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Dept. of East Asian Languages and Literatures Chinese Linguistics Program |
After Professor Timothy Light's departure in 1986, the torch was passed on to Professor Frank Hsueh, who juggled teaching and research with serving as acting DEALL chair on two occasions before retiring in Spring 1995. During his many years in DEALL, Professor Hsueh advised a number of graduate students in Chinese linguistics, as well as developed and taught a number of the courses in Chinese linguistics in the department, including Chinese phonology, history of the Chinese language, Chinese historical syntax, Chinese historical phonology, and the graduate seminar in Chinese linguistics. (Professor Eugene Ching, who regularly taught language courses in the department, developed and taught one Chinese linguistics course, namely, the course on the Chinese writing system, during his years in the department before his retirement in the mid-1980's.) In addition to courses in Chinese linguistics, Professor Hsueh's regular courses included the three-quarter series of classical Chinese (Chinese 601-603). During the first few years of retirement, before moving to California, he taught several courses and co-advised some graduate students' dissertations.
Professor James H-Y.Tai and Professor Marjorie K.M. Chan joined DEALL in Autumn Quarter 1987 (Professor Tai replacing Professor Light and Professor Chan replacing Professor Ching), eventually forming the core of the Chinese linguistics program. Professor James Tai had been teaching at Southern Illinois University, and Professor Marjorie Chan had just completed two years of post-doctoral research at the Phonetics Laboratory at UCLA. The Chinese linguistics team was then joined briefly by Professor Robert Sanders (and later by Dr. Shunde Jin as a Lecturer (1996-1998)).
Professor James H-Y. Tai was trained in theoretical linguistics at Indiana University. His research interest over the years has been modern Chinese syntax. His teaching in DEALL included the introductory course in Chinese linguistics, Chinese syntax, history of the Chinese language, the graduate seminar in Chinese linguistics, as well as Classical Chinese. In addition to teaching and advising numerous graduate students in Chinese linguistics, he also served for two terms as the Editor of the Journal of the Chinese Language Teachers Association. In 1995, Professor Tai was recruited to National Chung Cheng University (NCCU), Taiwan, to assist in establishing the Graduate Institute of Linguistics, the first such independent institute established in Taiwan. (While at NCCU, he also served a four-year term (1998-2002) as the Dean of the College of Humanities.) During the initial two years of the Graduate Institute of Linguistics at NCCU, Professor Tai continued to be co-affiliated with the Ohio State University. With his resignation from the Ohio State University in Summer 1997, Professor Tai began a new, official affiliation with DEALL as Adjunct Professor. As the Graduate Institute of Linguistics at NCCU forms an integral part of that institution's goal to become the center of cognitive sciences in Asia in the twenty-first century, future cooperation and exchanges will benefit students and faculty in the international arena. Professor Tai currently has new administrative responsibilities in Taipei, Taiwan, while maintaining his academic affiliation with NCCU. As of 1 February 2003, he holds the prestigeous position of Director General, Department of Humanities and Social Sciences, National Science Council of Taiwan (i.e. the equivalent of the National Endowment for the Humanities and the National Science Foundation in the U.S. rolled into one). With Professor Tai's current roles in the academic and research-funding settings in Taiwan and his continued good-will and formal affiliation with OSU as Adjunct Professor, there are yet further possibilities for future cooperative ventures -- between DEALL and the Graduate Institute of Linguistics at NCCU, between OSU and National Chung Cheng University, and between OSU and the research community in Taiwan at large. In the meantime, Professors Tai and Chan will continue to collaborate on some research projects.
Professor
Marjorie K.M. Chan's training was in linguistics, with specialization in Chinese linguistics.
She completed her Bachelor and Master of Arts degrees in Linguistics at the University of
British Columbia (with an M.A. thesis in 1980 on Zhongshan phonology under the advisorship of Professor Edwin G. Pulleyblank),
and her Ph.D. degree in Linguistics at the University of Washington (with a Ph.D. dissertation in 1985 on Fuzhou
phonology under the advisorship of Professor Ellen Kaisse). She did a two-year post-doctoral fellowship at the
Phonetics Laboratory of the Department of Linguistics at
the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) before coming on board at The Ohio State
University. Her teachers in Chinese linguistics included: Professors Edwin G. Pulleyblank
(University of British Columbia), Jerry Norman and Anne Yue-Hashimoto (University of Washington), and
faculty members teaching at the Linguistic Society of America Summer Linguistic Institute held one summer
at the University of Hawaii, namely, Professors William S-Y. Wang, Ying-che Li, Robert Cheng, and Fang-kuei Li.
