Title: Academic Definitions
1Academic Definitions
- Communicative and Academic English for the EFL
Professional
2Todays Class
- (1) Discuss Academic Definitions.
- (2) Discuss Final Research Paper Project.
3Definitions
- One import task of academic writers is to define
terms. As a teacher you will constantly have to
provide definitions for your students and as a
researcher you will also have to define the terms
you use in your research paper.
4Definitions in Formal Academic Writing
- In general, there are three kinds of definitions
in academic writing - (1) Short definitions provided within sentences.
- (2) Full sentence definitions.
- (3) Extended definitions.
5Short Definitions within Sentences
- Short definitions within sentences are usually
provided - using phrases such as
- . . .known as . . .
- . . . defined as . . .
- . . . called . . .
-
- Short definitions are also given using the
following - e.g.
- , or
- i.e.
-
-
6Short Definitions within Sentences
- Here is one example sentence
- Questions where the teacher already knows the
answer, known as display questions, are rarely
asked in conversation outside of the classroom. -
-
7Short Definitions within Sentences
- Here is another example
- Repeating what students have said for the
benefits of the whole class, called teacher echo,
may be beneficial or harmful depending on when a
teacher uses it.
8Short Definitions within Sentences
- Here is another example
- Elicitation, defined as getting responses from
students, is a valuable skill that teachers
acquire over time with experience.
9Short Definitions within Sentences
- Here is another example
- Questions for which there are more than one
possible answer, or open-ended questions, are
thought to foster creativity and divergent
thinking .
10Short Definitions within Sentences
- Here is another example using an appositive
structure - Wait time, the duration of teacher pauses after
questions, is an important variable in research
on science teaching.
11Sentence Length Definitions
- Full sentence length definitions can be given
using the following constructions - (term)is defined as (definition)
- (definition) is known as (term)
12Sentence Length Definitions
- Here is one example
- Wait time is defined as the time a teacher
allows for a student to respond to a question.
13Sentence Length Definitions
- Here is another example
-
- The difference between what a learner can do
without help and what he or she can do with help
is known as the Zone of Proximal Development.
14Sentence Length Definitions
- Full sentence length definitions can also be
given using the term/category/description model - (term) is a (category) that/which (description)
- This is a very powerful and useful model for
making formal definitions. It is also useful for
making definitions in the classroom for your
students.
15Sentence Length Definitions
- Here is one example
- A polyword is a phrase that acts as a single
word.
16Sentence Length Definitions
- Here is another example
- TPR is a teaching technique in which a learners
(usually children) responds to language input
with body motions.
17Sentence Length Definitions
- Here is another example
- A collocation is a pair of words that occur
together with high frequency so that their
association seems natural whereas other
synonymous words may seem awkward.
18Extended Definitions
- Extended definitions are definitions that are
long than a single sentence and contain much
detail.
19Extended Definitions
- Here is one example
- In linguistics, a corpus (plural corpora) or text
corpus is a large and structured set of real
world texts that are usually electronically
stored and processed. They are used to do
statistical analysis and hypothesis testing,
checking occurrences or validating linguistic
rules. Corpora are often subjected to a process
known as annotation such as part-of-speech
tagging, or POS-tagging, in which information
about each word's part of speech (verb, noun,
adjective, etc.) is added to the corpus in the
form of tags.
20Competing Definitions
- In the examples above, the definitions were
presented as if they were definitions that would
be generally accepted by most interested people. - However, there are times when there is a lack of
agreement over the definition of a term. In this
case, the term may be defined differently by
different people or have different definitions
under different conditions. It may be important
to indicate that (a) a universally accepted
definition does not exist (b) you are using the
terms as defined in one specific way or that you
are adopting a particular definition.
21Competing Definitions
- Here are some examples
- For the purposes of this paper, . . . is
defined as . . . - Here we define . . . as . . .
- We have adopted (authors) definition of . . .
22Competing Definitions
- Although there is no universally accepted
definition of cultural and linguistic competency,
a useful definition adopted by the Office of
Minority Health (OMH) distinguishes between
culture, competence and the relationship between
the terms - "Cultural and linguistic competence is a set of
congruent behaviors, attitudes and policies that
come together in a system, agency or among health
professionals that enables work in cross-cultural
situations. http//www.nhchc.org/cultur
al.html
23Competing Definitions
- Applied linguistics is broadly defined here as
linguistics with an interest in social issues,
and in the service of society.
24Contrastive Definitions
- You may be asked to define two terms at once
through a contrastive definition. This can
accomplished using the following - On the other hand, . . .
- Whereas, . . .
- While, . . .
- The former . . . . The latter . . .