Department of Language & Linguistic Science, University of York

Department of Language & Linguistic Science, University of York Departmental page for prospective and current students to find out information on courses, key dates, events and more.

A recent Guardian feature on linguist Valerie Fridland, author of the new book Why We Talk Funny, examines how the way w...
28/05/2026

A recent Guardian feature on linguist Valerie Fridland, author of the new book Why We Talk Funny, examines how the way we speak shapes the judgements others make about us, from job interviews to the courtroom. These questions sit at the heart of our free four-week course, Accents, attitudes and identity, run by the Department of Language and Linguistic Science. Open to anyone curious about how accents work and why attitudes towards them matter, the course is free to join on FutureLearn.

A member of the Russell Group, we're a research-intensive university founded on excellence, equality and opportunity for all.

Are you looking to build a career in English language teaching? The Department of Language and Linguistic Science is acc...
08/05/2026

Are you looking to build a career in English language teaching? The Department of Language and Linguistic Science is accepting applications for our intensive Trinity CertTESOL course running 17 August to 18 September. This level 5 qualification is accepted by the British Council and equips you with the practical skills needed for your first post as an ESOL teacher. Apply by 20 May 2026 to secure your place.

The Trinity Certificate in Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages (CertTESOL) is an intensive English language teacher training course at level 5 which is open to everyone and is accepted by the British Council as an initial TESOL or TEFL (Teaching English as a Foreign Language) qualificati...

How do speakers manage complex grammar in different languages? Dr Caroline Andrews (University of Oxford) joins the LLS ...
10/04/2026

How do speakers manage complex grammar in different languages? Dr Caroline Andrews (University of Oxford) joins the LLS Colloquium Series to discuss case production in Hindi, Basque, and Shipibo-Konibo.

16 April, 15:00, P/L/002, University of York

The York English Language Toolkit returns on 10 July 2026. This free hybrid CPD workshop for A-level English Language te...
27/03/2026

The York English Language Toolkit returns on 10 July 2026. This free hybrid CPD workshop for A-level English Language teachers features talks from Prof Devyani Sharma, Prof Paul Kerswill, Prof Sam Hellmuth and Dr Kobin Kendrick. Save the date.

https://englishlanguagetoolkit.york.ac.uk/workshops

Staff in the Department of Language and Linguistic Science are using Kamishibai, a traditional Japanese storytelling met...
26/03/2026

Staff in the Department of Language and Linguistic Science are using Kamishibai, a traditional Japanese storytelling method, to enhance language education and community outreach. Géraldine Enjelvin, Yumi Nixon and Ulrike Wray have integrated this tool into modules and local primary school projects. The team will deliver new interactive workshops this June, including a session at the York Festival of Ideas.

Read more: https://www.york.ac.uk/language-linguistic-science/about/news/2026/kamishibai-march-2026/

Researchers from the Department of Language and Linguistic Science recently received commendations at the Deepfake Detec...
19/03/2026

Researchers from the Department of Language and Linguistic Science recently received commendations at the Deepfake Detection Challenge hosted by the Accelerated Capability Environment at Microsoft London. The team demonstrated the power of combining human and tool-based methods to strengthen audio deepfake detection in operationally realistic forensic scenarios.

Read more:
https://www.york.ac.uk/language-linguistic-science/about/news/2026/deepfake-detection-challenge/

The growing use of AI in law enforcement raises critical questions about fairness, transparency, and accuracy. To addres...
17/03/2026

The growing use of AI in law enforcement raises critical questions about fairness, transparency, and accuracy. To address this, members of the Forensic Speech Services (FoSS) group in the Department of Language and Linguistic Science have collaborated with the UKRI AI Centre for Doctoral Training in Safe AI Systems (SAINTS) to publish a new policy brief.

Co-authored by FoSS researchers Jessica Wormald, James Tompkinson, Lauren Harrington, Ben Gibb-Reid, Philip Harrison, and Vincent Hughes, the brief consolidates research across forensic speech science and AI safety. It outlines clear recommendations for policymakers to ensure that speech recognition technologies in policing are carefully managed and rigorously tested, with human oversight remaining at the forefront of procedures.

Read the policy brief:
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1s9_DAXm4brEnV9smW6LQk4C9fde12GB4/view

How does the meaning of the word 'just' change the way we say it? A new study by Dr Ben Gibb-Reid explores the link betw...
12/03/2026

How does the meaning of the word 'just' change the way we say it? A new study by Dr Ben Gibb-Reid explores the link between pragmatic function and phonetic reduction in British English. Read his findings in English Language and Linguistics.

https://doi.org/10.1017/S1360674325100609

Abstract submissions for YorCCA, the York Conference on Conversation Analysis, close on 10 April. Organised by York post...
10/03/2026

Abstract submissions for YorCCA, the York Conference on Conversation Analysis, close on 10 April. Organised by York postgraduates, the two-day event welcomes current MA/PhD students and recent graduates (2023+). 17–18 July 2026.

Call for papers: https://sites.google.com/york.ac.uk/yorcca/call-for-papers

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Department Of Language And Linguistic Science, University Of York
York
YO105DD

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