Professor Chan's research focus continues to be phonetics and phonology of
Mandarin and other varieties of Chinese, along with interest in both synchronic and
diachronic issues.
Professor Marjorie Chan's current research also encompasses language and gender, as well as pragmatics of intonation.
Professor Chan's teaching includes introductory courses in Chinese linguistics, as well as courses on
Chinese phonology, syntax, dialects, and more specialized topics covered in seminars, such as
Chinese corpus linguistics.
Besides involvment in teaching, research, and other professional activities in Chinese linguistics,
Professor Chan also actively contributes to the Chinese language teaching profession.
She was elected to the Board of Directors of the
Chinese Language Teachers Association (CLTA) in 1997 for a three-year term. While on the Board of
Directors, she was nominated for the Vice-President/President-Elect position in 1999, and was elected
to that position, thus, serving as CLTA Vice-President from November 1999 through November 2000, followed
by one year as President, and one year as Immediate Past President, completing her three-year elected officer
positions on the CLTA Board of Directors in November 2002. Because of her knowledge of computing and web
technology, in the same year that she was elected to
the CLTA Board of Directors, Professor Chan was appointed by the Board to serve as CLTA Webmaster.
The Chinese
Language Teachers Association Home Page, hosted jointly by The Ohio State University's
College of Humanities
and its Department
of East Asian Languages and Literatures, was officially "unveiled" on 20 January 1998.
In addition, during her Presidency, a contract was signed between the Chinese Language Teachers Association and the
National East Asian Languages Resource Center's
During the past couple of decades,
the Chinese linguistics faculty members in DEALL have produced over twenty doctoral students, many of whom are strategically placed in major
universities in the United States, as well as in China, Taiwan, Singapore, and Korea.
Since graduating, some of them have become very active in the Chinese linguistics community in the U.S. and abroad.
Others have applied their linguistic training to careers in Chinese language teaching, combined
with research in linguistic and pedagogical research.
Chinese linguistics faculty members have also served on dissertation committees in the Department of Linguistics,
helping to guide those doctoral students conducting linguistic research pertaining to the Chinese language.
As of 1 January 1999, Professor Marjorie Chan is also an Adjunct Associate Professor in the
Department of Linguistics at OSU.
Chinese linguistics faculty members in DEALL have also been very active over the years in hosting a number of major Chinese linguistics events. Since 1986, for example, faculty members in Chinese linguistics have hosted the Second Conference on Chinese Linguistics in 1986; the XIXth International Conference on Sino-Tibetan Languages and Linguistics, also in 1986; the Third Ohio State University Conference on Chinese Linguistics in 1988;
the First Northeast Conference on Chinese Linguistics (or NECCL-1) in 1989, a conference that has since extended its regional boundaries and has been renamed "North American Conference on Chinese Linguistics" (NACCL), to encompass both the U.S. and Canada; and the Workshop on Interfaces and the Chinese Language, which was held in conjunction with the 1993 Summer Linguistic Institute, hosted by OSU's Department of Linguistics and sponsored by the Linguistic Institute of America (LSA).
With a team that has always been very productive in research, and highly visible in the Chinese linguistics community, it is not surprisingly that DEALL has, over the years, been recognized as one of the strongest centers of Chinese linguistics in North America, and has attracted students and scholars world-wide.
The main focus of Chinese linguistics in DEALL today is the synchronic study of linguistic structures of both spoken and written Chinese, in the context of China’s history and culture. The main objective is to uncover details as well as generalizations that have hitherto been hidden. The findings have both theoretical and pedagogical implications: theoretical with respect to Chinese linguistics in particular and linguistics in general, and pedagogical with respect to applications to language teaching and learning.
At the same time, since China has had a long, written tradition, Chinese linguistics in DEALL also includes a historical dimension in order to understand better the modern language
in its social setting and cultural milieu. Hence, Chinese linguists in DEALL also study Chinese history, culture, and literature, in addition to their central research in Chinese linguistics.
Course offerings in Chinese linguistics in DEALL cover both undergraduate and graduate levels, with topics ranging from introductory concepts about the structure of the Chinese language to more advanced, theoretical issues in Chinese linguistics that are covered in graduate seminars.
The Chinese linguistics faculty also teaches about the Chinese script, unique among the writing systems of the world.
The topic is covered both as a subject within the undergraduate and graduate introductory Chinese linguistics courses, and as a separate course.
DEALL's course offerings include ten specifically on Chinese linguistics. These are given in the table below (where 'U' is Undergrad, 'G' is Grad, followed by the number of credit hours
(viz., '3', '5', or '3-5'). Not included in that table are courses for individual or group studies, thesis or dissertation research, interdepartmental seminars, etc.
