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foNETiks
A newsletter for
The International Phonetic Association
and for the Phonetic Sciences
October 2015
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Linda Shockey, University of Reading, UK
Lisa Lim, The University of Hong Kong
Rachel Smith, University of Glasgow, UK
Radek Święciński, University of Amsterdam
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
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ANNOUNCEMENTS
[new ones marked ##, normally with further information below]
[date of first appearance follows]
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9-11 October 2015. 2015 Annual Meeting on Phonology (AMP 2015). Vancouver, B.C. Canada. http://blogs.ubc.ca/amp2015/ (09/15)
16-17 October 2015. Seventh Annual Conference on Pronunciation in Second Language Learning and Teaching: L2 Pronunciation and Discourse. Dallas, TX, USA. http://linguistlist.org/easyabs/PSLLT2015 (05/15)
22-24 October 2015. V Colóquio Brasileiro de Prosódia da Fala. Ceilândia, Brasília, Brazil. http://www.lbass.org/?sessao=atividades (7/15)
5-6 November 2015. Feedback in Pronunciation Training. Hofgut Imsbachm, Northern Saarland, Germany. feedback-workshop AT coli.uni-saarland.de; www.ifcasl.org (07/15)
20-21 November 2015. 2015 International Conference on Speech Sciences (ICSS 2015). Seoul, South Korea. http://ksss.jams.or.kr (02/15)
26-27 November 2015. 3rd International Workshop on Phonotactics and Phonotactic Modeling (PPM 2015). Vienna, Austria. http://w3.erss.univ-tlse2.fr/ppm2015/ (06/15)
30 November – 1 December 2015. Methods in L2 Prosody 2015 - Romance Languages and Chinese at the Crossroads (ML2P-2015). Napoli, Italy. http://www.gscp.it (09/15)
3-4 December 2015. 2nd Edinburgh Symposium on Historical Phonology. Edinburgh, Scotland, UK. http://www.lel.ed.ac.uk/symposium-on-historical-phonology (09/15)
3-5 December 2015. 9th Conference on Native and Non-native Accents of English (ACCENTS 2015). Łódź, Poland. http://filolog.uni.lodz.pl/accents/ (06/15)
8-10 December 2015. Ultrafest VII. Hong Kong. http://www.ultrafest2015.hku.hk/ (04/15)
10-11 December 2015. Workshop on Individual differences in language processing across the adult life span: Implications for models of comprehension and production. Max Planck institute for Psycholinguistics, Nijmegen, The Netherlands. (09/15)
18-19 December 2015. 3rd St. Petersburg Winter Workshop on Experimental Studies of Speech and Language. St Petersburg, Russia. https://nightwhites2015.wordpress.com (09/15)
7-8 January 2016. Workshop on Tone and Intonation 3. Guwahati, Assam, India. http://www.iitg.ernet.in/wti3 (06/15)
## 8 January 2016. One-day teach-in on Acoustic Modelling of Sound Change. Centre for Linguistics and Philology, University of Oxford. http://www.phon.ox.ac.uk/jcoleman/ancient-sounds-workshop.html (10/15)
9 January 2016. Speech Processing in Realistic Environments (SPIRE). Groningen, The Netherlands. http://spin2016.nl and http://inspire-itn.eu/index.php/inspire-events/workshop-spin2016 (09/15)
13 January 2016. Workshop on Variation in Phonology. Workshop of OCP13 (see item below). Budapest, Hungary. http://seas3.elte.hu/ocp13/variation.html (05/15)
13-16 January 2016. 13th Old World Conference in Phonology (OCP13). Budapest, Hungary. http://seas3.elte.hu/ocp13 (05/15)
## 14-15 January 2016. CUNY Phonology Forum 2016: Conference on Sonority (Phonoforum 2016). New York, USA. http://cunyphonologyforum.ws.gc.cuny.edu (10/15)
4 March 2016. Third Workshop on Sound Change. Salamanca, Spain. http://diarium.usal.es/fsmiret/3rd-workshop-on-sound-change-salamanca-march-4th-2016/ (03/15)
22-23 March 2016. Prosody and Information Structure in Stuttgart (PINS). Stuttgart, Germany. http://www.ims.uni-stuttgart.de/events/PINS.html (09/15)
## 30 March – 1 April 2016, British Association of Academic Phoneticians Colloquium (BAAP). Lancaster, United Kingdom. http://wp.lancs.ac.uk/phonetics/baap2016/ (10/15)
31 March - 2 April 2016. Sociolinguistic Variation and Language Processing (SVALP). Blacksburg, Virginia, USA. http://www.cpe.vt.edu/svalp/ (04/15)
