Department Chair

Dr. Anna Joaquin


Department of Linguistics/TESL
Sierra Tower (ST) Room 805
Monday – Friday: 8 AM to 5 PM

Phone: 818-677-3453

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M.A. in Linguistics

Requirements for the Master of Arts in Linguistics

Candidates completing the program leading to an M.A. degree in Linguistics will have a fundamental understanding of the core areas in linguistics at an advanced level.

A. Required Core Courses (30 units)

  • LING 404 Syntax (3)
  • LING 408 Semantics and Pragmatics (3)
  • LING 501 Seminar in Phonology (3)
  • LING 503 Seminar in Cognitive Linguistics or LING 505 Seminar in Discourse Analysis (3)
  • LING 506 Foundational Concepts of Phonetics and Phonology (3)
  • LING 510 Foundational Concepts of Linguistics (3)
  • LING 517 Foundational Concepts in Language Development and Acquisition (3)
  • LING 541 Seminar in Sociolinguistics (3)
  • LING 566 Research Methods for Linguistics (3)
  • LING 610 Seminar in Syntax (3)

B. Electives (6 units):

In consultation with the chair/advisor, candidates will select 6 units of electives at the 400-, 500-, or 600-level, as long as the total number of 400-level courses does not exceed 9 units in their program. Coursework may include LING courses or courses in other departments in consultation with the chair/advisor.

Preapproved electives for the M.A. in Linguistics:

  • EED 577 Language Arts and ESL Instruction
  • EED 610 Research Methods in Elementary Education
  • EED 626 Literacy Instruction for English Learners
  • EED 675 Bilingual/Multilingual Teaching Strategies
  • ENGL 653 Literary and Rhetorical Genre Theory
  • ENGL 654A-Z Advanced Topics in Rhetoric and Composition
  • EPC 600 Educational Statistics for Research and Measurement
  • LING 403 Introduction to Morphology
  • LING 411 Introduction to Historical Linguistics
  • LING 427 Languages in Contact
  • LING 447 Bilingualism in the U.S.
  • LING 455 Computational Linguistics
  • LING 495A-Z Selected Topics in Linguistics
  • LING 500 Seminar in Phonetics
  • LING 502 Seminar in Second Language Acquisition
  • LING 503 Seminar in Cognitive Linguistics (if LING 505 counts as required)
  • LING 505 Seminar in Discourse Analysis (if LING 503 counts as required)
  • LING 515 Survey of Applied Linguistics
  • LING 520 Issues in ESL Reading and Writing
  • LING 521 Issues in ESL Listening and Speaking
  • LING 525 English Structures for ESL/EFL Teaching
  • LING 530 Introduction to TESL
  • LING 568 TESL Testing and Assessment
  • LING 578 English for Specific Purposes
  • LING 589 Introduction to Celtic Languages
  • LING 590A-Z Selected Topics in Linguistics/TESL
  • LING 604 Acoustic and Instrumental Phonetics
  • SED 514 Computers in the Instructional Program
  • SED 625ESL Theory and Research in Teaching ESL in Multilingual Classrooms
  • SED 626 Literacy Instruction for English Learners
  • SPAN 400 Structure of the Spanish Language (3)
  • SPAN 401 Language and Culture (3)
  • SPAN 425 Spanish Phonetics (3)
  • SPAN 497 Comparative Structure of Spanish and English (3)
  • SPAN 530 Spanish Dialectology
  • SPAN 600 History of the Spanish Language
  • SPAN 603 Seminar in Romance Linguistics

C. Studies in a Language other than English Component:

Graduate students are required to complete two 3-unit progressive semesters (or the equivalent) of coursework in one language other than English. Students with prior language experience can pass all or part of the language requirement by examination or other evidence, at the discretion of the department. If prior coursework is used to satisfy this requirement, only courses completed within seven years of admission to the program will be accepted.

Students should fulfill this requirement within the first two semesters of enrollment in the program.

D. Culminating Experience (3 units):

In order to complete the M.A. degree in Linguistics, graduate students submit a graduate project, which is comprehensive in nature. Graduate students work on the different components of this project throughout the program; the final project is publicly presented during their last/graduating semester. These 3 units of culminating experience are part of the degree count

Graduate Project

Students during their last semester will enroll in LING 698D. Students on probation or who have remaining incompletes, or who have not completed the foreign language component, will not be permitted to enroll in LING 698D until these issues are all resolved. Students who fail the graduate project a second time are disqualified from the M.A. in Linguistics degree program

E. Unit Count for the M.A. in Linguistics

Description Units
Required Courses 30
Electives 6
Culminating Experience 3
Total Units: 39

Department Chair

Dr. Anna Joaquin


Department of Linguistics/TESL
Sierra Tower (ST) Room 805
Monday – Friday: 8 AM to 5 PM

Phone: 818-677-3453

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