Linguistics at UH


The Department of Linguistics at the University of Hawai‘i was founded in 1963 as an active research and teaching unit dedicated to the scientific study of language. A draft HISTORY of the Department by George Grace is posted on his personal web site. The faculty and students in the department are committed to understanding and explaining how language works - how it is acquired, how it is used, how it changes over time, how it is represented in the brain, and how threats to linguistic diversity can be addressed through documentation and conservation efforts.

In carrying out this mission, the Department has a special focus on the languages of the vast Austronesian family (which includes the indigenous languages of Polynesia, Micronesia, Melanesia, Indonesia, the Philippines, and Taiwan) and on the languages of Asia.

The department makes use of the full range of methodologies appropriate for the investigation of human language, including the standard analytic techniques of linguistic theory and description, the methods of anthropology and ethnography, and the techniques of cognitive science, including psycholinguistic and neurolinguistic experimentation, computer modeling, and interdisciplinary research that seeks to situate language in the larger domain of cognition.

In addition, we are committed to research and teaching in Language Documentation - addressing the threat to human linguistic and cultural diversity that comes from language endangerment and language loss, especially in the Pacific, where there is an urgent need for appropriate grammars, dictionaries, language planning, and educational programs. Please visit the Language Documentation Training Center site to see what some of our students and faculty are doing to help the preservation of underdocumented languages. The Department produces Language Documentation and Conservation, a free and online biannual journal. Members of the department have also edited the journal Oceanic Linguistics since its inception.

The teaching mission of the Department includes commitments at both the undergraduate and graduate levels. At the undergraduate level, we offer courses and certificates that satisfy the program requirements and/or complement the subject matter of other departments in the University (e.g., Anthropology, Communication, East Asian Languages and Literatures, Ethnic Studies, Hawaiian and Indo-Pacific Languages, Languages and Literatures of Europe and the Americas, Philosophy, Psychology, Second Language Studies, Sociology, and Speech). An undergraduate major in linguistics is available through the Interdiciplinary Studies Program.

At the graduate level, the M.A. in linguistics offers a thorough introduction to the subject matter and skills of the discipline. The Ph.D. program provides full professional training for careers in research and teaching.

Department Updates

Check these out:

Newsline

NEW Wait List for Ling 102 Unit Mastery. Write to linguist@hawaii.edu
Plenty of other sections still open.

NEW General Ed in Linguistics
  • HAP: Ling 100 "Lang in Hawai'i and the Pacific.
  • WI: Ling 102 "Intro to the study of language"

Unit mastery as well as classroom formats.
Want to know more?
Check out this short video.

NEW Fall 2009 Linguistics course availibility.

NEW Spring 2010 course schedule and descriptions (PDF)

List of potential committee members

LSH website

Language Documentation Training Center

Language Documentation & Conservation