition sought to combine the words “ebony” with “phonics”
Quoted & Reported Speech. We often have to give information about what people say or think. In order to do this you can use “direct = quoted” speech,
INTRO TO LINGUISTICS. KNOW – LEARNED – QUESTIONS KNOW LEARNED QUESTIONS  What do you know about ‘linguistics’, if anything?  What did you learn about.
Myths about African American English AAE is bad or broken English AAE is just slang All African Americans speak AAE Only African Americans speak AAE AAE.
What does “Non Standard English” mean? According to Wolfram Et Schilling-Estes, Vernacular or nonstandard varieties are those ”varieties of a language.
Speech Community / Social Dialects
EBONICS. Definition  Term was created in 1973 by Dr. Robert Williams combining the words Ebony + Phonics  Reflection of the multinational linguistic.
1 English In A Changing World Introduction. 2 3 Text And New Words: Advice  Record New Unfamiliar Words  Organize In Textbook Units or by Topics 
Language Hayley Bunnell Jenna Hagerty Lauren Lubitz.
Language, Race and Ethnicity Najd 232. African-American English (AAE) A good example of an ethnic language variety is African- American English (AAE)
Making it Meaningful  Dialects of American English as YOU see them Dialects of American English  Does everyone speak using a dialect? Information about.
Language Society and Culture. Social Dialects  Varieties of language used by groups defined according to :  - Class  - Education  - Occupation  -
Unit 2 The Nature of Learner Language 1. Errors and errors analysis 2. Developmental patterns 3. Variability in learner language.
ENTRY TASK  Define and provide an example for intraregional and interregional migration.
 Language and Culture LT 5. I can define language and examine its impact on culture.
LANGUAGE, DIALECT, AND VARIETIES
The Issue of Dialect.
Dialects and Varieties Deny A. Kwary Airlangga University.
Language, Dialect and Accent. Nature of a language The linguist makes no value judgment. S/he recognizes and accepts the existence of language varieties.
Language.  Informal language is language characterised by:  spontaneous speech in situations that may be described as conversational  the use of a.
What happens when you meet someone who does not speak your language?  Try gestures  Use a lingua franca  Acquire a second language  Develop a pidgin.
Terms/Facts for Today TERM Pinyin: Developed in China in the 1950s, Pinyin is a Romanization system used to learn Mandarin. It transcribes the sounds of.
Aleksandra Najdeska.  Stereotype: -generalization about a group’s characteristics that does not consider variation between individuals - Not necessarily.
1 LANE 422 SOCIOLINGUISTICS Summarized from SOCIOLINGUISTICS An Introduction to Language and Society Peter Trudgill 4 th edition. 2000, and other sources.
The future of language: Module objectives Language Self-Awareness  Future forms [Language Development]  Accents and Dialects [Language in Context] 
Linguistic Diversity February Language Rights “The vast majority of the world's nations are at least bilingual, and most are multilingual, even.
Match the phrase to the presenter Controlled Assessment 3: Spoken Language Analysing how speakers adapt for different purposes Using Spoken Language Features.
Lecture 7 Gender & Age.
King Faisal University جامعة الملك فيصل Deanship of E-Learning and Distance Education عمادة التعلم الإلكتروني والتعليم عن بعد [ ] 1 جامعة الملك فيصل عمادة.
AFRICAN AMERICAN ENGLISH
To Linguistics Introduction Department of English Level Four
Regional Grammatical Variation
Compare & Contrast between Standard English vs. Afro American Vernacular English.
L23A: Sociology of Language
Language and Social Variation
The Basics of Sentence Structure
What is sociolinguistics?
Regional dialects.
Presentation transcript:

Standard English and AAVE This lesson borrows heavily from Peter Trudgill’s paper “Standard English: What it isn’t” (in Trudgill, P. (2002). Sociolinguistic Variation and Change. Washington, DC George Washington University Press.

How does a language becomes standardized? Selection: Deciding what version of a language will be standardized –How did this happen in English? Codification: giving a variety a publicly recognized form –How did this happen in English? Stabilization: the fixing of a variety to contain less variation –How did this happen in English?

