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Development of academic writing by international students

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Title: Development of academic writing by international students


1
Students literacy practices insights on
academic writing development
Weronika Górska King's College London Academic
Literacies Seminar QUEEN MARY 12 June 2009
2
Session content
  • Background of the study
  • Research aim
  • Conceptual framework
  • Methodology
  • Data presentation and analysis
  • Emerging themes and issues
  • Directions for further research

3
What is there for teachers?
  • Course books for academic writing
  • Text structure
  • Sentence structure
  • Academic vocabulary
  • Punctuation
  • Referencing systems
  • General readings and critical thinking exercises
  • Examples of texts from different disciplines
  • Writing as technology (Leki, 2000)

4
Seen by the public eye
Faculty members It is interesting how our
students are able to communicate fluently when
they speak, but how poor ability in writing they
have. Writing courses should be the most
difficult ones to pass. Writing classes provide
the basis for other courses, and content courses
are not the place to teach writing Or maybe ?
But we will not do it. Press publications The
previous year's 2002/03 report Annual Course
Monitoring Report had also warned of falling
standards. One staff member on the German honours
course complained that students' ability in
written language had "declined" in recent years,
while another official raised the "diminishing
general knowledge base" of undergraduates.
Sunday Herald, 19.09.2005

5
International students-data from UKCISA
  • All non-UK domicile in HE  in 2007/2008
  • Postgraduate research 39,860
    43
  • Postgraduate taught 115,805
    42
  • Postgraduate other 11,825
  • First degree 143,570
    11
  • Other undergraduate 30,735
  • Total non-UK 341,795
  • The total number of non-UK students for
  • 2005/06 was 307,040
  • 2006/07 was 325,985
  • 2007/08 was 341,790 the 2007/08 represent a
    5 on the previous year

6
Research aim
  • To explore the situation of international
    undergraduate students and recognize what assists
    student learning of academic writing and where
    the learning actually takes place
  • To investigate change from writing in writing
    classes to writing in content classes and
    cultural processes involved in that change

7
Approaches to academic writing
  • Focus on text
  • College composition
  • Theories from literary and rhetorical studies,
    cultural studies
  • WAD/WID
  • Sociocultural theories, activity theories and
    communities of practice
  • EAP/ESP, Academic Socialization
  • Applied linguistics, theories of genre and
    discourse
  • Genre pedagogies
  • Genre theory, systemic functional linguistics
  • Study skills
  • Focus on practices
  • Academic literacies (ACLITS)
  • New Literacy Studies, critical discourse studies,
    the sociology of knowledge
  • Ideological model of literacy where the focus is
    on acknowledging the socioculturally embedded
    nature of literacy practices and the associated
    power differentials in any literacy related
    activity
  • (Lillis Scott, 2007)

8
Conceptual framework
  • Academic Literacies
  • requirement to switch writing styles and genres
  • contested nature of academic knowledge
  • epistemological nature of writing
  • power relations, identity
  • (Lea Street, 1998)
  • Culture - ? - culture more as an action rather
    than only a static description of certain rules
    or realities
  • (Roberts et al, 2001)
  • Critical stance towards current models of writing
    support provision (Lillis, 2006)

9
Research questions
How do international students learn academic
writing in English?
1.
Do students find writing courses a useful and
sufficient support in learning how to write at an
English medium university?
2.
What assists students learning to write and in
what spaces does their learning take place?
How is learning to write viewed from the
perspectives of both international students and
faculty members?
3.
What do students experience when entering an
English writing academic culture and how does
their participation in that culture affect their
writing development?
4.
10
Methodology
  • Ethnographic-type approach, facilitating
    discussion around writing classes in relation to
    writing in content based courses
  • Insider perspective, making the familiar strange
  • Ethnography is the study of people in naturally
    occurring settings or fields by methods of data
    collection which capture their social meanings
    and ordinary activities, involving the researcher
    participating directly in the setting, if not
    also the activities, in order to collect data in
    a systematic manner but without meaning being
    imposed on them externally

  • (Brewer, 2000)

11
Research field
  • a university in central London with a substantial
    number of international students

change
  • Writing Classes
  • Composition and Rhetoric
  • Different types of argumentation
  • Sentence Structure
  • Content Courses
  • Fashion Marketing,
  • International Business
  • Research reports
  • Evaluation reports
  • Reflective evaluation

