Curriculum Innovation: Integrating QM into undergraduate programmes in Linguistics in the School of Languages and Social Sciences, Aston University.

Lead Research Organisation: Aston University
Department Name: Sch of Languages and Social Sciences

Abstract

At Aston, in common with many other universities, Linguistics/Applied Linguistics is taught as part of undergraduate programmes (UG) in English, English Language (EL) and Modern Foreign Languages (MFL), the latter of which at Aston, comprises of French, German, Spanish and Translation Studies. UG students may take these subjects as single or joint honours programmes. UG programmes in EL and MFL sit within the same School, the School of Languages and Social Sciences (LSS). This combination of disciplines within a School is not common, and has enabled colleagues in EL and MFL, particularly in German, to collaborate on joint research projects with a pedagogical focus (see section 6 below). In addition, various other research projects in EL have produced various data sets upon which this project can draw in producing QM learning and teaching (L&T) materials. This proposal, therefore is, in the first instance, to design, implement and integrate QM within the EL and MFL:German UG programmes at Aston with a view to extend dissemination of QM teaching beyond these groups to linguistics students studying other languages.
Linguistics students are different from other social science students such as psychologists or sociologists for example, because many will have given up maths based subjects at 16 and will not have studied maths beyond GCSE level. Given multidisciplinary degrees, this is an issue for the majority of students who come to languages and linguistics UG programmes via a post 16 humanities curriculum. More specifically, UG Programmes in MFL, Linguistics and Applied Linguistics have also appeared increasingly to move away from any teaching of QM and focus almost exclusively on the collection and analysis of primary data. Thus, the fragile teaching base of QM in social science UG programmes as identified by MacInnes (2009:2), is virtually absent in UG programmes which contain modules in EL/MFL/Linguistics/Applied linguistics. However, increasingly, postgraduate and research students in these subjects are either being required to, or want to, apply QM methods to the analysis of data, with an ensuing skills gap when such students do not have the foundational skills required to undertake such activity.
Currently at Aston, QM in EL and MFL:German is taught at UG level in small amounts, mainly through second and third level modules in corpus linguistics and forensic linguistics. Students produce excellent coursework in such modules, which could be further improved by the incorporation of QM data and methods. This is particularly true of modules such as: Language as Evidence and The Linguistics of the Individual. However, on the whole, colleagues in both EL and MFL shy away from incorporating QM into the curriculum and assessment of their modules, mainly because their own education and research have lacked QM. As a result, the PI and Co-PIs acknowledge that our UG programmes in EL and MFL are weaker for this, and that the employability of our graduates would be strengthened as a result of incorporating QM into the UG curriculum at all levels.
The students' learning experiences surrounding the initiatiative will be researched throughout the duration of the project and at the beginning and end of periods QM teaching attitudes towards QM and numeracy more generally will be evaluated.

Planned Impact

The initial beneficiaries of this research are undergraduate students (UG) of linguistics, following programmes in English Language (EL) and MFL:German within the School of Languages and Social Sciences at Aston University. QM L&T materials will be integrated into the teaching and assessment of a designated number of modules at all three levels of the programmes.

In terms of disseminating the QM L&T materials to the academic community more widely, the Project Team propose writing a textbook: Quantitative Research Methods for Linguists with an accompanying website, with a publisher such as Routledge or Palgrave. The decision to disseminate the material in this way, rather than a website available more freely, is to maximise the website's sustainability beyond the life of the project and into the future. In addition, projects which already have freely available websites such as the Ge-Wiss The West Midlands English: Speech and Society, as part of their design, will have QM exercises linked specifically to them, and cross link to the text book companion website and others, such as the British Library's forthcoming Voices of the UK site.

Other impact activities planned as part of the project is to research the T&L impact of the QM materials, and to publish at least one article in a research led Learning and Teaching journal such as The International Journal of Learning and Teaching in Higher Education.

In addition, the feasibility of establishing a Midlands Consortium of University teachers and lecturers in Linguistics to disseminate the work of the project will be explored as part of the project.

Publications

10 25 50
 
Description Integration of Quant and research methods teaching into linguistics / language curriculum is most effective teaching method.
Linguistics / languages students have considerable teaching needs in this area.
Exploitation Route Developed in host university curriculum and ran workshops on methods and approach for other UK HEI
Sectors Education

 
Description 'Embedding quantitative methods in political sociology, race, ethnicity and migration' 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Primary Audience
Results and Impact We hosted this workshop as part of the Cardiff University WISERD unit ESRC RDI Teaching Quantitative Methods Workshop Series
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity