St.	
  Cloud	
  State	
  University	
  values	
  diversity	
  of	
  all	
  kinds,	
  including	
  but	
  not	
  limited	
  to	
  race,	
  religion	
  and	
  ethnicity	
  (full	
  statement	
  at	
  
bulletin.stcloudstate.edu/ugb/generalinfo/nondiscrimination.asp).
TTY:	
  1-­‐800-­‐627-­‐3529	
  SCSU	
  is	
  an	
  affirmative	
  action/equal	
  opportunity	
  educator	
  and	
  employer.	
  
This	
  material	
  can	
  be	
  made	
  available	
  in	
  an	
  alternative	
  format.	
  Contact	
  the	
  department/agency	
  listed	
  above.	
  A	
  member	
  of	
  the	
  Minnesota	
  State	
  Colleges	
  and	
  Universities	
  system.
ST. CLOUD STATE UNIVERSITY
DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH
720 Fourth Avenue South
St. Cloud, MN 56301-4498
tel 320.308.3061
fax 320.308.5524
www.stcloudstate.edu/english
March 09, 2015
A letter of Recommendation for Ms. Maria Bloch
A student of mine, Ms. Maria Bloch, has asked me to write a letter of recommendation to support her
application to pursue a graduate program at your university. I do so unreservedly and with great enthusiasm for
several reasons. The applicant is academically gifted and has had a strong desire and motivation to do forensic
linguistics, especially forensic acoustic phonetics. I have had a tremendous pleasure advising, challenging, and
guiding her in this pursuit. I have prescribed a rigorous course of study for her in preparation for the graduate
work that she intends to do in forensic sciences. As you will notice from her transcripts, the applicant has taken
a wide variety of courses from Forensic Chemistry to Physics, to Pre-calculus to Computational Linguistics, to
Psychology. For her senior project, I’m having her study the Center of Gravity of the palatal fricative [ʃ] with
the hope of discovering whether or not, and to what extent if any, the vowel context has any impact on the
measurements of this segment. A secondary benefit that we wish to derive from this study is to test the
Acoustic Invariance Hypothesis. There are two theoretical schools in acoustic phonetics: one that subscribes to
the view that acoustic phonetic signals are unique to the individual speaker, and another that claims that given
the anatomical and aerodynamic similarities in speech production, individual differences are not robust. Indeed,
many leading studies of fricatives espouse the latter view. Since Ms. Bloch has a strong interest in forensic
linguistics, I’ve asked her to investigate this palatal fricative from an acoustic phonetic perspective with an eye
on invariance or variability. The participants in her study include three male and three female speakers from
Central Minnesota. She is examining [ʃ] in eleven vowel contexts, in pre-vocalic and post-vocalic
environments. Ms. Bloch has very strong analytical abilities and a genuine interest in forensic sciences. By
assigning her to work on such a challenging topic, she is honing her skills as a future forensic phonetician. She
is also learning the value of data triangulation, using information from biology, physics, mathematics/statistics,
and computational modeling to arrive at a conclusion that may or may not be of forensic significance. Ms.
Bloch is an exceptionally gifted student, one who is keenly interested in forensic linguistics. Because of this,
and of the aforementioned reasons, I strongly and unreservedly recommend her to your program. I can be
contacted by phone at (320)-308-3539, by fax at (320)-308-5524, or by electronic mail at
enkoffi@stcloudstate.edu should you want me to provide you with additional information regarding her
application.
Ettien N. Koffi, Ph. D.
Professor of Linguistics
Saint Cloud State University,
enKoffi
Digitally signed by enKoffi
DN: cn=enKoffi, o=SCSU, ou=English
Department, email=enkoffi@stcloudstate.edu,
c=US
Date: 2015.03.20 09:56:39 -06'00'
 
	
  
	
  
	
  
St.	
  Cloud	
  State	
  University	
  values	
  diversity	
  of	
  all	
  kinds,	
  including	
  but	
  not	
  limited	
  to	
  race,	
  religion	
  and	
  ethnicity	
  (full	
  statement	
  at	
  
bulletin.stcloudstate.edu/ugb/generalinfo/nondiscrimination.asp).
TTY:	
  1-­‐800-­‐627-­‐3529	
  SCSU	
  is	
  an	
  affirmative	
  action/equal	
  opportunity	
  educator	
  and	
  employer.	
  
