I am still constructing this page, but please take a look at these resources. It will help your research and teaching!!
Platform for research dissemination
Tools for textual analysis (research oriented)
Dr. Kristopher Kyle's corpus tools
Tools for textual analysis (pedagogy/research)
Statistics
www.linguisticanalysistools.org/taales.html
Platform for research dissemination
- Multi-ʻōlelo is an interactive platform that shares summaries of research studies published on language-related issues. It attempts to enhance the accessibility to research findings in the field particularly by practitioners and policymakers, through not only text summary but also other multimodal format such as info-graphics, slide decks in multiple languages. Currently, the project is led by a group of Ph.D. candidates/students at the Department of Second Language Studies at University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa (and a PhD student in the Department of Linguistics at University of Oregon).
Tools for textual analysis (research oriented)
Dr. Kristopher Kyle's corpus tools
- TAALES (TOOL FOR THE AUTOMATIC ANALYSIS OF LEXICAL SOPHISTICATION)
- TAASSC (TOOL FOR THE AUTOMATIC ANALYSIS OF SYNTACTIC SOPHISTICATION AND COMPLEXITY)
- TAACO (TOOL FOR THE AUTOMATIC ANALYSIS OF COHESION)
Tools for textual analysis (pedagogy/research)
- Compleat Lexical Tutor by Dr. Tom Cobb comprise a series of computational, corpus linguistic tools that focus on vocabulary learning and teaching. The most famous feature is VocabProfiler, which allows you to examine the frequency profiles of your chosen texts based on commonly used databases (e.g., BNC-COCA, General Service List and Academic Word List) at ease. I recommend you to explore the webpage because Dr. Tom Cobb adds frequently revises and adds additional features to the web page. The development is ongoing.
- Multi-Word Units Profiler is a free web application that allows user to identify, highlight and learn about potentially useful English chunks in their input texts. The tool is still in developmental stage, but it can identify useful chunks based on three existing lists of multi-word units.
Statistics
- langtest.jp by Dr. Atsushi Mizumoto is a fantastic, easy-to-use interface that allows you to analyze your own quantitative data through R environment. You can choose desired statistical tests and it will conduct necessary assumption checks, visualization and main statistical analysis. Although you need to know what test you need to conduct and what procedure you need to follow (so, you need conceptual understandings of the statistical procedure), the webpage will shortcut the difficulty in coding in R, which I think greatly benefit our community, especially for BA/MA students and action researchers.
www.linguisticanalysistools.org/taales.html