1-2 April 2016. Sound to Word in Bilingual and Second Language Speech Perception. Iowa City, Iowa, USA. http://www.soundtoword16.org/ (09/15)
8 April 2016. Workshop on Syntactic and Phonological Representation of Speech Acts. Göttingen, Germany. https://www.uni-goettingen.de/en/glow-2016---39th-generative-linguistics-in-the-old-world/510338.html
15-17 April 2016. Current Approaches to Spanish and Portuguese Second Language Phonology (CASPSLaP 2016). Columbus, Ohio, USA. http://u.osu.edu/caspslaposu2016/ (06/15)
24-27 May 2016. 5th International Symposium on Tonal Aspects of Languages (TAL 2016). Buffalo, NY, USA. https://ubwp.buffalo.edu/tal2016/ (09/15)
31 May – 3 June 2016. Speech Prosody 2016. Boston, MA, USA. http://www.speechprosody2016.org (09/15)
10-12 June 2016. New Sounds 2016: 8th International Symposium on the Acquisition of Second Language Speech. Aarhus, Denmark. http://conferences.au.dk/newsounds2016/ (09/15)
15-18 June 2016. International Clinical Phonetics and Linguistics Association Conference. Halifax, Canada. http://icpla2016.ca (07/15)
13-16 July 2016. 15th Conference on Laboratory Phonology (LabPhon15). Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, USA. http://labphon.org/labphon15 (03/15)
18-23 July 2016. International Congress of Romance Linguistics and Philology Rome, Italy. http://www.CILFR2016Roma.it (07/15)
21-24 September 2016. Experimental Approaches to the Perception and Production of Language Variation, Vienna. https://exapp2016.univie.ac.at/ (07/15).
28-30 October 2016. Phonetics Today. Moscow, Russia. phoneticstoday AT yandex.ru (09/15)
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CONFERENCES
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CUNY Phonology Forum 2016: Conference on Sonority
CUNY, New York, USA: 14-15 January 2016
http://cunyphonologyforum.ws.gc.cuny.edu
Abstract deadline: 31 October 2015
Call for Papers:
Sonority is thought to play a central role in the organization of segments into syllables, and more specifically, to determine the nature of syllable-internal consonant clusters, possible coda segments, syllabic consonants, glide-vowel alternations, epenthesis sites, tone-bearing units, and even, in some languages, sonority-based stress patterns. Investigations into sonority have focused on its role in synchronic grammar, its status as universal and innate, and whether the full sonority scale reflects a single phonetic correlate. The topic has received much attention from both theoretical and laboratory phonologists, and this forum seeks to showcase work from both approaches.
We invite papers from any subdivision of cognitive science such as formal linguistics, language acquisition, neurolinguistics, phonetics, philosophy, psychology, etc. We also encourage diversity in methods so we welcome both formal and experimental approaches to the topic of sonority.
Submission Guidelines:
We invite both oral presentations and posters. Abstracts should consist of a one-page description of the paper (12pt font) with a second page for references, data and/or illustrations; please specify if you wish to submit for a poster, an oral presentation, or are fine with either. Talks will be 20 minutes with 10 minutes for discussion.
Abstracts should be anonymous, on one A4/letter page (12 pt. font) with a second page for references, data and/or illustrations. Abstracts should be emailed as a .pdf attachment to [log in to unmask] no later than 23:59 EDT on 31 October 2015.
Important Dates:
31 October 2015 – deadline for abstract submission
1 December 2015 – notification of acceptance
14-15 January 2016 – Conference on Sonority
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British Association of Academic Phoneticians (BAAP)
Lancaster University, UK: 30 March-1 April 2016
http://wp.lancs.ac.uk/phonetics/baap2016/
Call for Papers
Abstract deadline: 6 November 2015
The 2016 British Association of Academic Phoneticians Colloquium will take place at Lancaster University on 30th March to 1st April. The meeting will be held within the campus of Lancaster University, where on-site accommodation will be available. We will send details of how to book the accommodation when registration opens.
