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Academic Writing Ideas in Flux

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Title: Academic Writing Ideas in Flux


1
Academic Writing Ideas in Flux
  • Diane Schmitt
  • Nottingham Trent University

2
Student Voices
  • I can read all of the words, but I dont
    understand the sentence.
  • I wrote every thought I had in everyday language,
    because I havent had any academic vocabulary at
    that stage.
  • When I heard about the plagiarism software, I
    freaked out. How do I express the specialized
    language? I spent 12 hours a day for two weeks
    and I got a 7 match.

3
The Matthew Effect
  • Children with reading problems read less than
    proficient readers.
  • Children with reading problems read less
    challenging texts than proficient readers
  • The result is that children with reading problems
    read even less and even less challenging
    materials.
  • The gap between proficient and less proficient
    readers grows wider and wider.
  • (Stahl, 2003)

4
Vocabulary, the Matthew Effect and International
Students
  • Understanding the gist is not enough to fully
    engage in PG classes.
  • Students may be forced to rely on background
    knowledge and familiar topics to complete their
    PG assignments instead of broadening their
    knowledge.
  • Lack of automaticity hinders the activation of
    known vocabulary in other modalities.
  • Reading speed bumps up against library loan
    periods.
  • Slow reading speed also leads to truncated
    reading.

5
More on Vocabulary, the Matthew Effect and
International Students
  • Lack of vocabulary leads to difficulty in
    expressing complex ideas
  • Vocabulary gain and loss when vocabulary is not
    consolidated there is little or no overall
    growth.
  • Danger of inadvertent plagiarism.
  • Overall missed opportunities and scaled back
    goals.
  • (based on Banerjee, 2003)

6
  • Writing promotes the truest method of
    learning.
  • (Sternglass, 1997 293)
  • Does it really?

7
Where is the thinking in the field for second
language writers?
  • View 1
  • Linda Lonon Blanton
  • Discourse, Artifacts, and the Ozarks
  • Understanding Academic Literacy
  • Journal of Second Language Writing, 1994
  • View 2
  • Ilona Leki
  • Undergraduates in a Second Language
  • Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, 2007

8
Where is the thinking in the field for second
language writers?
  • View 1 - Linda Lonon Blanton
  • Reading and writing are integrated.
  • Language is medium in which student, teachers and
    texts interact.
  • Class work is activity- oriented and
    collaboratgive
  • Language use is necessitated by the need to
    complete the task at hand.
  • Tasks call for interacting with texts
  • Texts do not constitute the sole authority on any
    subject.
  • Students experience is called for and valued in
    text interaction.
  • Tasks provided opportunities for students to
    claim authority as they balance individual
    responses with those of audience.
  • Language occurs in the context of meaningful
    communication.
  • The teacher fosters the acquisition of literate
    behaviours.

9
Where is the thinking in the field for second
language writers?
  • View 2 - Ilona Leki
  • Writing researchers exaggerate the role of
    writing in the lives of L2 undergraduates and in
    their intellectual and academic development.
  • Students took away from L2 writing classes some
    understanding of grammar, organizing essays,
    responding to essay exams, increased fluency,
    some vocabulary and transition words.
  • Knowledge of discourse community
  • Subject matter
  • Genre knowledge
  • Rhetorical knowledge
  • Writing Process
  • Developing socio-academic relationships peers,
    partners, professors and in some cases, writing
    centres.

10
Writing is privileged in the academy
  • To the extent that the academic community is a
    community, it is a literate community, manifested
    not so much at conferences as in bibliographies
    and libraries, a community whose members know one
    another better as writers than as speakers.
  • (Brodkey, 1987)

11
A Quiz
  • The university as experienced by the student is
  • a. the same as the academy
  • b. different from the academy
  • c. depends on the discipline
  • d. depends on the level of study
  • e. other

12
Student Writers - Visible or Occluded?
  • the academic community is a community,
    manifested in bibliographies and libraries
  • a community whose members know one another better
    as writers than as speakers.
  • (Brodkey, 1987)

13
Access Lave and Wenger, 1991
  • Learning occurs as a result of legitimate
    peripheral participation in a community.
  • Participation requires access to
  • the full range of activities needed to learn how
    to write for university
  • tools that can be used jointly for learning
  • practice/doing rather than instruction about

14
Blanton asks?
  • Does the term academic community carry the
    connotation held by many that communities are
    warm and cohesive places?

