About
Professor Teresa Satterfield Linares is a linguist whose areas of research include child bilingualism, first language acquisition (the roles of [psycholinguistic and sociolinguistic] factors in developing grammars), language contact phenomena in the context of U.S. (Afro-)Latinx identity and culture. She collaborates extensively on studies using fNIRS brain imaging techniques to inform theories of syntactic development and literacy research in bilingual children. She is the founder and director of the community-based Saturday Spanish academic program for Spanish-speaking children grades Pre-K to 5, "En Nuestra Lengua" (ENL) www.umich.edu/~tsatter/ENL, www.facebook.com/EnNuestraLengua.
Specializations: bilingualism, syntactic theory, language variation and contact, computational models of language
Other areas of interest: language as a Complex Adaptive System
Recent and Selected Publications
Marks, R., T. Satterfield, & I. Kovelman. (in press). Integrated Multilingualism as Revealed through Bilingual Reading Development. In MacSwan, J, ed. “Integrated Multilingualism.” Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
Satterfield, T. (2021). Dual Competence in Dual Language Learners: Gradience and Variability of Object Clitics in Spanish Heritage Language Learners. In Gupton, T. & E. Gieslau, eds. “Festschrift for Paula Kempchinsky.” Amsterdam: John Benjamins, 189 – 213.
Satterfield, T. (2019). Review of Schwegler, Kirschen & Maglia, eds. (2017): Orality, Identity, and Resistance in Palenque (Colombia): An interdisciplinary approach, Volume 54: Contact Language Library. Middle Atlantic Review of Latin American Studies 3(2): 172 – 174.
Arredondo, M., Hu, X., Tsutsumi, A., Satterfield, T., Gelman, S. & I. Kovelman (2019). Are Two Better Than One? Language Competition in the Bilingual and Monolingual Developing Brain. Brain and Language: Special Issue, Developmental and Computational Approaches to the Bilingual Brain. Volume 195, doi.org/10.1016/j.bandl.2019.104640
Satterfield, T. & J. Benkí (2019). Caribbean Spanish influenced by African-American English: US Afro-Spanish language and the new US Caribeño Identity. In Valentín-Márquez, W. & M. Gonzáléz-Rivera, eds., Dialects from Tropical Islands: Caribbean Spanish in the US. New York: Routledge Publishers, 201–219.
Satterfield, T. & J. Haefner (2018). Community Service Immersion: A Blueprint for US Social and Linguistic Engagement. In Purdy, Jann, ed. Language beyond the Classroom: a How-to-Guide for Service Learning Curriculum in Foreign Language Programs. New York: Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 184 – 209.
Arredondo, M., X. Hu, Seifert, E., T. Satterfield, & I. Kovelman (2018). Early-exposed Bilingual Children Show Heightened Cortical Specificity for Syntax in Left IFG. Bilingualism, Language & Cognition, 1– 19. doi:10.1017/S1366728918000512
Pollard-Durodola, S. D., Gonzalez, J. E., Satterfield, T., Benkí, J., Vaquero, J., & Ungco, C. (2017). Parent book talk to accelerate Spanish content vocabulary knowledge. The Reading Teacher. 17(3): 335 – 345 doi.org/10.1002/trtr.1615
Arredondo, M., Hu, X., Beltz, A., Stojanov, L., Satterfield, T. & I. Kovelman (under review). Understanding Individual Variability in Children’s Brain & Cognitive Development Through a Bilingualism Lens, Brain & Language, Special Edition.
Méndez, L. & Satterfield, T. (under review). Relating Perceived Phenotype and Discrimination to Ethnic-Racial Identity in Young Latinx Children. Hispanic Journal of Behavioral Sciences.
Regus, M. & Satterfield, T. (submitted). Where is Mi Gente? Codeswitching Our Blackness and Latinidad in the Music Classroom. Bulletin of the Council for Research in Music Education.
Recent undergraduate courses taught
Span 373: Bilingualism in the Spanish-speaking world
Span 385: Race and Ethnicity in the Hispanic World: "The Language of Reggaetón" (Race and ethnicity-approved course)
Span 411: Spanish Morphosyntax
Span 428: Domestic Internship
Span 487: Studies in Hispanic Linguistics: "Mock Spanish - Language, mockery and racism" (Race and ethnicity-approved course)
Spanish 491, 492: Senior Honors Coursework
Research Areas
Romance linguistics, (first) language acquisition, bilingualism, syntactic theory, language variation and contact, computational models of language
Director, En Nuestra Lengua Research Group <ennuestralengualab@gmail.com>
Affiliations
Romance Languages & Literatures
Linguistics
Combined Program of Education and Psychology (CPEP)