LING534
Sociolinguistic
applications of social network theory
Handbook
Guidelines
General
suggestions (for all authors):
1.
Formatting:
--
for consistency, I suggest we commonly title our sections as follows, for
example:
"Chapter 1: The Origins of
Social Network Theory and Modeling
(author)"
--
use 0, 1, 1.1, 1.1.1 etc. for numbering subheadings
--
Section 0 should be titled "Introduction" for everyone
2.
Within your chapter, use section headings to highlight the organization of your
chapter.
3.
Collect endmatter into endnotes (not footnotes)
4.
Citations and References section should follow APA style
Specific
suggestions:
For
those of you who do chapters focused on studies of particular speech
communities, it would be good to follow a common organizational strategy in
writing your handbook chapter, and use section headings constructed in
parallel. We can decide this to some extent as a class. Here are some ideas to
get us started:
1.
Introduction
State
the purpose of your chapter, set out the type of research you will survey, and
the organization of your chapter.
2.
possible subhead: "The social networks of <type of community here>
speakers"
*
Provide a description of the type of social network study(ies) examined in the
works you read, for example:
--immigrant
community in a host language setting (bilingual)
--immigrant
community in a host language setting (monolingual with phonological
restructuring)
--established
speech community where language is undergoing change
--inter-ethnic
contact between two communities
--etc.
3.
possible subhead: "Applications of network analysis techniques"
*
What methods of social network analysis did the author(s) use? (e.g.,
journaling, participant-observation?)
*
What kinds of network structures were examined? What did they quantify (e.g.,
whole networks? strong and weak ties? density? multiplexity?)
*
Did authors use a network strength scale of some kind? How was it constructed?
Is
there a way that she could have more fully or fruitfully made use of network methods in conducting this study?
*
What kinds of linguistic variables were explored for correlations to network
strength?
3.
possible subhead: "Social network-theoretic findings"
*
Were there any hypotheses formulated and tested by the author(s) that were
grounded in the predictions made by social network theory? Could the author(s) have more fully
explored the predictions made by the theory itself?
4.
possible summary subhead: "Contributions to the sociolinguistic study of
social networks"
*
What "new" space did this study/these studies map out within
variationist sociolinguistics? What were its(their) major contributions?
Question:
Yes-Do
we want to include an appendix on software for calculating and visualizing
networks?
Yes-Do
we want to include graphics?
Here's
what specific people will be doing in their contributions:
**the
notes below are just that--NOTES. They are not meant to be interpreted as
definitive statements regarding chapter content, or as being organized into the
headings suggested above. They are mostly intended to give the class an overall
view of what kind of material will be included in each chapter of the handbook.
This way, you can cross-refer to the work of your colleagues in your own
chapter. This section of
this document will be updated as people inform me of their handout chapter
plans.
Chapter
1--(author):
Chapter
2--(author):
Chapter
3--(author):
Chapter
4--(author):
Chapter
5--(author):
Chapter
6--(author):
Chapter
7--(author):
Introduction --Alicia Wassink