The BAAP Colloquium is open to members and invited participants, i.e. those phoneticians working in the British Isles who know a member. Those who are not members and are interested in attending are encouraged to contact a member known to them or the President directly (Jane Stuart-Smith: [log in to unmask]). Postgraduate students in phonetics and speech science are particularly encouraged to attend the Colloquium.
Call for papers:
Please note that all submissions must be principally on phonetics, but may also overlap with other fields. If you submit more than one abstract then you may only be first author on one oral presentation and one poster presentation (no limits on non-first-author submissions). Your abstract should be a maximum of one page in length, including references and illustrations, and should NOT include any personal information.
Please upload abstracts via this Linguist List Easy Abs page:
http://linguistlist.org/easyabs/BAAP2016
Deadline for abstract submission is Friday 6th November at midnight UK time.
Any questions, please contact the organisers: Claire Nance and Sam Kirkham [log in to unmask]
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LabPhon15: Speech Dynamics and Phonological Representation
Cornell University, NY USA: 13-16 July 2016
http://www.labphon.org/labphon15/node/2
Call for papers
Abstract deadline: 1 December 2015
Abstract submission is now open for the 15th conference on Laboratory Phonology. LabPhon15 will feature oral sessions that are primarily thematic (see below) as well as poster sessions. Submissions on any aspect of laboratory phonology are welcome.
Student submissions are particularly encouraged. Reduced registration fees will be available for all students, and a number of student travel grants will be awarded.
The abstract submission deadline is midnight December 1, any time zone. All abstracts must be submitted through EasyChair (via the LabPhon website, http://www.labphon.org/labphon15/node/2) between October 1 and December 1, 2015.
Thematic sessions
Production dynamics: How are representations constructed and implemented in speech, and what does articulation reveal about the dynamics of production mechanisms? How do these mechanisms shape representations on longer timescales?
Invited Speaker: Khalil Iskarous, University of Southern California;
Invited Discussant: Elizabeth Zsiga, Georgetown University
Perceptual dynamics: What forms of perceptual representation do speaker-hearers use and what are the temporal dynamics of perception? How does the interaction between perception and production constrain phonological systems on life-span and diachronic timescales?
Invited Speaker: Meghan Sumner, Stanford University;
Invited Discussant: Jennifer Hay, University of Canterbury
Prosodic organization: What are the mechanisms of prosodic organization and how do they give rise to cross-linguistic differences? What are the connections between perception and production of prosodic structure?
Invited Speaker: Yiya Chen, Leiden University;
Invited Discussant: Martine Grice, University of Cologne
Lexical dynamics and memory: How do experience and lexical memory influence phonological representations? What are the relations between lexical representation, production, and perception across diverse timescales?
Invited Speaker: Matthew Goldrick, Northwestern University;
Invited Discussant: Keith Johnson, University of California, Berkeley
Phonological acquisition and changes over the life-span: What is the nature of early representations and how do they change? How does learning a second-language interact with existing representations?
Invited Speaker: Sharon Goldwater, University of Edinburgh;
Invited Discussant: Stefan Frisch, University of South Florida
Social network dynamics: How does the structure of social networks influence phonological representations on diverse timescales? What are the roles of perception and production in relation to social network dynamics?
Invited Speaker: Jane Stuart-Smith, University of Glasgow;
Invited Discussant: Erik Thomas, North Carolina State University
Abstract Submission
Deadline: December 1, 2015
Notification of acceptance: February 15, 2016
All abstracts must be submitted through EasyChair (via the LabPhon15 website,www.labphon.org/labphon15) between October 1 and midnight December 1 (any time zone).
Abstract submission guidelines:
- Individuals may submit only one abstract as first or sole author.
- Individuals may be a co-author on more than one abstract.
- Submitted abstracts must be in .pdf format, with A4 or letter size (8.5 x 11 in.) page setting.
- Abstracts may be up to 2 pages, including references and figures.
- Include the paper title in the abstract.
