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1st ALAA-ALANZ
Postgraduate Student Workshop


Tuesday 29 November 2011


This workshop precedes the first ALAA-ALANZ Conference 2011 (30 November–2 December) and the ALS Conference (2–4 December). It will be a unique opportunity for graduate students who register for the ALAA-ALANZ and/or ALS conferences from universities in Australia, New Zealand and other countries to discuss an issue or a burning problem related to their thesis with distinguished academics, including the ALAA-ALANZ Conference plenary speakers. Currently, the Workshop leaders are:

Chris Davison University of New South Wales
Diana Eades University of New England
Janet Holmes Victoria University, Wellington NZ
Andy Kirkpatrick Griffith University
Tim McNamara University of Melbourne
Johanna Rendle-Short The Australian National University
Merrill Swain University of Toronto

Click on Guidelines and Application link below for details on each Workshop Leader’s area of expertise.

The Workshop will not attract a separate registration fee. The Workshop will be organised in small groups in order to maximise discussion and interaction. Places are therefore limited and will be allocated on the basis of the details contained in your application form (see guidelines before completing an application form).

The due date for applications has been extended until COB 21 October 2011.
Applicants will be notified of the success or rejection of their applications on 28 October 2011.

Note: the Workshop is not a separate mini-conference for graduate students but rather a special event that complements the main ALAA-ALANZ conferecnce. Please see the Guidelines for further information.

Venue The Australian National University

Guidelines &
Application Form

Guidelines & application form
Contact AppliedLing.2011@canberra.edu.au

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Hosted by the Applied Linguistics Association of Australia, Applied Linguistics Association of New Zealand, Australian Linguistic Society
& Australian Society for French Studies

at The Australian National University & the University of Canberra
              

with further support from the Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies