Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Category
-
Program
-
Employer
-
Field
-
The School of Linguistic, Speech and Communication Sciences at Trinity College Dublin seeks applications from qualified candidates with a proven teaching record for the post of Language Assistant in
-
for excellence in education, research, and innovation, which has been inspiring generations of thinkers for over 400 years. Trinity College Dublin- an introduction Post Summary The School of Linguistic
-
-medium and Gaeltacht Education, and of Irish-language education more broadly, is an overt policy priority in Ireland. The sector is engaging with challenges with respect to the changing sociolinguistic
-
language and culture in Trinity, in accordance with the University’s strategic objectives, Trinity seeks to appoint an Assistant Irish Language Officer. The successful candidate will be responsible
-
visits. Essential Criteria MA in English, a modern European language, Comparative Literature or subject equivalent (high MA result of 2:1-1:1 or GPA above 3.2; academic transcripts will be requested from
-
Studies. The appointee will join a vibrant language teaching team. Duties include the development of innovative teaching materials, coordination of modules, assessment, support of students, outreach and
-
of this programme of research is to ensure that interventions to support language and communication deliver maximum benefit for children with or at risk for developmental language disorder (D)LD. To do this we aim
-
-centered and psychologically informed methods that could encourage responsible behaviours. Designing such approaches for opaque generative models, such as Large Language Models (LLMs), is critical and is
-
standard of at least Second Class Honours, Grade I in a relevant Masters degree. If English is not the applicant’s first language, they must meet the minimum English language entry requirements
-
available Large Language Models to parse, extract and interpret the most useful peer-reviewed scientific information of inflammatory bowel disease within public repositories. Experience with previous