Connect

Join Our Listserv!

Faculty and students interested in receiving ongoing information about CLASP courses and upcoming events can subscribe to the CLASP listserv by sending an email (with no subject header) from a CU email account to: listproc@lists.colorado.edu. The entire text of the message should read:

subscribe claspcu firstname lastname

Electronic confirmation of the subscription should arrive within 24 hours of subscribing. If you have any issues subscripting, please contact the CLASP Web Manager at katherine.arnold-murray@colorado.edu. 

Like Us on Facebook

A great way to keep in touch and up to date with CLASP is through Facebook. You can like the  as well as the CLASP Conference page.

Follow the Lab on Research Gate

Read more about our lab member's research on the lab's . 

For Further Information about the CLASP Program

Inquiries about the CLASP program should be addressed to the CLASP Director, Kira Hall, Associate Professor in the Departments of Linguistics and Anthropology. Professor Hall can be reached by email at kira.hall@colorado.edu. Messages for the CLASP program can also be left with the Department of Linguistics, 303-492-8456.

Alumni and current members

To update your profile information or inform us of your accomplishments, please email katherine.arnold-murray@colorado.edu 

CLASP Mailing Address

Program in Culture, Language, and Social Practice
c/o CLASP Director Kira Hall
Department of Linguistics
Campus Box 295
University of Colorado
Boulder, Colorado 80309-0295

A Graduate Community

  The CLASP certificate provides excellent training for students who are interested in doing interdisciplinary work concerning the intersections between language, society, and culture. This multi-dimensional approach provided me with a rich foundation and the necessary skills to explore complex theoretical and empirical issues cross-disciplinarily, while additionally connecting me with a larger graduate community at CU Boulder.  

-Matthew Ingram
MA, Linguistics, 2013

CLASP Facts

CLASP student Sarah Adams uses methods of sociolinguistic analysis to study hockey discourse in the NHL.