111 research outputs found
Reworking research: interactions in academic articles and blogs
The blog is an increasingly familiar newcomer to the panoply of academic genres, offering researchers the opportunity to disseminate their work to new and wider audiences of experts and interested lay people. This digital medium, however, also brings challenges to writers in the form of a relatively unpredictable readership and the potential for immediate, public and potentially hostile criticism. To understand how academics in the social sciences respond to this novel rhetorical situation, we explore how they discoursally recontextualise in blogs the scientific information they have recently published in journal articles. Based on two corpora of 30 blog posts and 30 journal articles with the same authors and topics, we examine the ways researchers carefully reconstruct a different writer persona and relationship with their readers using stance and engagement (Hyland, 2005). In addition to supporting the view that the academic blog is a hybrid genre situated between academic and journalistic writing, we show how writersâ rhetorical choices help define different rhetorical contexts
Accommodating to English-medium instruction in teacher education in Finland
This study analyses teacher educatorsâ and student teachersâ perceptions of teaching and learning situations in an international English as a lingua franca (ELF) context in an English-medium instruction (EMI) teacher education programme in Finland. The analysis of semi-structured interviews revealed that the participants perceived a partial reversal of traditional teacher and student roles; students assisted voluntarily and teaching became reciprocal. Some teachers reflected on having used typical strategies in ELF context such as code-switching to further communication and engage students. However, teachersâ lack of fluency was sometimes considered causing frustration among students and affected negatively their feeling of being professional teacher educators. Nevertheless, by increasing more learner-led activities, ELF can positively affect teacher education pedagogy.Peer reviewe
Paving the way for research findings: writers' rhetorical choices in education and applied linguistics
Notwithstanding the existence of previous investigations into how research results are presented in different academic disciplines, fewer studies have looked into how authors pave the way for their results, the interdisciplinary differences in âresult pavementsâ, and the interconnections between their communicative functions and linguistic choices. Using the techniques of genre analysis, I have analyzed two corpora of research reports in applied linguistics and education in order to identify the possible ways in which experienced writers schematically pave the way for their findings. Using evidence based on authentic research articles, this study demonstrates how writers set the stage for their research results by (i) demonstrating their control of the structure and flow of result-related information, (ii) connecting past research with a current finding while furnishing pertinent background elements that lead the readership progressively to specific findings, (iii) regenerating readersâ interest in their initial research purposes, and (iv) deploying locatives to embed results in a âspace-saving strategyâ aimed at presenting an abridged Results section. I have also analyzed interdisciplinary differences in the frequencies of these rhetorical steps and the range of intricate linguistic mechanisms employed by authors as communicative resources in each step to establish a smooth rhetorical transition that sets the stage for their research results
Metatalk in American academic talk: The cases of "point" and "thing"
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/88138/1/swales-metatalk_american_academic.pd
Strategic use and perceptions of English as a Lingua Franca
English as a Lingua Franca is today a thriving and vibrant field of research which has sparkedconsiderable debate but also a wealth of studies in various directions. This paper builds on recentresearch in this field and focuses on two areas of investigation, namely pragmatic strategies andperceptions of ELF, while placing them within the larger theoretical framework of ELF studies
Language Contact and the Future of EnglishIanMacKenzie. Abingdon, UK: Routledge, 2018. Pp. ix + 187.
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