12
Data collection
  • Research sample
  • 5 international undergraduate students
    representing various European and Asian countries
  • 5 lecturers teaching content based courses, both
    of native and non native English background
  • Interview areas
  • Experience / Training
  • Types of assignments
  • Working with texts
  • Feedback students written comments on their
    own texts
  • Writing courses/Content courses

13
Change writing classes /
content courses Data from
interviews with students
  • Lisa
  • We dont need to follow like causal,
    evaluation...just the main structure
    introduction, body, conclusions. I just write
    in different paragraphs, explain what I was
    talking about. And thats fine too.
  • Writing for Business and Computers I think it
    differs.
  • I also use Internet to translate,...dictionaries..
    .and its good when a friend or somebody looks at
    your paper
  • Nicole
  • Writing for my other classes is different it's
    more general. I wrote it just today, so I don't
    know. I hope it's ok.
  • When we were doing presentations, I have realized
    how writing differs among disciplines and even
    within a discipline, how differently ideas are
    expressed.
  • When I lived here three years ago, I used to read
    a lot, and yea, reading helps, so I have to read
    a lot.

14
Change writing classes /
content courses Data from
interviews with lecturers
  • Jenny
  • I dont want to be teaching them an English
    class. Thats not my job. I need to teach them
    their class content wise it has to deal with the
    class. Anything English related I send them to
    the Learning Centre.
  • Clark
  • I give them examples. But writing is an issue.
    They should go to some foundation programme for
    one or two years, learn how to write and then
    come to other courses.

15
Change cultural aspects Data from
interviews with students
  • Lisa
  • My native language is a completely different
    language. When I read my sentences, sometimes it
    looks like I am saying it in my native
    language.
  • In my country we dont write for other subjects,
    we just write about literature. It surprised me a
    lot when I came to England.
  • Nicole
  • I know how to say it in English as well, but I
    know a better way to say it in my native
    language. Its more like a childish way if you
    see what I mean. I know how to say it in English
    in very basic way sometimes I feel like I am
    five years backwards when I am writing in English
    to me when I read it, it is like someone with
    less education than I have or would have written.
  • I did one year of undergraduate studies in my
    country, and we didnt write much. One essay, I
    think, with no specific instructions. So we do
    not really write.

16
Change cultural aspects
Data from interviews with lecturers
  • Jenny
  • I dont think that language has anything to do
    with writing skills, you know the difference in
    language. Obviously they dont learn how to speak
    in order to write, but it doesnt mean that
    writing is so differentWhat is important here is
    motivationAnd I always tell them make sure you
    go to the Learning Centre.
  • Clark
  • No, it is not about culture, it is about
    training. Because those who have learnt English
    like Africans and Americans, their English is a
    bit better. You see that they have the command.
    But those who come from countries like Turkey or
    Middle East they havent had training.

17
Change feedback on students texts
  • Students focus
  • Sentence structure
  • Vocabulary
  • Text structure (introduction, conclusions)
  • Facultys focus
  • Understanding of disciplinary knowledge
  • Meaning-making
  • Appropriate voice and stance
  • Coherent and logical text structure
  • Surface level of language

Study skills
ACLITS understanding
18
Emerging themes and issues
  • Writing courses prove to be a useful but at the
    same time insufficient support in learning how to
    write at university.
  • The perspective on learning to write represented
    by the faculty seems to contradict their own
    expectations of students writing
  • Faculty members direct students towards study
    skills but in practice they expect ACLITS
    understanding.
  • Students seem to be disempowered as a result of
    the institutional
  • writing support received at university
  • Students appear to come with ACLITS
    understanding, but they are directed towards
    study skills.
  • Students compensate by engaging in various
    outside classroom literacy practices that help
    them meet writing conventions of their
    disciplines and in which they attempt to use
    culture as an active resource.
  • Alternative pedagogic practices and institutional
    spaces for teaching/learning writing (dialogues
    of participation, Lillis 2006).

19
Directions for further research
  • What students literacy practices assist their
    learning to write at university?
  • Can insights from students own literacy practices
    assist pedagogy design?
  • How to use ethnography to investigate students
    literacy practices and outside classroom spaces
    where these practices take place?

20
Thank you
Weronika Górska
weronika.gorska_at_kcl.ac.uk
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