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FONETIKS  April 2017

FONETIKS April 2017

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Subject:

Monthly newsletter

From:

Linda Shockey <[log in to unmask]>

Reply-To:

Linda Shockey <[log in to unmask]>

Date:

Thu, 13 Apr 2017 08:18:02 +0000

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*********************************************************

foNETiks

A newsletter for
The International Phonetic Association
and for the Phonetic Sciences

April 2017

*********************************************************

Linda Shockey, University of Reading, UK
Lisa Lim, The University of Hong Kong
Rachel Smith, University of Glasgow, UK
Radek Święciński, Amsterdam University of Applied Sciences
Claire Timmins, University of Strathclyde, UK
Duncan Robertson, University of York, UK

E-mail address: fonetiks-request AT jiscmail.ac.uk
The foNETiks archive can be found on the WWW at: http://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/lists/fonetiks.html

Visit the IPA web page at http://www.internationalphoneticassociation.org

******************************************************
  ANNOUNCEMENTS
  [new ones marked ##, normally with further information below]
  [date of first appearance follows]

******************************************************

The Association is pleased to announce that Illustrations of the IPA from 2001 through 2013 are now freely available from the Journal of the IPA website:
https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/journal-of-the-international-phonetic-association
Click on "Illustrations of the IPA - free content" to see a list, or access individual Illustrations from contents of back issues. (09/16)

******************************************************

Call for Papers for a Special Issue in Journal of Phonetics: 


“Marking 50 Years of Research on Voice Onset Time and the Voicing Contrast in the World’s Languages” (edited by Taehong Cho, Gerry Docherty and D. H. Whalen)


It has been just over a half century since Lisker & Abramson (1964) proposed an acoustic measure of Voice Onset Time (VOT) as a unified means of specifying voicing categories of stops across languages which had often been distinguished by seemingly independent phonetic features of voicing, aspiration and “force of articulation.” Since then, this innovative measure has been adopted by virtually every experimental phonetic study that has investigated acoustic characteristics of stop consonants, which has greatly advanced our understanding of voicing properties of stop consonants and their typology in the world’s languages. In a recent submission as Technical Note to Journal of Phonetics, Arthur Abramson and D. H. Whalen have provided a retrospective commentary entitled “Voice Onset Time (VOT) at 50: Theoretical and practical issues in measuring voicing distinctions.” It bore largely on procedural aspects of application of VOT, its limitations and ways to expand the notion of VOT to a wider range of different phonological contexts. Inspired by this initiative retrospective on VOT, we will mark the occasion of 50 plus years of VOT in a special issue of Journal of Phonetics.


This special issue will be devoted to exploring phonetic properties of voicing contrasts with a view to providing a contemporary lens on various aspects of voicing contrast of consonants within and across the world’s languages from both theoretical and methodological perspectives, and relevant points of debate that have endured alongside or as an alternative to VOT. We will particularly welcome proposals on, though not limited to, one or more of the following topics: Phonetic properties of voicing contrast of consonants in the world’s languages; Variation in phonetic implementation of phonological voicing contrast as a function of linguistic structure; Articulatory mechanisms that may underlie VOT or voicing contrast; Relationship between voicing contrast and phonation; and Methodological issues on assessing phonetic properties of voicing contrast. These topics may primarily concern the acoustic/articulatory perspectives, but we also welcome contributions exploring these topics from the perceptual perspective. More broadly, we welcome contributions that address issues that are related to VOT and voicing contrast from both theoretical and methodological perspectives as long as they advance our understanding of voicing contrast in the world’s languages in a theoretically-informed way.


For more discussion on the topics and other details, please follow the link below  to see the full version of this call for papers or to download its full version.


