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Coffin, Caroline; Hewings, Ann; North, Sarah – Journal of English for Academic Purposes, 2012
Learning to argue is a key academic purpose for both first and second language students. It has been claimed that computer mediated asynchronous text-based conferencing is a useful medium for developing argumentation skills (Andriessen, Baker, & Suthers, 2003). This paper reports on two research studies which explore this claim. One study focused…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Persuasive Discourse, Role, Discourse Analysis
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Coffin, Caroline; Donohue, James P. – Journal of English for Academic Purposes, 2012
Two approaches to English for Academic Purposes (EAP) research and teaching which have arisen in recent years are systemic functional linguistics (SFL) approaches in Australia and elsewhere (e.g. Hood, 2006; Lee, 2010; Woodward-Kron, 2009) and Academic Literacies approaches in the UK and elsewhere (e.g. Lillis & Scott, 2008; Thesen &…
Descriptors: Linguistics, Discourse Analysis, Foreign Countries, Epistemology
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Coffin, Caroline; Hewings, Ann – Language and Education, 2005
The study reported on here explores the claim that computer conferencing is a valuable environment for students to rehearse academic debates and arguments which can then be drawn on in their written assignments. In order to carry out the exploration, the functional linguistic concept of ENGAGEMENT was employed. ENGAGEMENT comprises six sets of…
Descriptors: Linguistics, Computer Mediated Communication, Persuasive Discourse, Teleconferencing
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Coffin, Caroline – Written Communication, 2004
Historians generally agree that causality is central to historical writing. The fact that many school history students have difficulty handling and expressing causal relations is therefore of concern. That is, whereas historians tend to favor impersonal, abstract structures as providing suitable explanations for historical events and states of…
Descriptors: Linguistics, Historians, History Instruction, Content Area Writing
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Coffin, Caroline – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2006
This study uses the tools of functional linguistics to illuminate the writing requirements of the history curriculum in the context of Australian secondary schools. It shows how the resulting linguistic description was integrated into a sequence of teaching and learning activities through collaboration between linguists and content/pedagogic…
Descriptors: Language Research, Linguistics, Foreign Countries, Writing Skills