- Abstracts must have a minimum of 1-inch margins and 11 point font.
- Authors are allowed (but not required) to include one or more figures in their abstract, but any figures should be clearly labeled and should be described in the abstract text.
- The filename must be in the form "Paper_title.pdf", or "Paper_title_abbreviated.pdf".
For example: Longitudinal_study_long_distance_coarticulation.pdf.
- Review of submitted abstracts is double-blind. Therefore, abstracts must be anonymous; author name(s) must not appear in the abstract or file name. Authors should check that no author name is in the document properties of the .pdf file.
- During the submission process authors may identify which conference theme(s), if any, their submission relates to.
For more information, please visit LabPhon15 website (http://labphon.org/labphon15).
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One-day teach-in on Acoustic Modelling of Sound Change
Centre for Linguistics and Philology, University of Oxford: 8th January 2016
http://www.phon.ox.ac.uk/jcoleman/ancient-sounds-workshop.html
Over the past few years we have developed a variety of useful computational techniques for modelling sound change using audio recordings and speech analysis/synthesis methods. In this workshop, John Coleman and other members of the Ancient Sounds research group will give hands-on classes about those techniques and how to carry them out on your own laptop computer. In this way we hope to spread the skills and equip participants with the practical know-how to carry out such analyses themselves. The target audience is graduate students, postdocs, and other researchers interested in historical phonology and comparative philology.
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POSITIONS VACANT
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Assistant Professor(s) in General Linguistics/Phonology
Council for the Humanities-Program in Linguistics, Princeton University, New Jersey, USA
https://jobs.princeton.edu
Application deadline: 2 November 2015
The Program in Linguistics at Princeton University invites applications for two tenure-track Assistant Professors, beginning in the academic year 2016-17. The program welcomes applications in all fields of linguistics, though special consideration will be given to applicants with research interests in syntax or phonology. Preference will be given to candidates who demonstrate willingness and ability to teach a broad range of undergraduate courses, including courses outside of their research specialty.
Ph.D. is expected by the time of the start date.
Interested candidates should apply online at the application website below with a cover letter, CV, a research statement, sample(s) of research, a teaching statement and evidence of teaching excellence, and at least 3 letters of recommendation. Applicants should submit materials by November 2, 2015. Princeton University is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer and all qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, disability status, protected veteran status, or any other characteristic protected by law. These positions are subject to the University’s background check policy.
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Tenure Track Assistant Professor of Phonetics
Department of Linguistics, Univeristy of California, Santa Barbara
https://recruit.ap.ucsb.edu/apply/JPF00566
Application deadline: 6 November 2015
The Linguistics Department of the University of California, Santa Barbara seeks to hire a linguist specializing in phonetics. The appointment will be a tenure-track position at the Assistant Professor level, effective July 1, 2016. The ideal candidate will use primary data collected through one or more methodological paradigms to explore the importance of phonetics for our understanding of phonology, and more generally, linguistic theory. We especially seek candidates with expertise in speech perception and/or articulation. Important criteria for this position include research on multiple languages and thorough training in linguistics. The candidate should also have the potential to link the theoretical implications of his or her research to other subdisciplines in linguistics, and to interact with colleagues and students across disciplinary boundaries at UCSB. Candidates must have demonstrated excellence in teaching and will be expected to teach a range of graduate and undergraduate courses in phonetics, phonology, and general linguistics and to contribute to the department's undergraduate minor in Language and Speech Technologies. For more information on the department, see www.linguistics.ucsb.edu.
A Ph.D. in linguistics or a related field is expected by the time of appointment. To ensure full consideration, all application materials, including letters of reference, should be received by November 6, 2015. The position will remain open until filled. Applicants must complete the online form at https://recruit.ap.ucsb.edu/apply/JPF00566
and must submit online the following in PDF format: letter of application, statement of research interests, curriculum vitae, and 2 writing samples. Applicants should request at least 3 academic letters of reference to be sent directly to https://recruit.ap.ucsb.edu/apply/JPF00566 by the November 6 deadline.
Materials submitted via fax or hard copy will not be accepted.