Graduate students in DEALL pursuing a masters or doctoral degree in Chinese linguistics take the introductory Chinese linguistics course (Chinese 680) and one other
Chinese linguistics course (e.g., Chinese 681),
and design the remainder of their program under the guidance of their advisor.
For a full listing and description of Chinese courses, including Chinese linguistics,
see DEALL's Chinese course offerings. See also
Professor Marjorie Chan's sample online course syllabi.
The research orientation in Chinese
linguistics in DEALL is grounded in functional and cognitive perspectives. Thus, it links
with Professor Galal Walker’s current pedagogical research that focuses on the role of memory in the teaching and learning of the Chinese language,
and with Professor Jianqi Wang's
cognitive approach to pedagogical issues pertaining to the Chinese language.
Professor Wang joined DEALL in Autumn 1998 as a tenure-track faculty member
for what was then a newly-created Chinese language pedagogy position that is part of the
East Asian Pedagogy component in DEALL.
His 1996 Ph.D. dissertation, entitled Theoretical Consideration on Chinese Language Processing,
was completed in the Department of East Asian Languages and Literatures at the University of Hawaii.
Within DEALL, Chinese linguistics also dovetails with Professor Charles Quinn’s research in Japanese functional linguistics,
and Professor Mineharu ("JJ") Nakayama’s research in Japanese psycholinguistics.
And Professor James Marshall Unger, who joined the Department in Autumn 1996
as DEALL's chair, researches in Japanese linguistics and
has publications
that are directly related to the Chinese language or its script.
Professor Unger's major areas of research are writing systems, literacy, and script reform,
and he offers a course on Scripts of East Asia (EALL 683), which covers Chinese, Japanese, and Korean.
And, while Professor Mari Noda's core research interest and activities relate to Japanese language pedagogy,
her educational background combines linguistics and language pedagogy; her
1990 Ph.D. dissertation, completed in (what was then) the Department of Modern Languages and Linguistics at Cornell University,
was a functionally-based linguistic study on The Extended Predicate and Confrontational Discourse in Japanese.
A 1998 addition to the Japanese component in the Department is
Professor Etsuyo Yuasa, hired for the Japanese language pedagogy component. Her research background
is Japanese linguistics, with core research interests in Japanese syntax,
and extending to pedagogical research since joining the Language Pedagogy component in the
Department.
Her Ph.D. was from the Department of Linguistics at the University of Chicago.
Professor Yuasa oversees the
Japanese Individualized Instruction Program.
The newest addition to the Department was in Autumn 2001, with
Professor Eun Joo Kim joining the Korean component in the teaching of Korean language and culture.
Professor Kim's Ph.D. was from the Department of Linguistics at
the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, and her research interests are
Korean language pedagogy and second language acquisition, with psycholinguistics an integral part of her research background.
All in all, DEALL currently has an impressive total of seven (7)
faculty members with formal, theoretical linguistic training,
teaching in a department with M.A. and Ph.D. programs in Chinese and Japanese, and subfields in linguistics, pedagogy, and
literature in these graduate programs.
Moreover, Professors Marjorie Chan, Mineharu Nakayama, and James M. Unger are connected with the Ohio State
University's Center for Cognitive Science,
and are members of the Adjunct Faculty of the
Department of Linguistics
at the Ohio State University.
Whereas OSU's Department of Linguistics has a strongly theoretical orientation, in that it is concerned mainly
with the development of a general theory of human language (although its faculty members also conduct fieldwork and
research on the structure, development, and variation of individual languages),
the graduate programs in linguistics in DEALL (viz., Chinese linguistics and Japanese linguistics at the M.A. and Ph.D. levels)
are language-driven, in the investigation of
the linguistic structures and historical development of the specific languages within the larger context of the field of theoretical linguistics.
Linguistics in DEALL is furthermore oriented towards a more functional approach, stressing communication in the socio-cultural context.
The original version, written in August 1995 by J. Tai and M. Chan, had been expanded and updated by M. Chan in Nov./96 for this web page.
Last update: 1 February 2004.
Chinese 580 The Chinese Language: Description and Analysis U G 5 Chinese 680 Introduction to Chinese Linguistics U G 5 Chinese 681 History of the Chinese Language U G 5 Chinese 683 Study of the Chinese Writing System U G 5 Chinese 782 Chinese Phonology U G 3 Chinese 784 Chinese Syntax U G 3 Chinese 785 Modern Chinese Dialects U G 3 Chinese 882 Studies in Chinese Historical Phonology G 5 Chinese 884 Studies in Chinese Historical Syntax G 3 Chinese 889 Seminar in Chinese Linguistics G 3-5 
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