Fieldwork 1: How we communicate through gender role socialization and child rearing. …
Fieldwork 1: How we communicate through gender role socialization and child rearing. Observation of gender role socialization and child rearing at an activity or specific place, where it is not a single family gathering or your family. It must be an observation done now and not from memory.
Fieldwork 2: This fieldwork observation focuses on how symbolic capital is deployed in discourse and provides an opportunity to gain greater insight into how language and other nonverbal and symbolic cues communicate gender, ethnicity, values, status and power in subtle ways.
The purpose of this course is the study of human communication across …
The purpose of this course is the study of human communication across the life span from a temporal-spatial approach. Specifically, the course examines human communication from an evolutionary and adaptive perspective and explores the fundamental question, in what way does culture shape communication and communication shape culture?
Contains syllabus, ten lessons, and two fieldwork exercises for a ten-week course.
Catalog description for ANTH 180 (Language and Culture): This course provides answers …
Catalog description for ANTH 180 (Language and Culture): This course provides answers to these provocative questions by exploring the anthropological disciplines of descriptive, historical and ethno linguistics: How does language work? Where is it in the brain? How do children acquire it? How does language affect thought and our perception of the world? How is our language different from that of other animals? How did human language evolve and develop throughout history?
Visit to a virtual via live webcam or actual via foot wildlife/primate …
Visit to a virtual via live webcam or actual via foot wildlife/primate rescue center, lab or zoo. Visit a wildlife primate (baboons, orangs, monkeys, chimps, etc. ) rescue center or sanctuary (eg. GRACE, Born Free, Sanaga-Yong, Chimp Haven), lab (Oregon Prinate Center) or a zoo (eg. Oregon Zoo, Bristol Zoo, National Zoo, San Diego Zoo, etc.) via the Internet (view a live web cam only not a recorded video) or in-person.You have three options for your observations.Option One: Discuss two specific animals of the same species within one exhibit. Option Two: Discuss one animal from two different species or exhibits from the same location. Option Three: Discuss one animal from two different locations (eg., maybe one from a Zoo and one from a Sanctuary and compare).
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