This component hosts regular open online courses and materials for Applied Linguistics. These courses consist of 10 to 15 units (workload ca. 90 to 150 hours), they are certified, they do not involve any fees and they are ready for self-enrollment. Each of these courses can be used as a customized version ready for full curricular integration.

This course aims to familiarize students with the principles and methods of corpus linguistics, a field that studies language through large collections of texts (corpora). The course covers topics such as corpus design, text collection, annotation, and analysis. Students learn to use software tools for corpus analysis and explore linguistic patterns in data. The goal is to equip learners with skills to conduct empirical research on language usage, enabling them to understand language variation, change, and the practical applications of corpora in areas such as language teaching, lexicography, and natural language processing.

This repository/course provides the theoretical and descriptive foundations for the investigation and solution of language-related problems, especially those of language use, but also problems of psycholinguistics, sociolinguistics, forensic linguisics and historical linguistics. As a consequence, VLC300 tends to be interdisciplinary in many ways.

The hybrid name psycholinguistics reflects a truly interdisciplinary endeavour.

  • Linguists are engaged in the formal description of language
  • Psycholinguists attempt to discover how the underlying structures are used in the processes of speaking, understanding and remembering, and how they are acquired by children.

These insights determine the way in which this class is organized: Part I discusses central issues in speech production and perception. Part II deals with the most important aspects of language acquisition. The third part is dedicated to some selected aspects of neurolinguistics and cognitive linguistics.

This course aims to familiarize students with the principles and methods of corpus linguistics, a field that studies language through large collections of texts (corpora). The course covers topics such as corpus design, text collection, annotation, and analysis. Students learn to use software tools for corpus analysis and explore linguistic patterns in data. The goal is to equip learners with skills to conduct empirical research on language usage, enabling them to understand language variation, change, and the practical applications of corpora in areas such as language teaching, lexicography, and natural language processing.

VLC302 consists of seven units and constitutes the the theoretical and practical foundations for two continuations:

  • VLC303 Corpus Linguistics: Linguistic Applications
  • VLC304 Corpus Linguistics: EFL Applications

VLC303 is aimed at integrating empirical, data-driven methodologies with theoretical linguistic analysis. In particular, enhancing the understanding of linguistic theory through empirical evidence from corpus data, identifying and interpreting patterns, trends, and anomalies in language use and investigating language variation across different contexts, genres, and time periods.

Prerequisite for participation in VLC303 is the successful completion of "VLC302 - Corpus Linguistics Basics".