17th Annual Stabilizing Indigenous Languages Symposium

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17th Annual Stabilizing Indigenous Languages Symposium “Language and Place” Call for Proposals June 25 - 27, 2010 University of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon Proposal Due Date: November 30, 2009 by 5:00 pm PST The University of Oregon and the Northwest Indian Language Institute are pleased to announce that we will be hosting the 17th Annual Stabilizing Indigenous Languages Symposium held June 25, 26, and 27, 2010. The University of Oregon, in Eugene, sits on ancestral lands of the Kalapuya people.

Language and Place are intrinsically tied together. Indigenous thought and lifeways are rooted in the places people have lived since time immemorial. With this thought in mind, please submit proposals that support these ideas through educating and informing language workers, advocates, programs, and linguists from around the world. Symposium session information We invite you to submit a proposal that will fit in one of four venues: workshops, demonstrations, poster sessions, and panel sessions. The symposium committee will select proposals that focus on language documentation, revitalization, maintenance, methodology, research, practices, and teaching which address and/or incorporate the Language and Place theme. We are especially seeking presentations that inform and educate Symposium participants on the best practices in language revitalization/maintenance; not presentations which primarily promote a specific company, product, service, or solution. Sessions will range in time from 45, 60, and 90 minute blocks. Important dates Complete proposals must be received on November 30, 2009 by 5:00 pm PST. Late submissions will be accepted at the discretion of the SILS Committee. Online and email submissions are highly encouraged! The committee will contact you on or before January 29, 2010 to let you know if your proposal has been selected for presentation at the Symposium. All decisions are final. Symposium waste-free goal In being mindful of our environment, our goal is to be a waste-free event. Therefore we encourage presenters and participants alike to help in this effort to avoid unnecessary waste or excessive use of paper. To this end, we encourage presenters to offer digital materials to participants when at all possible. We would be glad to offer the Symposium website as a place for participants to download materials before or after the Symposium. Please let us know if you would like to take advantage of this offer.

Symposium proposals should include the following: Name of the person(s) who will be part of the session Affiliation (tribe, nation, organization, etc.) Title and description of the session - up to 300 words Audio, visual, computer needs - *please note, we cannot provide lap top computers Type of session (workshop, presentation, panel session, poster session) Length of session (45, 60, 90 minutes) Presenter(s) profile(s) - on a separate page please include the following information about each presenter in your proposal: name, title (if applicable), affiliation (tribe, nation, organization, university, etc.), contact information (including email and phone number), and a biography of no more than 100 words per presenter. *Please indicate if you are willing to make your handouts digitally available before and/or after the SILS Something Different at SILS 2010 This year we would like to offer a space for language groups, alliances, and organizations to meet. If you are a leader of a language organization, please send in a one page Meeting Proposal. Be sure to include: your group name, name and contact information for your group’s main person/contact, expected number of participants, and the type of meeting you will be having (business meeting, language/language family work group, open discussion forum, etc.). Also, indicate if the meeting is open for anyone to attend. A meeting agenda would be a good resource to include with the proposal, if available. Please mail your session proposal information to: SILS 2010 NILI - University of Oregon Attn: SILS Committee 1629 Moss Street Eugene, Oregon 97403 USA Send via email to: [email protected] For updated conference information and documents visit the SILS 2010 website at: http://www.uoregon.edu/~nwili/SILS/SILS.html

Important Dates SILS Proposals due - November 30, 2009 by 5:00 pm PST Notification of proposal acceptance - January 29, 2010 SILS 2010 - June 25, 26, and 27, 2010