Link to the full description of this call for papers

https://www.journals.elsevier.com/journal-of-phonetics/call-for-papers/call-for-papers-for-a-special-issue-in-journal-of-phonetics


Download the PDF version of the full call for papers:

http://media.journals.elsevier.com/content/files/sivotjphonfinal-11151319.pdf

 

Timeline

Ÿ   Deadline of submission of two-page paper proposals: July 1, 2017

Ÿ   Invitation for full paper submission: July 15, 2017

Ÿ   Deadline of submission of full papers: Nov. 15, 2017 

Ÿ   Expected publication date in print (tentative): Nov. 1, 2018 (but any manuscript accepted prior to this target date will be available online with DOI)

 

Two-page paper proposals (single-spaced with 12 pt font size) should be submitted by July 1, 2017, via email to Taehong Cho ([log in to unmask]) with cc to Gerry Docherty ([log in to unmask]) and Doug Whalen ([log in to unmask])

Authors of selected proposals will be invited to submit their full papers by Nov. 15, 2017. Invited full papers will undergo standard Journal of Phonetics review processes and be subject to rejection in the following two cases: when they do not meet the journal’s standard or when they are not likely to meet the targeted deadlines, for example, due to substantial revisions required by reviewers even after the first round of revision.

(04/17)

******************************************************

19-22 April 2017. 4th International Workshop on Sound Change (WSC4). Edinburgh, Scotland, UK. http://lel.ed.ac.uk/wsc/ ; j.kirby AT ed.ac.uk (06/16, 07/16, 08/16)

26-27 April 2017. Speech perception and production across the lifespan (SPPL 2017). UCL, London, UK. www.sppl2017.org  (06/16)

3-5 May 2017. International Workshop on Abstraction, Diversity and Speech Dynamics. Herrsching am Ammersee, Germany. http://www.phonetik.uni-muenchen.de/institut/veranstaltungen/abstraction-diversity-dynamics/index.html (01/16)

11-12 May 2017. Contemporary Research in Phonetics and Phonology: Methods, Aspects and Problems (CRiPaP 2017). Riga, Latvia  https://cripap.jimdo.com/   (02/17)

14-17 May 2017. Challenges in the analysis and processing of spontaneous speech (CAPSS workshop). Budapest, Hungary. capss2017 AT nytud.mta.hu http://capss2017.nytud.hu/  (03/16, 05/16, 01/17)

17-19 May 2017. EPIP5 - 5th International Conference on English Pronunciation: Issues & Practices. Caen, France. http://www.crisco.unicaen.fr/Home.html  (05/16)

18-19 May 2017. Speech Audio Archives: Preservation, Restoration, Annotation. Rome, Italy. http://www.lincei.it/modules.php?name=Convegni&file=lista&func=Convegni_edit&Id=135 0 (06/16)

24 May 2017. Workshop on Dynamic Modeling in Phonetics and Phonology (Session of 53rd Meeting of the Chicago Linguistic Society). Chicago, USA.https://lucian.uchicago.edu/blogs/phonlab/events/workshop-on-dynamic-modeling-in-phonetics-and-phonology/  (01/17)

31 May – 2 June. International Child Phonology Conference (ICPC2017), The George Washington University • Washington, DC Cynthia Core  ICPC2017 AT gwu.edu  (3/17)

11 June, 2017. Phonetics and Phonology in Loanword Adaptation, Cologne, Germany. http://www.fon.hum.uva.nl/klaas/loanwords.html  (12/16) (Satellite workshop)

11 June, 2017. Statistical Methods in Phonetic Sciences. Cologne, Germany. http://pape2017.uni-koeln.de/satellite-workshops/   (12/16) (Satellite Workshop)

12-14 June 2017. Phonetics and Phonology in Europe 2017. University of Cologne, Germany. http://pape2017.uni-koeln.de/  (09/16)

21-23 June 2017. Subsidia: Tools and Resources for Speech Sciences. Málaga (Costa del Sol), Spain. http://www.subsidiamalaga2017.com  (09/16)

23-25 June 2017. Approaches to Phonology and Phonetics (APAP). Lublin, Poland. http://apap.umcs.lublin.pl  (11/16)

