Item details
Item ID
ACLA1-FM010_C
Title FM010_C
Description This was recorded at CD's house. Near old church at Daguragu. There is one old man sitting down and lots of cats. SU and CD read the book to SB and then to themselves. This seems to be a very successful session.14:49min.
Origination date 2003-10-15
Origination date free form
Archive link https://catalog.paradisec.org.au/repository/ACLA1/FM010_C
URL
Collector
Felicity Meakins
Countries To view related information on a country, click its name
Language as given
Subject language(s) To view related information on a language, click its name
Content language(s) To view related information on a language, click its name
Dialect
Region / village Daguragu
Originating university University of Queensland
Operator Tina Gregor
Data Categories
Data Types Sound
Discourse type interactive_discourse
Roles CD : speaker
SU : speaker
SB : speaker
DOI 10.26278/KWX3-RX46
Cite as Felicity Meakins (collector), CD (speaker), SU (speaker), SB (speaker), 2003. FM010_C. PLAIN/EAF+XML/MPEG/VND.WAV. ACLA1-FM010_C at catalog.paradisec.org.au. https://dx.doi.org/10.26278/KWX3-RX46
Content Files (5)
Filename Type File size Duration File access
ACLA1-FM010_C-01.cha text/plain 28 KB
ACLA1-FM010_C-01.eaf application/eaf+xml 1.95 MB
ACLA1-FM010_C-01.mp3 audio/mpeg 13.6 MB 00:14:49.138
ACLA1-FM010_C-01.txt text/plain 195 KB
ACLA1-FM010_C-01.wav audio/vnd.wav 489 MB 00:14:49.115
5 files -- 504 MB -- --

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Collection Information
Collection ID ACLA1
Collection title The Aboriginal Child Language Project
Description The Aboriginal Child Language Project was funded by an Australian Research Council Discovery Grant. The project investigated the type of input children receive in multilingual environments that include a traditional language, a contact variety of English and code-mixing between languages and speech styles. It involved case studies of three Aboriginal communities and was designed to address the following questions:

RQ1: what kind of language input do Indigenous Australian Aboriginal children receive from traditional Indigenous languages, Kriol and varieties of English, and from code-switching involving these languages as used by adults and older children?
RQ2: what effect does this have on the children's language acquisition and how the input is reflected in their productive output?
RQ3: what are the processes of language shift, maintenance and change which may be hypothesised to result from this multilingual environment, as evidenced by the children's input and output and the degree to which this reflects transmission of the target languages, the loss of traditional languages, or the emergence of new mixed languages?
To address the complexity of these questions, this project brought together people with expertise in three different, but related, fields: Central Australian languages (Disbray, McConvell, Meakins, Moses, O'Shannessy and Simpson), first language acquisition (Wigglesworth), and historical change and language maintenance (McConvell and Simpson).
Countries To view related information on a country, click its name
Languages To view related information on a language, click its name
Access Information
Edit access Tina Gregor
Felicity Meakins
View/Download access
Data access conditions Closed (subject to the access condition details)
Data access narrative If you wish to request access to the audio and transcript files, please contact the depositor, Felicity Meakins, at the School of Languages and Cultures, University of Queensland. No access will be granted to material containing deceased people without prior consent of the families.
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