A Brief History of the Stabilizing Indigenous Languages Symposium (SILS) The First Symposium focused on creating an agenda for reversing language shift and was held on November 16-18, 1994 at Northern Arizona University in Flagstaff, Arizona, and featured some the leading figures in the field of minority language preservation. The symposium had four roundtables. They were on needs and rationale, community issues, education, and policy. It was hosted by Northern Arizona University (NAU) with assistance from the Bilingual Unit of the Arizona Department of Education, The Hopi Tribe, Navajo Community College, The Navajo Nation, Tuba City Unified School District #15, and EAC - West, Las Vegas, New Mexico. The conference was planned by Gina Cantoni, Benjamin Barney, Robert Luis Carrasco, Deborah House, Richard Littlebear, and Gary McLean and facilitated by Robert Arnold, Benjamin Barney, William Demmert, Joshua Fishman, Richard Littlebear, Dan McLaughlin, John Oller, and Jon Reyhner. Dick Heiser played a major role in organizing the symposium, and it was funded with a grant from the U.S. Department of Education's Office of Bilingual Education and Minority Languages Affairs. The Second Symposium was held on May 4-6, 1995 at NAU and also included many tribal educators from throughout Arizona. The second symposium was also funded with the grant from the U.S. Department of Education's Office of Bilingual Education and Minority Languages Affairs. Speeches, session summaries, and submitted papers from the first and second symposia were published in Stabilizing Indigenous Languages. The Third Symposium was hosted by Dr. Richard Littlebear and held in Anchorage, Alaska, in February 1996 and brought together mostly Alaskan Native educators. No proceedings were published from this conference. The Fourth Symposium on "Sharing Effective Language Renewal Practices" was sponsored by NAU's Center for Excellence in Education and Department of Modern Languages and held on May 1-3, 1997. It was co-chaired by Dr. Evangeline Parsons Yazzie and Dr. Jon Reyhner. A selection of papers was compiled from this conference and published under the title Teaching Indigenous Languages. A short description of the Fourth Symposium can be found in the NABE News. The Fifth Symposium on "Strategies for Language Renewal and Revitalization" was co-chaired by Dr. Robert N. St. Clair and Dr. Evangeline Parsons Yazzie and held at Louisville, Kentucky on May 14-16, 1998. Dr. Gina Cantoni, Dr. Jon Reyhner, and Dr. Barbara Burnaby served on the symposium advisory board. Papers from the conference were published in Revitalizing Indigenous Languages. The Sixth Symposium was held on June 3-5, 1999 at the University of Arizona in Tucson and was sponsored by the Twentieth Annual American Indian Language Development Institute (AILDI), which was co-directed by Dr. Teresa L. McCarty and Dr. Ofelia Zepeda. Twenty-three papers from this conference were published by the Center for Indian Education, Arizona State University in 2006 as One Voice, Many Voices: Recreating Indigenous Language Communities. This book as well as many other valuable journals and books can be found on the ASU Center for Indian Education website at: http://coe.asu.edu/cie/bookads.htm. The Seventh Symposium on "Language Across the Community" was held on May 11-14, 2000 at The Toronto Colony Hotel in Toronto, Canada. The conference chair was Dr. Barbara Burnaby of the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education of the University of Toronto. More than 500 people attended this very successful conference, including indigenous language activists from across Canada and the

United States, Asia, Africa, Australia, New Zealand, Hawai'i, and South America. Go to the conference proceedings. The Eighth Symposium on "Merging Tradition & Technology to Revitalize Indigenous Languages" was co-chaired by Gary Owens and Jon Reyhner and held on June 14-16, 2001 at Northern Arizona University in Flagstaff, Arizona. Go to Conference Program (pdf file). The Ninth Symposium was held at Montana State University in Bozeman, Montana, June 9-11, 2002. The Tenth Symposium was hosted by the Ho Chunk Nation on June 25-28, 2003 in Wisconsin Dells, WI. Selected papers from the 8th, 9th, and 10th conferences are included in Nurturing Native Languages. The Eleventh Symposium was held in Berkeley, California on June 11-13, 2004. It was chaired by Leanne Hinton and hosted by the Advocates for Indigenous California Language Survival and the University of California at Berkeley. Selected papers from the conference are published in Report 14 of the Survey of California and Other Indian Languages titled Language is Life. The 2005 Symposium was held on June 2-5, 2005 in Victoria, British Columbia, at the University of Victoria. The 2006 Symposium was chaired by Lori Quigley and held on May 18-21, 2006, in Buffalo, New York and was co-hosted by Buffalo State College's School of Education and the Seneca Nation of Indians. An article by Christine Graef in News From Indian Country on this conference is on-line at http://www.indiancountrynews.info/fullstory.cfm-ID=449.htm. The 2007 Symposium was held in Mount Pleasant, Michigan, on June 1-3 and was hosted by Eastern Michigan University and the Saginaw Chippewa Tribal Nation and chaired by Margaret Noori. The 15th Annual Symposium was held May 2 & 3, 2008 at Northern Arizona University in Flagstaff, Arizona. Selected papers and speeches from the 14th and 15th symposiums can be downloaded at http://jan.ucc.nau.edu/~jar/ILR/. The 16th Annual Symposium was held from April 30 to May 2, 2009 at Arizona State University. For many years the Native American Languages Issues (NALI) group held annual conferences. Go to Information on NALI. To receive conference updates, join the Indigenous-L list at: http://list1.ucc.nau.edu/cgi-bin/wa?SUBED1=indigenous-l&A=1

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