Inquiries may be addressed to the Search Committee at [log in to unmask]
Applicants selected for an interview will have the option of either a Skype video interview with the search committee or an in-person interview at the Linguistic Society of America annual meeting in Washington, D.C. (January 7-10, 2016); interviews in either format will be considered equivalent. Our department has a genuine commitment to diversity, and is especially interested in candidates who can contribute to the diversity and excellence of the academic community through research, teaching and service. The University of California is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action employer. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, disability status, protected veteran status, or any other characteristic protected by law.
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Assistant Professor in Phonetics
The Department of Cognitive, Linguistic, and Psychological Sciences, Brown University, Providence USA
http://apply.interfolio.com/31071
Application deadline: 1 December 2015
The Department of Cognitive, Linguistic, and Psychological Sciences at Brown University invites applications for a tenure-track Assistant Professor position beginning July 1, 2016, specializing in the phonetics of language, including experimental and theoretical approaches to speech acoustics, production and/or perception. We seek applicants whose research informs and/or is informed by one or more neighboring areas in linguistics, cognitive science, or psychology. Such areas include, but are not limited to, language change, lexical access, perceptual systems, phonetic fieldwork, the phonetics/phonology interface, and sociolinguistics. Successful candidates are expected to have (1) a track record of excellence in research, (2) a well-specified research plan that is likely to lead to research funding, and (3) a readiness to contribute to teaching and mentoring at both the undergraduate and graduate level. Preference will be given to candidates who can teach an introductory-level course in phonology on an as-needed basis. Brown has a highly interdisciplinary research environment in the study of mind, brain, behavior, and language; the Department has
recently moved into a newly renovated state-of-the-art building in the heart of campus.
QUALIFICATIONS
All Ph.D. requirements must be completed before July 1, 2016.
APPLICATION INSTRUCTIONS
Curriculum vitae, reprints and preprints of publications, statements of research and teaching interests (one page each), and three letters of reference should be submitted on-line as PDFs to http://apply.interfolio.com/31071. Applications received by December 1, 2015 are assured of full review.
Brown University is committed to fostering a diverse and inclusive academic global community; as an EEO/AA employer, Brown considers applicants for employment without regard to, and does not discriminate on the basis of, gender, race, protected veteran status, disability, or any other legally protected status.
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Assistant Professor of Phonology
Department of Languages, Literatures, and Linguistics, Syracuse University, New York USA
http://www.syr.edu
Application deadline: 7 December 2015
The Linguistics program in the Department of Languages, Literatures, and Linguistics in the College of Arts and Sciences at Syracuse University invites applications for a tenure-track assistant professor of Linguistics. We seek candidates with a primary research interest in phonology. Additional interest in language acquisition (L1 or L2), computational linguistics, or in experimental phonetics or phonology or the phonology-morphology interface is highly desirable. The successful candidate will be expected to teach undergraduate and graduate courses in phonology as well as in general linguistics. Ph.D. in linguistics with a specialization in phonology will be required in hand by August 2016.
The successful candidate will contribute to the core curriculum of the Linguistics Studies minor, major, and Master of Arts degree programs, to the linguistic theory concentration, and to a computational linguistics curriculum.
Applicants must complete a confidential faculty application, and submit a letter of application (cover letter), curriculum vitae, research writing sample and contact information for three professional references at the application website below to job number 072059. Application deadline is December 7, 2015. Syracuse University is an Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity institution, and we welcome applications from diverse candidates. Women and minorities are especially encouraged to apply.
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Assistant Professor of Linguistics
Department of Linguistics, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, USA
http://apply.interfolio.com/31902
Application deadline: 1 January 2016
The Department of Linguistics at Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey (New Brunswick) invites applicants for a tenure‐track Assistant Professor position in linguistics with a specialization in phonology, beginning September 1, 2016. We seek applicants whose research interests complement those of the current faculty and who can contribute breadth and depth to the department with respect to research, teaching, and advising at the graduate and undergraduate levels.
Applicants must have completed all degree requirements for a Ph.D. in linguistics or a related field by August 31, 2016.
Applications should include a cover letter, a curriculum vitae, a research statement, sample publications, a teaching statement, teaching evaluations if available, and three letters of reference addressed to Linguistics Search Committee (address below). The cover letter should include a list of those writing letters of reference and a list of all the materials that have been, or will be, submitted. All materials should be submitted via Interfolio (link below).
