Discovering DARE is a multidisciplinary curricula that includes audio and written materials from the comprehensive archive of the Dictionary of American Regional English, which includes the six volumes of the print dictionary, the online version Digital DARE, as well as the thousand original interview recordings—1,843 to be exact, collected from over 1,002 communities across the United States. We created the curricula to be as accessible to as many people as possible, primarily secondary and post-secondary instructors. Of our many goals, we hope to introduce people to the wonderful study and application of linguistics.
From eye-witness accounts of historical moments like Civil Rights marches or the Moon Landing that paralleled changes within the social dynamics of generations, we are harvesting the interviews and creating curricula for a variety of courses—language arts or linguistics, composition, literature, history, sociology, to name a few. We are certain the wealth of DARE materials within the freely available resources will continue to enhance our awareness of how language variety and change intersect with social change and contribute to our sense of individual, regional, and national identities.
We invite you to use our materials as they become available at:
Presently available:
(As of June 15, 2017)
Discovering DARE: Linguistic Lessons from the Dictionary of American Regional English
Authors: Kelly D. Abrams & Trini Stickle
This curriculum offers a flexible 5-day unit on language variation and change in American English based on DARE, which may be used as one course of study or as single lessons embedded within a larger unit. Students are challenged to evaluate the linguistic and social implications of language diversity.
Outline of Curriculum
Day 1: Language and Dialect
Day 2: Dictionaries
Day 3: Regional Dialect Variation
Day 4: Ethnic Dialects
Day 5: Identity
We are hopeful the Discovering DARE curricula will provide educators and students a thoughtful and engaging exploration of language within society. For additional information, please see the May 2017 edition of American Speech where Stickle and Abrams elaborate on this curriculum and the project as a whole.
Coming Soon:
Discovering DARE: Familiar voices seen and heard, investigating ‘eye’ dialects of American literature
Authors: Trini Stickle & Kelly D. Abrams
This curriculum provides a critical companion to works of American literature that represent regional language through ‘eye dialect’—representation of a dialect’s sound structure through orthography. Focusing on commonly assigned short stories, plays, and novels in which ‘eye’ dialect is used to recreate regional pronunciation (e.g., Bellow, Faulkner, Jewett, Hurston, Morrison, Welty, Wolfe), students compare orthographic representations to authentic speech data of speakers from corresponding regions selected from the DARE interview archive. As such, students are challenged to question the artistic and social consequences of this literary effect.
Discovering DARE: Voices from the perimeter, an exploration of the Civil Rights Movement beyond the Deep South
Authors: Jennifer Walton-Hanley, Trini Stickle, & Kelly D. Abrams
This curriculum engages students with perceptions of race relations and the Civil Rights movement during the 1960s and early 1970s through eye-witness accounts present in the DARE interview data. What is notable about this curriculum is its focus on the views of communities located outside the Deep South, thus, the perimeter states such as Ohio, Kentucky, Oklahoma, Nebraska. In doing so, students explore the greater national view on race and the Civil Rights movement with more commonly studied areas (e.g., Alabama, Mississippi, Georgia).
Arriving Later:
Discovering DARE: Tracing the History of English through Twentieth Century Conversations
Authors: Trini Stickle & Kelly D. Abrams
This curriculum supplements History of English courses by providing audio evidence of early language features—British and other historical English dialects—captured in the talk of older speakers within the DARE interview data. This curriculum engages students in linguistic sleuthing activities, allowing them to become linguistic researchers. They use DARE evidence to trace dialect features and word etymologies and conduct dialect research within their locals. By actually practicing the scholarly study of our nation’s sociolinguistic history, abstract and distant facts become internalized as knowledge.
Discovering DARE: To the Moon and back, eye-witness accounts of technological changes as experienced by ordinary people
Authors: Jennifer Walton-Hanley, Trini Stickle, & Kelly D. Abrams
This curriculum allows students to vicariously experience many technological advances of the early twentieth century through eye-witness accounts present in the DARE interview data. These changes include the Moon landing, public aviation travel, advances in agricultural practices. Students compare the perspectives of such historic changes with those of more recent technological changes (e.g., the Internet, cell phones). Drawing from these foundational exercises, students engage in research that includes data collection, analysis, and various types of reporting methods (e.g., papers, wikis, blogs).