The Department of Linguistics offers programs of graduate study leading to the M.A. and the Ph.D. Theoretical approaches in all areas of linguistics are emphasized, providing a thorough grounding in five core areas of linguistics through required courses in phonetics, phonology, syntax, semantics, and field methods. Advanced courses are offered in the department's core concentrations of phonetics and phonology, syntax and semantics, descriptive and documentary linguistics, computational linguistics, and the linguistics of signed languages, as well as areas that may be within the research interests of specific faculty. Students may also elect to take related coursework in such departments as Anthropology, Speech, Language and Hearing Sciences, Computer Science, Philosophy, Psychology, and Statistics, as well as specific language departments.
While the department usually does not accept students to only the MA degree, there may occasionally be reasons why an applicant needs to apply for the MA degree rather than the PhD, and in those cases we may consider the application. MA only students usually do not receive funding. PhD students indicate PhD as their degree objective even if they do not yet have an MA. All students take the same set of core courses, whether enrolled in the MA or PhD program. The MA program is a full-time program, with most courses taking place between 8 am and 5pm on weekdays.Add body text in this space.
The Department of Linguistics at The University of Texas at Austin has a long tradition of supporting advanced research on the linguistics of signed languages. That research has concerned the experimental phonetics of signed languages, various aspects of the grammars of signed languages, the sociolinguistics of signing communities, the history of signed languages, multilingualism among signers, and the acquisition of signed languages as first and second languages. The research conducted here has examined not only ASL, but also many other sign languages and their communities, including sign languages of Brazil, Mexico, and Tajikistan, among others, as well as emergent sign languages in Peru and Mexico.