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Courses may be offered in one of the following modalities:

  • Traditional in-person courses (0–29 percent of coursework is delivered online, the majority being offered in person.)
  • Hybrid/blended courses (30–79 percent of coursework is delivered online.)
  • Online courses (100 percent of coursework is delivered online, either synchronously on a designated day and time or asynchronously as a deadline-driven course.)
  • Hyflex (Students will be assigned to attend in-person or live streamed sessions as a reduced-size cohort on a rotating basis; live sessions are also recorded, offering students the option to participate synchronously or view asynchronously as needed.)

If you are enrolled in courses delivered in traditional or hybrid modalities, you will be expected to attend face-to-face instruction as scheduled.


First Year Seminar: Sociolinguistics: Switching Codes (GEN-110)


Semester: Fall 2023
Number: 0952-110-017
Instructor: Dolapo Adeniji-Neill
Days: Tuesday Thursday 4:30 pm - 5:45 pm
Note: Traditional In-Person Class
Location: Garden City - Hagedorn Hall of Enterprise 115
Credits: 4
Course Materials: View Text Books
Related Syllabi: Robert Siegfried for Fall 2008*
Christine Feeley-Mackin for Fall 2008*
Robert Siegfried for Spring 2009*
Robert Siegfried for Fall 2009*
Gary Schechter for Fall 2011*
Gary Schechter for Fall 2012*
Gary Schechter for Fall 2013*
Jennifer Fleischner for Fall 2014*
Jennifer Fleischner for Fall 2015*
Gary Schechter for Fall 2016*
Gary Schechter for Fall 2017*
Gary Schechter for Fall 2018*
Gary Schechter for Fall 2019*
Susan Kilgore for Fall 2019*
Kimberly Mullins for Fall 2020*
Gary Schechter for Fall 2021*
Jack Bryant for Fall 2021*
Gary Schechter for Fall 2022*
Cory Poccia for Fall 2022*

*Attention Students: Please note that the syllabi available for your view on these pages are for example only. The instructors and requirements for each course are subject to change each semester. If you enroll in a particular course, your instructor and course outline may differ from what is presented here.

Description:

This course introduces students to the correlation of social structure and linguistic behavior. How is language used productively in society? How do social structures mirror, map onto, and transform linguistic structures? What is the relationship of language to gender and sexuality? To social class and education?

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