5-7 July 2017. 15th Annual Conference of the French Phonology Network, Grenoble, France. http://www.gipsa-lab.fr/colloque/RFP-2017 (3/17)

5-8 July 2017. 7th International Conference on Speech Motor Control, Groningen, Netherlands. http://www.slp-hijmegen.nl/smc201/  (12/16)

9-12 July 2017. International Association for Forensic Phonetics and Acoustics (IAFPA) Split, Croatia. iafpa2017 AT gmail.com (3/17)

9-11 August 2017. Phonetics Teaching and Learning Conference, London, UCL. https://www.ucl.ac.uk/pals/study/cpd/cpd-courses/ptlc/  (12/16)

##18-19 August 2017. History of Speech Communication Research (HSCR), Helsinki, Finland.  https://hscr2017.org/ (04/17)

24-27 August 2017. 2017 Roundtable in Forensic Linguistics and Forensic Phonetics. Copenhagen, Denmark. http://germanicsocietyforensiclinguistics.org/roundtable/  (01/17)

31 August-1 September 2017. Processing Prosody across Languages, Varieties, and Nativeness (ProPro2017). Tuebingen, Germany. http://www.uni-tuebingen.de/propro  (02/17)

1-2 September 2017. Pronunciation in Second Language Learning and Teaching (PSLLT). Salt Lake City, USA. http://speechlab.utah.edu/PSLLT2017.php  (02/17)

10-13 September 2017. Accommodation in Verbal and Nonverbal Behaviour. Zurich, Switzerland. ufsp.spur AT gmail.com (11/16)

10-13 September 2017. Modelling the Acquisition of Foreign Language Speech, Zurich, Switzerland. Magdala AT wa.amu.edu.pl (12/16)

15-17 September 2017. 5th Annual Meeting on Phonology (AMP), New York University, USA. http://wp.nyu.edu/amp2017 (03/17)

##18-20 September 2017. Beyond VOT – Searching for Realism in Laryngeal Phonology, Poznań, Poland. http://wa.amu.edu.pl/plm/2017/  (04/17)

28-30 September 2017. Speech Rhythm in L1, L2 and Learner Varieties of English. Workshop at BICLCE2017, Vigo, Spain.https://sites.google.com/site/rflinguistics/workshops/rhythm2017  (11/16)

21-22 October 2017. 22nd National Conference of the English Phonetic Society of Japan and 3rd International Congress of Phoneticians of English (EPSJ22 and ICPE3).Fukuoka, Japan. http://www.cc.kochi-u.ac.jp/~tamasaki/EPSJ22_ICPE3_2017.htm   (02/17)

10-11 November 2017. Seoul International Conference on Speech Sciences (SICSS 2017). Seoul, Korea. http://www.sicss.or.kr/  (02/17)

22-24 November 2017. 7th International Conference on Experimental Phonetics (7CIFE). Madrid, Spain. http://congresos.uned.es/w13428  (02/17)

##30 November-2 December 2017. 11th International Conference on Native and Non-native Accents of English (ACCENTS 2017). Łódź, Poland.  http://filolog.uni.lodz.pl/accents/ (04/17)

4-10 August 2019. XIXth International Congress of Phonetic Sciences. Melbourne, Australia. http://icphs2019.org/  (03/16)

*****************

CONFERENCES

*****************
 IAFPA 2017
Call for papers

Abstracts are invited for the 26th annual conference of the International Association for Forensic Phonetics and Acoustics (IAFPA) in Split, Croatia in 2017. We welcome abstracts on topics such as:
•         Speaker comparison
•         Speech and audio enhancement
•         Transcription
•         Speaker profiling
•         Disputed utterances
•         Voice line-ups
•         Authentication of recordings
•         LADO (Language analysis for the determination of origin)
•         Automatic speaker recognition/comparison
•         Retrieval of speaker population data
•         Interesting case reports