Review of applications will begin November 1, 2015 and continue until the position is filled. For full consideration, applications should be submitted by November 15, 2015. Inquiries about the search should be sent to Ms. Marilyn Reyes.
Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey, is an Equal Opportunity / Affirmative Action Employer. Qualified applicants will be considered for employment without regard to race, creed, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity or expression, national origin, disability status, genetic information, protected veteran status, military service or any other category protected by law. As an institution, we value diversity of background and opinion, and prohibit discrimination or harassment on the basis of any legally protected class in the areas of hiring, recruitment, promotion, transfer, demotion, training, compensation, pay, fringe benefits, layoff, termination or any other terms and conditions of employment.
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Assistant Professor in Phonetics and/or Phonology
Department of Linguistics, United Arab Emirates University
http://www.chss.uaeu.ac.ae/en/departments/als/
Application deadline: 31 January 2016
The Department of Linguistics, College of Humanities and Social Sciences, United Arab Emirates University (UAEU) invites applications for an Assistant Professor position with a specialization in phonetics and phonology. The post is expected to be available from January 2016, pending budgetary approval.
We are seeking an energetic researcher/teacher who is interested in the opportunity to join a fast-growing and innovative department. Faculty in the Department of Linguistics are involved in numerous research projects and the department hosts a state-of-the-art EEG Lab and is currently developing a Phonetics Lab.
Compensation includes competitive tax-free salary, free housing in off-campus villa or apartment, a comprehensive health plan, education allowance for children, annual return travel to home destination, and an end-of-service gratuity.
UAE University is the largest and most comprehensive federal university in the UAE. It has approximately 14,000 students, 800 faculty members and offers well over 70 programs at all levels through nine colleges, of which the College of Humanities and Social Sciences is the largest. The University recently moved to a newly-built campus, equipped with state of the art educational technology in all classrooms and laboratories. The University is developing rapidly into a research-intensive, globally recognized institution, and has high expectations for the research capacity of its faculty members.
The city of Al-Ain, where the university is located, is often described as a garden city of palm trees, grassy parks and low rise buildings set in the mountainous inland region of the UAE. Al Ain is a very safe and clean city with a cosmopolitan population. The larger cities of Abu Dhabi and Dubai are an easy 1.5 hour drive on modern highways.
Minimum Qualification
The ideal candidate will have an earned PhD with a specialization in phonetics and/or phonology or any other related field. All relevant areas of expertise will be considered. Applicants should demonstrate a strong publication record, teaching experience, and history of external funding commensurate with the level of appointment. A research focus on phonetics and phonology or related fields is expected. Successful applicants are expected to teach undergraduate level courses in the general linguistics major. They should also be able to contribute to the teaching of courses in the general linguistics program as needed, be engaged in research, advise students, and serve on committees. English is the language of instruction, and successful candidates must have native or near native competence in oral and written English.
UAEU operates an e-recruitment system for job vacancies. To be considered by the search committee, applicants should submit an electronic application at https://jobs.uaeu.ac.ae/login.jsp (Post: Linguistics - (CHSS) 299910).
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Professor of Phonetics/Experimental Phonology
Department of Linguistics, Yale University, Connecticut USA
http://apply.interfolio.com/31671
Application deadline: 1 September 2016
The Department of Linguistics at Yale University is seeking to make a tenured appointment in phonetics/experimental phonology or semantics/pragmatics, to begin in Fall 2016. The appointed scholar will be a leader in his or her discipline, and will have established a highly successful program of research. Particular attention will be paid to candidates whose work complements and connects with that of the current department faculty and other departments and research units at Yale. Applicants should have demonstrated evidence for excellence in teaching at the undergraduate and graduate levels, and in the training of graduate students.
Applications for this position should be submitted on-line at the application website below. The application will need to include a current CV, a research statement outlining the candidate's research program, two or three representative pieces of research, and three names of referees. Applications will be considered on a rolling basis, but the position will remain open until it is filled.
Yale University is an Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity Employer, and we especially encourage applications from women, persons with disabilities, protected veterans, and underrepresented minorities.
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The deadline for material for the next foNETiks newsletter is 28 October 2015.
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