15
University of Essex
  • Plagiarism is a serious academic offence but
    more often than not it results from
    misunderstanding rather than a deliberate
    intention to cheat.  Many students simply do not
    understand what plagiarism is exactly. 
  • Although confusion is understandable
    especially at the beginning of your study,
    ignorance will not be accepted as an excuse or as
    a defence against an accusation of plagiarism.  
    You must therefore make sure that you understand
    what plagiarism is and how you can avoid it.   

16
University of Waikato
  • What happens if you don't follow this advice?
    When one of your teachers thinks that one of your
    assignments has problems with acknowledgement and
    referencing, he or she has to decide whether to
    treat it as a mistake or as misconduct i.e.
    plagiarism. If they decide it is a mistake they
    are likely to explain the mistake to you, so you
    don't make it again, and they will give the
    assignment a mark that reflects, among other
    things, the inappropriate acknowledgement and
    referencing. You are expected to learn quickly
    how to acknowledge correctly by using the
    appropriate style of referencing, and you will be
    told all about this in your first classes and in
    handouts you will receive, so don't expect your
    teachers to tolerate mistakes for very long!

17
Affinity Space? (Gee, 2003)
  • People come, take what they need and go
  • This is interaction, but is it socialization in
    the discourse community sense of discourse as a
    social activity?

18
Why do we ask students to write in university?
  1. to foster community
  2. to enhance learning
  3. because we want to know what students think about
    the topics raised in our classes
  4. to replicate activity in the real world
  5. to police student activity
  6. because we havent got enough to do
  7. some combination of the above
  8. other

19
Change in the academy?
  • The more diverse backgrounds and experiences of
    those participating in the community of writers
    connected to the academy, the faster academic
    discourse will change, and it is likely to become
    far more interesting than it is now.
  • (Blanton, 19945)

20
Academic Genres
  • Genres embody strategies for responding
    effectively to particular situations. Genres
    develop as situations change.
  • How do school or university-based genres develop?
    Who develops them?

21
International Students
English speaking community
University community
22
Typical International Students
  • Enter with IELTS score of 6.0 or 6.5
  • Reading speed of around 200 wpm
  • Average vocabulary size of around 4000 words
  • Little previous experience of reading long texts
    in English
  • Little previous experience of writing long texts
    in English

23
Reading and Writing Like a University Student
  • Writing to Learn?
  • Lekis students clearly differentiated between
    actual text production and the activities that
    constituted preparation for writing.
  • Few writing experiences promoted student
    intellectual or disciplinary growth in any way
    particular to writing itself.

24
Transfer of Skills?
  • A students literacy skills undoubtedly transfer
    to other disciplines, it is behaviours and not
    skills that make the critical difference for
    students academic success. (Blanton, 19948)
  • Students who did poorly on general education
    courses did well in discipline courses and vice
    versa.
  • Students noted that it was easier to write more,
    more quickly.
  • Disciplinary writing often came with very clear
    instructions of what to write and how to write it.

25
What was most valuable?
  • Successful socio-academic relationships
  • Effective peer group work
  • Study groups
  • Being part of a cohort
  • Feedback and discussion about writing from the
    writing centre and professors

26
So what am I muddled about?
  • English for Academic Purposes courses emphasize
    writing over all other language skills.
  • EAP courses tend to teach English for General
    Academic Purposes
  • Advocates of situated learning argue that
    disciplinary writing needs to taught within the
    context of the discipline.
  • Fragile knowledge students are asked to write
    too early in relation to content knowledge, and
    students dont write enough to develop as writers.

27
So what am I muddled about?
  • University policies and practices can get in the
    way of helping students develop.
  • Relationship between reading and lectures and
    writing.
  • Access to feedback (editors and proofreaders).
  • Use of text matching software.
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