Scott Anderbois graduated with the PhD in linguistics from UCSC in 2011. Last spring, he accepted a permanent position in the Department of Cognitive, Linguistic, and Psychological Sciences at Brown University. We checked in with Scott to get his perspective on his new situation and on his path from dissertation to tenure-track position.
WHASC: Congratulations on your new position, Scott. Could you tell us about your current situation: What’s the environment like? Who are your colleagues?
Scott: I just started here at Brown as an Assistant Professor. Our department is Cognitive, Linguistic, and Psychological Sciences, and it is really exciting to get to know folks doing work in all sorts of areas in, around, and (well) beyond linguistics. For example, one project I’ve been working on has to do with the discourse behavior of attitude reports in Yucatec Maya, and so it is great to have colleagues right down the hall who work on issues like how children acquire mental representations and how adults reason over them. Beyond my department, there’s a very active research community here in Latin American studies (e.g. there was recently a roundtable discussion of researchers working on indigenous languages of Mesoamerica), a burgeoning Native American and Indigenous studies group, and lots of other folks doing interesting work! The other language folks in the department here are Sheila Blumstein, Uriel Cohen-Priva, Laura Kertz, Jim Morgan, and Pauline Jacobson. We have a small PhD program in Linguistics which we are hoping to grow a bit now that the faculty has grown (I am the third new linguistics hire in 4 years).
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