Keep up the pace

second two-week RGC workshop a few weeks following the first, so that everyone gets a rest before continuing. You can only cover the amount of grammar that you can cover in the allotted time. There is no need to kill yourself or the participants in your attempts to meet the workshop goals. Goals are to spur us on, not to enslave or bury us. Whatever grammar is not covered in the first workshop can wait for another workshop. That being said, it is your responsibility to carefully prioritize which grammar you will cover in the allotted time. Until the writing system is established, you must always be carefully planning grammar sessions that will be the most helpful to establish that writing system, and most often this involves sound changes at morpheme boundaries.

3.6 Other specific instruction

3.6.1 Keep up the pace

In all the activities, there needs to be a balance between doing careful linguistic analysis and not getting bogged down on any one word or grammatical detail. Go slow enough that the majority of participants are hearing the correct sounds, understanding some functions of the morphemes, observing the morphophonological patterns, tentatively agreeing on spelling, and writing correct grammar in the notebooks. However, keep things moving. In a language with numerous sound alternations at morpheme boundaries, stifle your linguistic curiosity to exhaust all the syntactic functions of a particular morpheme. Sure the grammar would make a nice linguistic paper, but your job is help the language group arrive at a tentative working orthography, not to gather data for linguistic papers that further your career. For a practical writing system, it is more important to find the sound changes of morphemes than to fully understand all the functions of morphemes. Keep to the grammar that will help you arrive at the goal of agreeing on an informed writing system. Often a broad view of the grammar, such as investigating most morphemes in most environments using representative data, will be a better foundation for making orthography decisions than a deep but narrow view of the language, such as learning all there is to know about a few morphemes in the language. Occasionally, participants will need time to discuss issues that arise, such as whether two adjacent roots should be joined as words, whether or not a certain noun has a plural form, or any number of other issues. Allow each person to have a say in the matter, but don’t allow such discussions to go on past five minutes or so, unless the discussion is important for the activity. Often the issue can be more easily answered in a later session when all relevant grammar is collected and discussed for that issue. So, at an appropriate point, bring the participants back to the goal of the activity, and encourage discussions about other issues to continue during the next break time.

3.6.2 When the activity goes poorly