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29 Ratings
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Elson is a very redundant lecturer. I'm a linguistics major, and I still had to get motivated to go to lecture. Don't make this your first linguistics course: instead look for something in the Anthropology department first and then move into this. It'll make linguistics more interesting and more fun.
The best way to characterize Professor Elson is that he is very old-fashioned. All that means is that he expects you to respect his strict rules, and he will respect you in return. The strict rules, however, are only created to create a positive learning environment and he is extremely helpful and responsive to questions. He also tells hilarious stories, and it is clear that he truly cares about his students. All in all, very good introduction to analytical linguistics--but like somebody else said, maybe take another linguistics class first before you take this one.
I really enjoyed this class. Professor Elson is kind of crazy and would bring examples of errors in newspaper articles to show us before class, but it was a good kind of crazy and he obviously cares about this approach to linguistics. The assignments were challenging but not impossible and the grading was fair. Blake was great!
Despite his tough cell phone policy and intimidating attitude, Elson is actually quite funny. He is extremely nit-picky with words and paying rapt attention to how people use them, but I suppose that's something normal for a Linguistics professor. His lectures were generally easy for me to understand, but the material was sometimes difficult to analyze on your own. The TA, Blake Galbreath, was also very helpful since he's pretty approachable. However, if you don't really care about writing on comparing phonemes and morphemes and phonetic segments, you probably shouldn't take this class...you find yourself just kinda b.s.ing your explanations.
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