"Introductory Lojban" is a student-run one-credit course at Rice University in Houston, USA.
The course, started on August 23, 2011, has a length of 14 weeks, with each weekly lesson lasting 1 hour. Registration is required for full participation; however, anyone is welcome to "sit in", but should contact the course presenter, Joe Anderson, beforehand. Additionally, much of the course material will be available through this page. Each Rice-registered student will be provided with a copy of the Lojban Reference Manual. By the end of the course, students should know the basic structure of Lojban and be able to converse in it readily.
Also, anyone with a RiceID can access the Owlspace page.
For more information or feedback, contact the course presenter, Joe Anderson.
The syllabus is found in this Google Doc. Explanation of the format is given in the first lesson. It is intended to be simple yet flexible, so feedback is welcome.
(August 23)
Starting this week, I will be constructing a list of useful Lojban links and a list of classroom Lojban phrases. (These are both things I want to "fill" in a week or two.)
I have a tendency to mispronounce {e} at the end of a word — I try to say {ei} or {y}. My students started catching this mistake partway through! For anyone else who has this problem, the best way I found to solve it from an American English background was to think of an ending in "eh", like "neh" or something.
How does one handle starting a name like "Hannah"? I've never seen a Lojban {'any} or similar, so I'm pretty sure the {'} is only between vowels. Just wondering.
:: Video Editing in Progress ::
Next time, on "Introductory Lojban!"