This is not a complete list and other topics would be welcome if they promote the aims of IAFPA (cf. www.iafpa.net).
We are planning three categories of papers:
(1)   Regular oral papers
(2)   Regular poster presentations
(3)   Work in progress poster presentations. This is a special poster session to outline new or ongoing research developments, particularly suitable for students.
Important dates
•         Abstract submission deadline categories (1) and (2): Sunday 26 March 2017 (extended)
•         Abstract submission deadline category (3): 31 May 2017
•         Expected notification of acceptance: 30 April 2017 (category 3: 15 June 2017)
•         Conference dates: 09-12 July 2017

Abstract format
•         Length: maximum 500 words, excluding title and references
•         Abstract format: submit as PDF, excluding name(s) and affiliation(s) of     author(s), please also remove authorship metadata
•         Template: (see the other document in the attachment)
•         Abstracts must be in English
•         Use only the words 'IAFPA abstract submission' as a subject.
•         Please indicate on your abstract whether you prefer to do a poster presentation or a talk (see template).
•         Send your abstract(s) to [log in to unmask] by 15 March 2017

Best Student Paper award
There will be a best student paper award. Please indicate on your abstract whether your paper is eligible for the student paper award (see template). The criteria for participation are:

- The first author is a student, i.e. registered as a (master/PhD) student.
- The first author presents his/her presentation or poster in person at the conference.
- The work presented has been done by the student.
- Note: being a student member of IAFPA is not a requirement.

The winner of this Prize wins free registration for next year's IAFPA conference.
To contact IAFPA Conference 2017 send an email to: iafpa2017 AT gmail.com
__________________________________________________________

The French Phonology Network (Réseau Français de Phonologie) is launching a call for papers for its 2017 annual conference. Building on the success of the previous conferences organized in Orléans (2010), Tours (2011), Paris (2012), Nantes (2013), Lille (2014), Bordeaux (2015) and Nice (2016), the 2017 edition will be organized by GIPSA-lab and will take place from 5 to 7 July at the Grenoble Alpes University, France.

Invited Speakers:

- Sabrina Bendjaballah, LLING & Univ. Nantes
- Monik Charette, SOAS London
- John Harris, UCL London
- Rachid Ridouane, LPP & Univ. Paris 3

Main session:

Submissions from any school or theoretical framework of phonology are welcome. Topics of interest may relate to phonology in general or in specific language, in synchronic or in diachronic dimensions. Issues focusing on phonology and its interfaces, epistemology, descriptive phonology, experimental phonology, phonological modeling or formalism are awaited.

Thematic session:

This year's conference, we especially encourage submissions focusing on the two following topics:

- Multi-level approach of the phonology-phonetic interface and / or description of minority languages, dialects, spatial variation, phonological changes, language and sound system typologies;
- Development and acquisition of phonological representation.

http://www.gipsa-lab.fr/colloque/RFP-2017
RFP-2017 AT gipsa-lab.fr

________________________________________________________

##2nd International Workshop on the History of Speech Communication Research (HSCR 2017)

The Second International Workshop on the History of Speech Communication Research (HSCR 2017) will be held at the University of Helsinki on August 18–19, 2017.  The workshop addresses the evolution of speech sciences, notably experimental tools and methods. The second workshop will be organised together with  the new Center for Digital Humanities — Heldig — at the University of Helsinki. Thus, a special focus for the workshop will be  “the changing face of speech communication research; from mechanical to digital”.

HSCR 2017 is an ISCA sponsored event and a satellite event for Interspeech 2017 in Stockholm.

Invited speaker: Michael Ashby (University College London): ''The Digital History of Phonetic Science''

https://hscr2017.org/
________________________________________________________

The Department of Linguistics and the Department of Communicative Sciences and Disorders at New York University are pleased to announce that the 5th Annual Meeting on Phonology (AMP) will be held on September 15th-17th, 2017 in New York, NY, USA.

