A Pedagogical Corpus to Support a Language Teaching Curriculum to Revitalize an Endangered Language

Author(s):  
Elizabeth Gatbonton ◽  
Ildiko Pelczer ◽  
Conor Cook ◽  
Vivek Venkatesh ◽  
Christine Nochasak ◽  
...  

An obstacle to revitalizing an endangered language is the shortage of authentic speech samples for learners to use as models. Digital recordings of community elders performing traditional chores and special rituals or narrating legends and myths are often made to overcome this obstacle. These recordings, however, contain speech that lacks the crucial features of conversational speech that make them appropriate instructional models. Effective model utterances should be short, have a stand-alone format, and have similar structures to utterances used in everyday transactions, which must be labeled and tagged and organized into a searchable corpus. To date, however, no such corpus exists for indigenous languages, and compiling one is an enormous task. To provide native speech models for adult Labrador Inuit learning their endangered language, Inuttitut, the authors explored the feasibility of building a specialized corpus potentially useful for aiding classroom instruction, using an internationally recognized open-source search and retrieval system called Topic Maps to create its database.

2020 ◽  
pp. 533-554
Author(s):  
Elizabeth Gatbonton ◽  
Ildiko Pelczer ◽  
Conor Cook ◽  
Vivek Venkatesh ◽  
Christine Nochasak ◽  
...  

An obstacle to revitalizing an endangered language is the shortage of authentic speech samples for learners to use as models. Digital recordings of community elders performing traditional chores and special rituals or narrating legends and myths are often made to overcome this obstacle. These recordings, however, contain speech that lacks the crucial features of conversational speech that make them appropriate instructional models. Effective model utterances should be short, have a stand-alone format, and have similar structures to utterances used in everyday transactions, which must be labeled and tagged and organized into a searchable corpus. To date, however, no such corpus exists for indigenous languages, and compiling one is an enormous task. To provide native speech models for adult Labrador Inuit learning their endangered language, Inuttitut, the authors explored the feasibility of building a specialized corpus potentially useful for aiding classroom instruction, using an internationally recognized open-source search and retrieval system called Topic Maps to create its database.


2004 ◽  
Vol 58 (1) ◽  
pp. 190-199 ◽  
Author(s):  
Adel Golovin ◽  
Dimitris Dimitropoulos ◽  
Tom Oldfield ◽  
Abdelkrim Rachedi ◽  
Kim Henrick

2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 17-24
Author(s):  
Snehangshu Shekhar Chanda

Language is the way of communication and used in different aspects of life. In every country there is a national language which is the state language used in offices and different organizations. Bengali is the state and widely spoken language of Bangladesh however language varies from community to community, race to race, society to society This study shows that there are many indigenous languages in Bangladesh which may be endangered in future specially in the Sylhet area of Bangladesh. The Manipuri language which is not used officially in Bangladesh may be one such language. It has its own alphabets and is spoken in the community. The language has however not been hampered due to COVID 19 and in fact has become more popular during the lockdown. Due to the increase in the popularity of social media (face book group, Cheik Kheik) the Manipuri language in Sylhet, still maintains their ethnic culture and use their language in the home domain.


2019 ◽  
Vol 24 (1) ◽  
pp. 38-48
Author(s):  
Esingbemi Princewill Ebietomere ◽  
Godspower Osaretin Ekuobase

Abstract Legal reasoning, the core of legal practice in many countries, is “stare decisis” and its soundness is usually strengthened by relevant case law consulted. However, the task of relevant case law access and retrieval is tiring to legal practitioners and constitutes a serious drain on their productivity. Existing efforts at addressing this problem are conceptional, restrictive or unreliable. Specifically, existing semantic retrieval (SR) systems for case law are desirous of exceptional retrieval precision. Ontology promises to meet this desire, if introduced to the SR system. As a consequence, an ontology-based SR system for case law has been built using the systems analysis and design methodology. In particular, the component-based software engineering and the agile methodologies are employed to implement the system. Finally, the search and retrieval performance of the resultant SR system has been evaluated using the heuristics evaluation method. The retrieval system has shown to have a search and retrieval performance of about 94 % precision, 80 % recall and 84 % F-measure. Overall, the paper implements the SR system for case law with excellent precision and affirms the superiority of ontology approach over other semantic approaches to SR systems for document retrieval in the legal domain.


1973 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 107-115 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephen R. Heller ◽  
Henry M. Fales ◽  
G. W. A. Milne

1972 ◽  
Vol 51 (5) ◽  
pp. 47-50
Author(s):  
William E. Chapman ◽  
Richard L. Rapport ◽  
F. W. Lancaster ◽  
J. Kiffin Penry

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