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Sinclair, Christine – TechTrends: Linking Research and Practice to Improve Learning, 2015
This study brings together three student comments and three theoretical constructs taken from Bakhtin's (1981) collection of essays "The Dialogic Imagination", written in the 1930s. Bakhtin's concepts of the chronotope, interanimation and the monologic provide lenses on a shifting student perspective on authoritative writing in…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Writing (Composition), Student Attitudes, Essays
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Schroeder, Rui M. – Journal of International Students, 2016
This study reports on the three-year development and validation of a new assessment tool--the Academic Spoken English Strategies Survey (ASESS). The questionnaire is the first of its kind to assess the listening and speaking strategy use of non-native English speaking (NNES) graduate students. A combination of sources was used to develop the…
Descriptors: Student Surveys, Graduate Students, English (Second Language), Academic Discourse
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Adika, Gordon S. K. – Practice and Theory in Systems of Education, 2015
Drawing from a social constructionist perspective to written scholarly communication, this paper argues that training in academic writing for students in higher education especially in second language contexts should go beyond emphasis on grammatical correctness and paragraphing strategies, and also focus on the rhetorical character of academic…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Credibility, Accountability, Academic Discourse
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Sanjaya, I. Nyoman Suka; Sitawati, Anak Agung Raka; Suciani, Ni Ketut – TEFLIN Journal: A publication on the teaching and learning of English, 2015
The study examines whether English and Indonesian research articles written by their respective native speaker scholars are significantly different from each other in terms of the number of hedges used. Hedges are rhetorical features (e.g. "may", "perhaps", "suggest") used to withhold complete commitment to the…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Computational Linguistics, English (Second Language), Second Language Learning
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Afros, Elena; Schryer, Catherine F. – English for Specific Purposes, 2009
It is now widely recognized that self-promotion in academic discourse varies across disciplines. Whereas most analysts focus on publicization techniques in natural and social sciences, the humanities have received much less attention. This article investigates the strategies associated with promotional (meta)discourse in the humanities. In…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Rhetoric, Humanities, Writing Instruction
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Drew, Julie; Lyons, William; Svehla, Lance – SUNY Press, 2010
"Sound-Bite Saboteurs" examines the emergence of a multifaceted, multimedia culture that encourages the use of sound bites to silence one's opponents at the expense of democratic deliberation and debate. No simple partisan phenomenon or mere attempt to "spin" a particular issue, sound-bite sabotage is, the authors argue, a…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Citizenship, Democracy, Leadership
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Brammer, Charlotte; Amare, Nicole; Campbell, Kim Sydow – Across the Disciplines, 2008
To help writing faculty learn the language of discourse communities across campus, we conducted faculty interviews as a first attempt to describe knowledge about disciplinary cultures, specifically with regard to writing. Based on the data received from the interviews about disciplinary definitions and characteristics of good writing and how…
Descriptors: Interviews, Culture Conflict, Intellectual Disciplines, Stereotypes
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Koutsantoni, Dimitra – Journal of English for Academic Purposes, 2004
Acceptance of claims made in scientific research articles depends on the "stance" authors take and their resources for "appraisal" (Martin and White, http://www.grammatics.com/appraisal). "Stance" has been defined as "the ways authors project themselves into their texts to communicate their relationship to subject matter and the readers",…
Descriptors: Scientific Research, Attitudes, Engineering, English for Academic Purposes
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Camiciottoli, Belinda Crawford – Journal of English for Academic Purposes, 2004
Interactive discourse structuring is used to guide listeners through on-going speech and has been shown to have a positive effect on lecture comprehension, particularly in L2 settings. As mobility increases in the academic world, there are more opportunities for lecture events characterized not only by linguistic/cultural diversity, but also by…
Descriptors: Linguistics, Audiences, Cultural Pluralism, Lecture Method