Posted: Tuesday 27 November 2012 by Joseph Vancell in
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For all those who still mix their and there, it's and its, loose and lose, affect and effect, then and than ...


15 Grammar Goofs That Make You Look Silly
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Amazing!

Posted: Tuesday 6 November 2012 by Joseph Vancell in
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SOK Facebook Page

Posted: Sunday 7 October 2012 by Joseph Vancell in
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Visit and like my new Systems of Knowledge Facebook page for daily postings about the subject and its project.

The SOK Syllabus

Posted: Friday 5 October 2012 by Joseph Vancell in
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Press the link below to access The Systems of Knowledge Syllabus

2013 MATSEC
2014 MATSEC 


SOK Project Action Plan 2012-13

Posted: Friday 28 September 2012 by Joseph Vancell in
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Press the link below to access the action plan form.

https://docs.google.com/open?id=0B8TASqPbw9FPTUh3NlFabVNmN28

Posted: by Joseph Vancell in
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Picasso's Guernica in 3D

Posted: Wednesday 26 September 2012 by Joseph Vancell in
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Siehbi fil-cupboard tal-kcina

Posted: Sunday 23 September 2012 by Joseph Vancell in
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The brilliant cover ..

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Walter Micallef's original

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The Death of Snow White

Posted: Saturday 22 September 2012 by Joseph Vancell in
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Posted: Monday 28 May 2012 by Joseph Vancell in
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Just read: Antoinette Camilleri-Grima (2009) Diglossia: Variation on a Theme, in Comrie, B., Fabri, R., Hume, E., Mifsud, M., Stolz, T. & Vanhove, M. (Eds.) Introducing Maltese Linguistics, Amsterdam, John Benjamin Publishing Co., pp. 379 - 392



Abstract
This paper is a preliminary investigation of the status of dialectal Maltese in Gozo, with special reference to the domain of education. The sociolinguistic concept of diglossia was explained in depth by Charles Ferguson in his seminal paper in 1959, and was later amplified by Joshua Fishman in 1967; and again defended and further explained by Fishman in 2002. Maltese dialects and their co-existence with Standard Maltese on the island of Malta are normally considered as presenting a case of diglossia (e.g. Camilleri 1987; Camilleri 1995), and Standard Maltese as enjoying a relationship of bilingualism without diglossia in relation to English.
This paper seeks to explain the peculiar co-existence of dialectal and standard Maltese on the island of Gozo, and claims that it is the Gozitan dialects, normally expected to act as Low varieties, that enjoy the higher social prestige normally associated with the High variety; while standard Maltese speakers are stigmatized. While focussing particularly on the domain of education, and dealing specifically with the two diglossic features of Function and Prestige, I shall (i) provide evidence to show how dialectal and standard Maltese share functions and fight for prestige in school; and (ii) discuss this unusual sociolinguistic context in terms of ethnolinguistic vitality. According to Fishman (2002) a fundamental criterion for describing a society as diglossic is depth in time, and in Gozo the prognosis is encouraging for the survival of dialectal Maltese, and its position as the High variety, given both the etiology, as well as the ehtnolinguistic vitality of the community.

References:
Camilleri A. 1987. Language, Education and Socialization in MÄ¡arr. Unpublished B.Ed. dissertation, University of Malta.
Camilleri A. 1995. "'Issa l-mummy trid tibda tkellimni bil-pulit'. A case study of a regional dialect in Malta." In Proceedings of the 2nd International Conference of L'Association Internationale pour la dialectologie Arabe, held at Trinity Hall, University of Cambridge, 10-14 September 1995, pp. 11-20.
Ferguson C.A. 1959. "Diglossia". Word 15: 325-40.
Fishman J. 1967. "Bilingualism with and without diglossia; diglossia with and without bilingualism". Journal of Social Issues 23(2): 29-38.
Fishman J. 2002. "Diglossia and Societal Multilingualism: Dimensions of Similarity and Difference". International Journal of the Sociology of Language 157: 93-100.

Body architect

Posted: Monday 7 May 2012 by Joseph Vancell in
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