We invite abstracts for presentations on all areas of theoretical, experimental and computational phonology. The conference will also feature an integrated, special session “Bridging the gap between phonological theory and speech disorders”.

News
-       February 1: Call for papers

Invited speakers

Main session
-       Sharon Rose (University of California, San Diego)
-       Elizabeth Zsiga (Georgetown University)

Special session: Bridging the gap between phonological theory and speech disorders
-       Adam Buchwald (New York University)

Workshops

Main session
-       Experigen: Michael Becker (Stony Brook University)
-       VoiceSauce: Jianjing Kuang (University of Pennsylvania)

Special session: Bridging the gap between phonological theory and speech disorders
-       Ultrasound biofeedback: Doug Whalen (The Graduate Center, CUNY)

Important dates
-       February 1: Call for papers
-       April 24: Abstracts due
-       June 23: Notification of acceptance, Registration opens
-       July 15: Program available
-       September 15-17: AMP conference

http://wp.nyu.edu/amp2017
am2017 AT nyu.edu

________________________________________________________

##Beyond VOT – Searching for Realism in Laryngeal Phonology
Session of the 47th Poznań Linguistic Meeting
Poznań, 18-20 September 2017


In this session, we will reconsider the links between phonological laryngeal specifications and their phonetic realization. We are looking in particular for contributions that seek to relate phonetic data to phonological specifications, either by way of experimental study, or through formal analyses that facilitate the formulation of new hypotheses for phonetic research.

Possible questions for investigation may include the following:

-    How 'primary' is VOT cross-linguistically as a perceptual cue?
-    How do cross-linguistic VOT patterns relate to the use of other cues?
-    To what extent is it feasible to merge specifications for voicing, tone, airstream mechanisms and phonation types?
-    Why don't languages contrast different categories of negative VOT?
-    Is it possible to provide a phonological account of laryngeal patterns without invoking markedness? Is this a desirable goal?
-    Is it possible to reconcile the appeal of laryngeal realism in capturing the VOT typology with the evidence that voiceless is phonologically active in true-voice languages?

 http://wa.amu.edu.pl/plm/2017/  
________________________________________________________

##11th International Conference on Native and Non-native Accents of English (ACCENTS 2017)
Łódź, 30 Nov – 2 Dec,  2017
 
‘Accents’ is an annual conference organized by the Department of English Language and Applied Linguistics at the University of Łódź, Poland. It brings together researchers and teachers interested in native and non-native accents of English, approached from a variety of theoretical and/or practical perspectives. The key issues discussed each year include individual accent characteristics, the dynamism of accent usage, accent teaching and learning, and the methods and tools for accent studies. ACCENTS 2017 aim to continue the discussion of the main themes of variability and function of accents, focusing on ‘accents in use’.
 
CONFIRMED PLENARY SPEAKERS
Una Cunningham, University of Canterbury, Christchurch
Magnus Huber, Justus-Liebig-Universität Giessen
Nancy Niedzielski, Rice University, Houston
Pilar Prieto, Universitat Pompeu Fabra, barcelona
Morgan Sonderegger, McGill University, Montreal
 
Call for Papers 
We invite proposals for papers, workshops and posters related to the main theme ‘accents in use’ as well as other issues related to native and non-native accents of English, including, but not limited to the ones mentioned below: 

·         Functional approach to accents
·         Accents in context (social, ethnic, geographical, political, historical etc.) 
·         Native / non-native accent perspective in theory and practice 
·         Variability in accents: description, explanation and predictions 
·         Tools for accent/pronunciation studies
·         Pronunciation teaching and learning
 
Please notice that each author can propose two contributions provided that one of them is co-authored.  Papers are given 20 minutes followed by 10 minutes for discussion, workshops will typically have 45 minute slots. Please specify the intended presentation format in your proposal.
The deadline for abstract submission is July 31, 2017. Please send  two copies of an abstract of up to 400 words (excluding references) to [log in to unmask], with the intended format, name and affiliation written under the title in one copy. The proposals will go through the process of peer review, after which notifications of acceptance will be sent out by August 31, 2017. Information on our previous conferences can be found at http://filolog.uni.lodz.pl/accents/ under Abstracts. Please send all conference related questions to [log in to unmask]

