The
Graduate Linguistics Program at USC
The Graduate Program in Linguistics at USC is comprehensive
in its scope. Its mission is to train students to pursue research
and teach in a wide range of linguistic subdisciplines. The program
strives to develop students' analytical skills and to encourage
creative and critical approaches to data, models, and theories.
In addition to requiring all students to have a theoretical foundation
in general linguistics, phonology, and syntax, the interdepartmental
structure of the program affords students the opportunity to take
coursework and pursue specializations in a range of subdisciplines
that includes: French/German/Spanish linguistics, historical linguistics , philosophy of language and discourse
analysis , phonological theory , psycholinguistics, second/foreign language acquisition and teaching
, sociolinguistics and linguistic anthropology
, and syntactic theory . The program's dual emphasis
on theoretical and applied aspects of linguistics is one of its
major strengths, and the great variety of research conducted by
faculty and graduate students is a reflection of the intellectual
diversity that characterizes the program.
In addition to offering graduate degrees to its own
students, the Linguistics Program also provides cognate or minor
field courses to graduate students in a number of other departments.
Minor fields of study have been designed and approved (or are being
planned) for Ph.D. students in the following programs: Comparative Literature , Computer Science, English Composition and Rhetoric , English Literature , Experimental
Psychology , Philosophy, and Communication Sciences & Disorders .
|