This	
  material	
  can	
  be	
  made	
  available	
  in	
  an	
  alternative	
  format.	
  Contact	
  the	
  department/agency	
  listed	
  above.	
  A	
  member	
  of	
  the	
  Minnesota	
  State	
  Colleges	
  and	
  Universities	
  system.
Saint Cloud, MN.

CollegeRecommendation_2015-Maria Bloch

  • 1.
            St.  Cloud  State  University  values  diversity  of  all  kinds,  including  but  not  limited  to  race,  religion  and  ethnicity  (full  statement  at   bulletin.stcloudstate.edu/ugb/generalinfo/nondiscrimination.asp). TTY:  1-­‐800-­‐627-­‐3529  SCSU  is  an  affirmative  action/equal  opportunity  educator  and  employer.   This  material  can  be  made  available  in  an  alternative  format.  Contact  the  department/agency  listed  above.  A  member  of  the  Minnesota  State  Colleges  and  Universities  system. ST. CLOUD STATE UNIVERSITY DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH 720 Fourth Avenue South St. Cloud, MN 56301-4498 tel 320.308.3061 fax 320.308.5524 www.stcloudstate.edu/english March 09, 2015 A letter of Recommendation for Ms. Maria Bloch A student of mine, Ms. Maria Bloch, has asked me to write a letter of recommendation to support her application to pursue a graduate program at your university. I do so unreservedly and with great enthusiasm for several reasons. The applicant is academically gifted and has had a strong desire and motivation to do forensic linguistics, especially forensic acoustic phonetics. I have had a tremendous pleasure advising, challenging, and guiding her in this pursuit. I have prescribed a rigorous course of study for her in preparation for the graduate work that she intends to do in forensic sciences. As you will notice from her transcripts, the applicant has taken a wide variety of courses from Forensic Chemistry to Physics, to Pre-calculus to Computational Linguistics, to Psychology. For her senior project, I’m having her study the Center of Gravity of the palatal fricative [ʃ] with the hope of discovering whether or not, and to what extent if any, the vowel context has any impact on the measurements of this segment. A secondary benefit that we wish to derive from this study is to test the Acoustic Invariance Hypothesis. There are two theoretical schools in acoustic phonetics: one that subscribes to the view that acoustic phonetic signals are unique to the individual speaker, and another that claims that given the anatomical and aerodynamic similarities in speech production, individual differences are not robust. Indeed, many leading studies of fricatives espouse the latter view. Since Ms. Bloch has a strong interest in forensic linguistics, I’ve asked her to investigate this palatal fricative from an acoustic phonetic perspective with an eye on invariance or variability. The participants in her study include three male and three female speakers from Central Minnesota. She is examining [ʃ] in eleven vowel contexts, in pre-vocalic and post-vocalic environments. Ms. Bloch has very strong analytical abilities and a genuine interest in forensic sciences. By assigning her to work on such a challenging topic, she is honing her skills as a future forensic phonetician. She is also learning the value of data triangulation, using information from biology, physics, mathematics/statistics, and computational modeling to arrive at a conclusion that may or may not be of forensic significance. Ms. Bloch is an exceptionally gifted student, one who is keenly interested in forensic linguistics. Because of this, and of the aforementioned reasons, I strongly and unreservedly recommend her to your program. I can be contacted by phone at (320)-308-3539, by fax at (320)-308-5524, or by electronic mail at enkoffi@stcloudstate.edu should you want me to provide you with additional information regarding her application. Ettien N. Koffi, Ph. D. Professor of Linguistics Saint Cloud State University, enKoffi Digitally signed by enKoffi DN: cn=enKoffi, o=SCSU, ou=English Department, email=enkoffi@stcloudstate.edu, c=US Date: 2015.03.20 09:56:39 -06'00'
  • 2.
            St.  Cloud  State  University  values  diversity  of  all  kinds,  including  but  not  limited  to  race,  religion  and  ethnicity  (full  statement  at   bulletin.stcloudstate.edu/ugb/generalinfo/nondiscrimination.asp). TTY:  1-­‐800-­‐627-­‐3529  SCSU  is  an  affirmative  action/equal  opportunity  educator  and  employer.   This  material  can  be  made  available  in  an  alternative  format.  Contact  the  department/agency  listed  above.  A  member  of  the  Minnesota  State  Colleges  and  Universities  system. Saint Cloud, MN.