Annotated Bibliography
Reading Part C – Annotated Bibliography
Topic: Flattening English standardization – improving accessibility,
communication, code-switching in the internet age
Al-Kadi,
Abdu M. Talib and Rashad Ali Ahmed. "Evolution of English in the Internet
Age."
A holistic
approach to English language evolution, citing historical language shifts, 20th-century
English imperialism. Differentiation between internetese and textese
(internet English and text English, respectively). Broad-scope summary of major
research in the field, rather than new information.
Suleman,
Nazia. "Impact of SMS Speak on the Formal Writings of the Students."
A study of
Pakistani faculty and students who use English as L2. Concludes that SMS
English use leads to degeneration of standard English on academic work. Notably,
the disappearance of the ‘absent author’ that characterizes formal writing.
Behrens, Susan J., et al. "Challenging Linguistic
Stereotypes on the Internet."
Study of
detrimental portrayals of linguistic variation. High school students are not
introduced to the analysis of linguistics or language variation. The
proliferation of false regionalisms leads to application of stereotypes and intolerance
of difference. This study attempts to unmask linguistic myths as well as
prepare readers to test assumptions and biases brought to the classroom.
Gee, James Paul and Elisabeth R. Hayes. Language
and Learning in the Digital Age. London: Routledge, 2011. ebook.
Literacy
and education are functions of democracy and accessibility. Chapters on
Language and Literacy are optimized for beginners. Evaluation of language as
communicative tool. Some discussion on the absence or presence of author in
formal writing. Inquiry space termed passionate affinity-based learning.
The role of play in learning.
McCulloch,
Gretchen. 7 Ways the Internet is Improving Language.
Hashtag
use coincides with more formal writing, whereas @-use coincides with more
informal, personal composition. Abbreviation use points reader to meaning and
intent of text. Visualization in images. Asynchrony allows wider conversational
access. Corpora for linguistic research. Vast opportunities for practice.
Schleppegrell,
Mary J. The Language of Schooling: A Functional Linguistics Perspective.
Mahwah: Lawrence Earlbaum Associates, 2004. ebook.
This book
is a broader introduction to academic language and its applications and
considerations for L1 and L2 English learners. Language pedagogy in Chapter 6
may be useful for this project. Chapter 2, Language and Context, with
subheadings Life Experience and Language Development, Language in School Tasks,
and Language and Success at School, will undoubtedly serve as
describing benchmarks for standard expectations of academic language.
Baron, Naomi S. Always On: Language in an Online
and Mobile World. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2008. ebook.
This book
covers more than just computer-mediated linguistics, but a holistic evaluation
of what it means to be ‘always online’. There is an entire chapter dedicated to
what email, AIM, IRC, and other message systems are—in case you weren’t born
yet when they were being heavily used. Chapter 4, Are Instant Messages
Speech? may be relevant. Most of the research is based on late-1990s/early-2000s
web use, and doesn’t address web 2.0 (possibly because it was published just
before smartphones really took off).
Calhoun,
Kendra. "Race, humour, and activism online through the lens of black
digital culture."
Video
lecture about social media activism viewed as discourse (language beyond sentence-level).
As I’m not really looking at the level of discourse for this project, this is
interesting but ultimately irrelevant.
Online Resources for African American Language
University of Oregon hosts a project for education and research about African American Language (what might have been called Ebonics or AAVE in past). There’s also an extensive list of resources for K-12 educators. Considering Oregon’s incredibly anti-black history… go Oregon!
Heath,
Maria. "Internet Linguistics list of readings."
This list
should be cited because it’s where I found a few other links for my
bibliography. It’s an annotated bibliography for a self-directed Intro to
Internet Linguistics for amateurs. I really just want to spend 13 weeks going
through it, even though it isn’t all relevant to my topic.
Citations
Al-Kadi, Abdu M. Talib and Rashad Ali Ahmed.
"Evolution of English in the Internet Age." Indonesian Journal
of Applied Linguistics 7.3 (2018): 727-736. website.
Baron, Naomi S. Always On: Language in an Online
and Mobile World. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2008. ebook.
Behrens, Susan J., et al. "Challenging
Linguistic Stereotypes on the Internet." Research and Teaching in
Developmental Education 32.2 (2016): 62-72. website. <https://www.jstor.org/stable/44290297>.
Calhoun, Kendra. "Race, humour, and activism
online through the lens of black digital culture." Canterbury:
Inspirational Speakers, 7 July 2020. YouTube video.
Gee, James Paul and Elisabeth R. Hayes. Language
and Learning in the Digital Age. London: Routledge, 2011. ebook.
Heath, Maria. "Internet Linguistics list of
readings." 2019. Maria Heath: Internet Linguist. website. 7
February 2021.
Kendall, Tyler, Jason McLarty and Charlie
Farrington. Online Resources for African American Language. 2020.
website. 7 February 2021.
McCulloch, Gretchen. 7 Ways the Internet is
Improving Language. 21 September 2015. webpage. 7 February 2021.
<https://www.mentalfloss.com/article/68696/7-ways-internet-improving-language>.
Schleppegrell, Mary J. The Language of Schooling:
A Functional Linguistics Perspective. Mahwah: Lawrence Earlbaum
Associates, 2004. ebook.
Suleman, Nazia. "Impact of SMS Speak on the
Formal Writings of the Students." M. Phil Thesis. 2011-2013. webpage.
This is a solid collection of research spanning at least a decade looking at evolutiuon of language during our most recent information revolution. A quick description of each resource is appreciated and helps readers decide if there is value in exploring each individual resource further. A good mix of formats and journals, with some traditional academic articles mixed in with some web based resources. What could have been helpful to include would be some reminder/introduction of your overall topic, as well as some discussion of the process, search strategies, and reflection over all. The blog format really encourages more narration of the experience to help contextualize the information and purpose.
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