- Docente: Silvia Bernardini
- Credits: 6
- SSD: L-LIN/12
- Language: English
- Teaching Mode: Traditional lectures
- Campus: Forli
- Corso: Second cycle degree programme (LM) in Specialized translation (cod. 9174)
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from Oct 03, 2024 to Dec 18, 2024
Learning outcomes
The student knows the basic features (terms, concepts, methods and techniques) needed to build and analyse corpora; s/he is able to understand, analyze and evaluate the structures, functions and textual and discursive organization of the English language; s/he is able to employ the knowledge acquired through the empirical analysis of texts to inform translation choices and the production of coherent and complex written texts and oral speeches in a variety of specialized text types and genres.
Course contents
Corpus linguistics is an approach to the empirical analysis of languages based on techniques and methods for the qualitative and quantitative analysis of collections of texts in electronic format. Through a didactic approach that combines lectures and workshops, the course offers a theoretical and practical introduction to corpus linguistics that will allow students to apply the acquired knowledge to practical tasks ranging from the collection of texts, through their structuring and annotation with metadata and the generation of research hypotheses, to the analysis and description of the results obtained. Different types of corpora (monolingual, comparable, parallel) and different tools for their consultation (corpus query tools or concordancers) will be presented. The main focus will be on the English language, also in relation to other languages known by the students, and will make constant reference to the applications of corpus linguistics to translation studies (also known as corpus-based translation studies). At the end of the course students will be able to extend their acquired knowledge to application and research areas such as the creation of textual resources for machine translation, the didactic use of corpora, discourse analysis, stylistics and so on.
Academic writing competences are specifically focused upon in a 20-hour seminar ("lettorato"), devoted to them.
Readings/Bibliography
Crawford, W. and Csomay, E. 2016. Doing corpus linguistics. Oxford and New York: Routledge.
Egbert, J., Larsson, T. and Biber, D. 2020. Doing linguistics with a corpus. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
McEnery, T. and A. Hardie 2012. Corpus linguistics. Method, theory and practice. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Mikhailov, M. and R. Cooper 2016. Corpus linguistics for translation and contrastive studies. Oxford and New York: Routledge
Other readings will be chosen jointly by the lecturer and the students, based on the areas of application of corpus linguistics focused upon. Students will be encouraged to actively search for relevant literature, and to share it with the class.
Teaching methods
The module is structured around a) a series of lectures covering the main theoretical and methodological aspects of corpus linguistics, and b) extensive hands-on, workshop-like lessons in which students apply the knowledge gained in the lectures by building and using their own corpora and by consulting existing ones available in the public domain.
Hands-on activities are problem-based, i.e. they revolve around authentic problem that students solve working autonomously or in small groups. Peer support and the lecturer' scaffolding create a relaxed learner-centred environment conducive to the development of relational and problem-solving skills.
Assessment methods
Success in learning is assessed through observation and interaction in class and through unassessed coursework such as oral presentations and short writing exercises, along the lines of the final exam.
The end of course exam has three parts: 1) a corpus study, 2) the drafting of a short essay reporting on it and 3) a peer evaluation exercise. The study is carried out in pairs and is evaluated through an oral presentation to be delivered before the end of the course. The essay, of about 1 000 words in length, should provide a clear outline of the aim of the paper, including well articulated research question(s), details about the research approach and method(s), results and their implications. It should also include an adequate number of references (not included in the word count). The peer evaluation exercise consists in the anonymous evaluation of two papers by other students in the class.
The final assessment grade will result from the grade obtained in the group presentation (worth 20%), that obtained for the individual essay (worth 70%), and that obtained for the peer evaluation exercise (worth 10%). For the first two parts formal/linguistic aspects (written and oral academic English language skills) and content-related ones (competences and skills related to corpus linguistics) will be considered.
Teaching tools
Both lecture-like and workshop-like sessions take place in a computer lab equipped with PCs and a data projector, so as to be able to switch back and forth between the two teaching methods.
Slides are used for lectures and subsequently made available to the students via the Moodle/Virtuale platform, in PDF or MS PPT format.
During workshop sessions, students have individual hands-on access to software for constructing and analysing corpora (e.g., Intertext editor, AntConc, NoSketch Engine).
Given the activities and teaching methods in this course, all students must have attended modules 1 and 2 of the 'safety in the workplace' course upon entering it.
Office hours
See the website of Silvia Bernardini
SDGs



This teaching activity contributes to the achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals of the UN 2030 Agenda.