**********************

  POSITIONS VACANT

***********************

University of Huddersfield, UK

We are pleased to invite applications for the post of Lecturer/Senior Lecturer in Phonetics and Phonology at 0.6 FTE based in the Linguistics and Modern Languages subject area. You will be replacing Dr Erica Gold who will be working on an ESRC funded research project that involves collecting a database of West Yorkshire speakers. You will contribute to teaching undergraduate phonetics across a number of modules, fulfil administration connected with teaching and contribute to developments in research, teaching, impact-focused activities and outreach across the subject area. Applicants should have a PhD in phonetics.

This post is based in the Linguistics and Modern Languages subject area, within the School of Music, Humanities and Media.

If you would like to have an informal discussion about the post please do not hesitate to contact Dr. Erica Gold at the contact information below.

To apply, please visit the application URL and search for the position "Lecturer/Senior Lecturer in Phonetics and Phonology".

University of Huddersfield: http://www.hud.ac.uk/research/linguisticsandmodernlanguages/

Linguistics at Huddersfield: https://www.linguisticsathuddersfield.com/
Application Deadline:17-Apr-2017
Application https://vacancies.hud.ac.uk/tlive_webrecruitment/wrd/run/etrec105gf.open?wvid=47489100QU

Contact Information: Erica Gold, e.gold AT hud.ac.uk

Phone: 0044 (0)1484 473848

_______________________________________________

The George Mason University, Fairfax, Virginia, USA

Tenure-Track Assistant Professor position in Linguistics with a specialization in phonology beginning Fall 2017. George Mason University has a strong institutional commitment to the achievement of excellence and diversity among its faculty and staff, and strongly encourages candidates to apply who will enrich Mason’s academic and culturally inclusive environment.

The Linguistics Program at Mason offers a Ph.D., M.A., an undergraduate concentration, and various minors in linguistics. Information about the linguistics program can be found at http://linguistics.gmu.edu/

Required:
- Ph.D. in Linguistics; and
- Must demonstrate potential for excellence in scholarship, and in graduate and undergraduate teaching.

Preferred Qualifications:
- A secondary specialization in experimental phonology or second language acquisition is strongly favored.

For full consideration, applicants must apply for position number F8800z at the application link below; complete and submit the online application; and upload a cover letter, CV, research statement, up to three representative papers (in fields labeled ‘Writing Sample,’ ‘Other Doc 2’ and ‘Other Doc 3’), and a list of three professional references with contact information. For full consideration, all materials must be received by April 14, 2017. The department will interview candidates via Skype in late April 2017
http://jobs.gmu.edu
weinberg AT gmu.edu

____________________________________________

##University of Rochester, NY, USA
Post-doctoral Fellow in Linguistics

The University of Rochester Center for Language Sciences (CLS) seeks a post-doctoral fellow for the 2017-18 year. The successful candidate will be housed in the Linguistics department. Preference is for a primary specialty in morphology or phonetics, but applicants from all areas will be considered. The successful candidate is expected to engage in interdisciplinary research bridging to another area in the CLS community, which is composed of researchers in Linguistics, Computer Science, Philosophy, Brain and Cognitive Sciences, Biomedical Engineering, the Neurolinguistics program, the Eastman School of Music, the Center for Origins of Cognition, and the Institute for Data Science.

Dissertation must be successfully defended before July 1, 2017, and Ph.D. degree awarded at next institutional opportunity.

Informal inquiries may be directed to the email below (see contact information).

To apply, please send cover letter, CV, samples of written work, and three letters of recommendation via email to the Application email below.

The position will remain open until filled, but for strongest consideration submit completed applications by April 15, 2017.