Is Standard English a language? Languages contain many varieties (dialects) Standard English is a very important variety of English (found in most writing, it is the language of the Educated elite, it is the variety taught to non-native speakers of English) Most native speakers of English are not standard English speakers Standard English cannot be a language

Is Standard English an accent? Accent is concerned with pronunciation Take a well-recognized highly prestigious accent (RP) –Do RP speakers speak Standard English? –Do Standard English speakers speak RP? Do newscaster speak standard English? –Do all newscasters have the same accent? Given that people can speak standard English with different accents, then Standard English cannot be an accent.

Is Standard English a style of speech? Styles are varieties of language that can be spoken in formal and informal contexts Given this definition, then single speakers have a number of different styles that they use in different contexts. The same speakers could say: –I was exceedingly fatigued after this weekend’s copious consumption of alcoholic intoxicants –I was totally hung over from drinking too much this weekend Is it possible to say either of these in a formal or informal setting? If so, then SE is not a style

So…what is it? A social dialect of English that… Has unusual and irregular present tense morphology –I go; you go; we go; they go…but he/she/it goes Lacks multiple negation –I don’t want none vs. I don’t wand any. Fails to distinguish between singular and plural second person pronouns –You bother me (not you all, youse, youse guys, ya’ll, thou

The Linguistic Society of America’s resolution to the “Ebonics” issue In January of 1997, the LSA passed a resolution on AAVE. Here are some selected quotes from it: The variety known as Ebonics, “ AAVE” or “VBE”…is systematic and rule-governed like all natural speech varieties. In fact, all human linguistic systems—spoken, signed, and written—are fundamentally regular.”

“Characterizations of Ebonics as “slang. “mutant,” lazy,” “defective,” “ungrammatical,” or “broken English” are incorrect and demeaning. The distinction between “languages” and “dialects” is usually made more onsocial and political grounds than on purely linguistic ones.”

“For those living in the United States there are also benefits in acquiring Standard English and resources should be made available to all who aspire to mastery of Standard English.” “There is evidence from Sweden, the US, and other countries that speakers of other varieties can be aided in their learning of the standard variety by pedagogical approaches which recognize the legitimacy of other varieties of a language.”

Features of Standard American English Has unusual and irregular present tense morphology –I go; you go; we go; they go…but he/she/it goes Lacks multiple negation –I don’t want none vs. I don’t wand any. Fails to distinguish between singular and plural second person pronouns –You bother me (not you all, youse, youse guys, ya’ll, thou

Features of AAVE 1. Present tense/3 rd person absence he walk for he walks he walk for he walks she raise for she raises she raise for she raises 2. Plural absence on general plural (but not plurals for weights and measures) four girl for four girls some dog for some dogs But not four cup for four cups four cup for four cups

3. Remote time been (something that happened a long time ago and is still relevant) You been paid your dues. I been known him for a long time But not You been gone to school today.

4. Copular be deletion She nice for She’s nice He in the kitchen for He’s in the kitchen You ugly for You ugly

Questions Identify some social groups you belong to that make your dialect what it is. Which recent US presidents spoke (or speak) with a distinct regional accent?

When you were in elementary school, did any or all of your elementary school teachers use the variety of the region where your school was located? Did any of your elementary or secondary school teachers speak a variety of English that differed from the region where you studied>

Think of reasons why a junior high school student might want to know Standard English, apart from traditional educational values. What might Standard English do for this type of student right now? What do you conclude about the utility of Standard English at this point in their lives? Think of reasons why a junior high school student might want to know Standard English, apart from traditional educational values. What might Standard English do for this type of student right now? What do you conclude about the utility of Standard English at this point in their lives?

Consider the following quotation, taken from an editorial by William Raspberry in the Washington Post (10/1/1986) in an article titled: “Black Kids Need Standard English”. Consider the following quotation, taken from an editorial by William Raspberry in the Washington Post (10/1/1986) in an article titled: “Black Kids Need Standard English”. And how could teachers help them [i.e., AAVE speakers] to acquire Standard English without eroding their innate pride in Black Culture? One retired teacher of my acquaintance used to do it by explaining that so-called Black English is nothing more than the language slaves learned from their ignorant white overseers.

Do you see any potential pitfalls in using such reasoning as a motivation for standard English? If so, what would you replace it with? Do you see any potential pitfalls in using such reasoning as a motivation for standard English? If so, what would you replace it with? How does this reasoning relate to the information we have read on the different positions of the origins of AAVE?

Quiz time!