scholarly journals The Columbus Linguistics in High School experience: Fits and starts as a prelude to success

2021 ◽  
Vol 6 (3) ◽  
pp. 5141
Author(s):  
Victora Paxton ◽  
Carly Dickerson ◽  
Brian D. Joseph

We report here on our efforts to incorporate linguistics into the high school curriculum in a large midwestern metropolitan area through a university-based initiative — Linguistics in High School (LxHS) — spearheaded by the Department of Linguistics at The Ohio State University. We offer a brief history of the project, and explain our strategy of targeting non-public schools and the practical nature of the reasoning behind this decision. We chronicle the ups and downs of our efforts, ultimately reporting on our success with implementing a linguistics course and a linguistics club at a small local STEM-oriented high school. This partnership between the school and the Linguistics Department has allowed, among other things, for on-site visits by the students to phonetics and sociolinguistics labs. By presenting our challenges, strategies, failures, and successes, we hope that others may be encouraged to evaluate how they can make a difference in their locale and with the resources they have.

1992 ◽  
Vol 85 (3) ◽  
pp. 191-195
Author(s):  
David Chu ◽  
Joan Chu

Probability has been suggested for inclusion in the high school or even junior high school curriculum (for example, probability and statistics is one of the strands in The Mathematics Framework for California Public Schools, Kindergarten through Grade Twelve [Sacramento: California State Department of Education, 1985]). The suggestion appeals to many because probability is viewed as a natural and intuitive subject manageable with very simple mathematics, It is also a good foundation for understanding statistics, which is in prevalent use in today's society. Many teachers are drawn to it because they see all the balls, cards, coins, and dice as ideal teaching tools to make the class interesting.


1984 ◽  
Vol 54 (3) ◽  
pp. 321-329 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roberta Snow ◽  
Lisa Goodman

This chronicle describes a senior high school curriculum that addresses four areas: personal values as a basis for political views, technological aspects of the nuclear arms race, the history of the nuclear arms race, and action for social change. Roberta Snow has played a key role in the development of the curriculum and has taught it many times. Here she joins with Lisa Goodman to provide a composite picture of the experience they and others across the country have had in using the curriculum.


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