The University of Rochester is an EO/AA employer.

Contact: Prof. Greg Carlson, [log in to unmask]

____________________________________________

##Rice University, Texas, USA
Lecturer in Phonetics/Phonology/Sociolinguistics

The Department of Linguistics at Rice University located in Houston, Texas, is now accepting applications for a lecturer position to begin July 1, 2017. The candidate should have research expertise related to sociophonetics, speech perception, and/or laboratory phonology. Experience recording and analyzing language-in-use in local speech communities (either underdocumented/endangered languages, or minority varieties of English) is desirable. This is a two-year appointment with possibility of renewal with a competitive salary. The successful applicant will be asked to teach two undergraduate courses per semester in the areas of Introduction to Linguistics, Sociolinguistics, and Phonetics/Phonology. S/he will also be expected to participate in departmental activities, and, together with other Linguistics faculty members, lead hands-on workshops for undergraduate students on recording, documenting, and analyzing language in urban communities.

We especially welcome applications from researchers who share the department’s interest in approaching language from a usage-based perspective with solid empirical grounding in primary data, especially approaches of a cognitive, social-interactional, and/or functional nature (see also our department website at http://ling.rice.edu/).

Application materials include: cover letter, CV, teaching statement, sample of written work, and names and contact information for three references. Past teaching evaluations and/or information about course topics the applicant could teach are also welcome but not required at this time. The deadline for receipt of applications is April 25th 2017. PhD is required by time of appointment.

Please upload your application materials to the application URL below. Materials that are not uploaded through that website will not be considered.

http://jobs.rice.edu/postings/9857

Equal Opportunity Employer- Females/Minorities/Veterans/Disabled/Sexual Orientation/Gender Identity

Contact: Rita Riley, [log in to unmask]
____________________________________________

##University of Delaware: College of Arts & Sciences: Linguistics and Cognitive Science
Assistant Professor- Phonetics

Location: Newark, DE

The Department of Linguistics and Cognitive Science at the University of Delaware invites applications for a temporary assistant professor position, to support the Department's teaching needs in phonetics.  This appointment will commence September 1, 2017, and will last for one year.  The successful candidate will demonstrate a strong commitment to excellence in teaching and a thorough knowledge of phonetics.  The primary responsibility of this position is to teach Introduction to Speech and Hearing Science and Introduction to Acoustic Phonetics.  Knowledge of and ability to teach phonology as well as the ability to teach general courses in linguistics is also desirable.  The successful candidate will also work with graduate students in phonetics and advise on phonetics research in the Department’s phonetics laboratory.

The University of Delaware combines leadership in research with a commitment to undergraduate and graduate education.  The main campus in Newark, Delaware provides the amenities of a vibrant college town with convenient access to the major cities of the East Coast.  The Department of Linguistics and Cognitive Science (https://www.lingcogsci.udel.edu) offers a PhD in Linguistics, a Master's degree in Linguistics and Cognitive Science, a Bachelor of Science degree in Cognitive Science (with a concentration in Pre-Professional Speech-Language Pathology), and a Bachelor of Arts degree in Linguistics. The Department is comprised of 11 full-time faculty and enrolls approximately 30 PhD students, 25 MA students, 290 undergraduate majors and 60 minors.  The Department also has ties to a new Clinical Master's Program in Communication Sciences and Disorders.  This program includes a new Speech-Language-Hearing Clinic (http://sites.udel.edu/cscd/clinic/), which opened in fall 2015.

QUALIFICATIONS

Applicants for this position should have a PhD in linguistics with a specialization in phonetics, or should expect to complete their degree requirements prior to appointment.

APPLICATION INSTRUCTIONS

Applicants should submit a CV; a letter outlining their qualifications, teaching experience, and research interests; and arrange to have three letters of recommendation submitted.

https://apply.interfolio.com/41375


********************************************************************

The deadline for material for the next foNETiks newsletter is 7th May 2017.

******************************************************************** 

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