This lecture provides an overview and introduction to the Academic Writing course. It discusses the structure and expectations of the course, including aims, lectures, tutorials, assignments, assessment criteria, and deadlines. It also introduces the course book and discusses key concepts in academic writing, such as the writing process, text structure, purpose and audience, plagiarism, and characteristics of formal versus informal writing. Resources for developing academic vocabulary are also presented.
3. Structure of this lecture
• Introduction to the course Academic
Writing
• Introduction of the coursebook
• Discussion of Introduction and Chapter 1
• Introduction of the Blackboard-site
Course Outline
Assessment of your essay
Toolbox
4. Aims of this Lecture
• Structure of the course
• What is expected of you
• Overview of content
5. About the course
• 3 ECTS
• 4 plenary lectures, in weeks 5-8 (on 8,15,
29 October and 5 November)
• 8 tutorials in small groups, in weeks 5-12
6. Course aims
• Write academic texts.
• Use correct reference, grammar and style.
• Use dictionaries and thesauruses (with the help
of an electronic toolbox in Blackboard).
• Use correct collocations, punctuation and
register.
• Write well-structured paragraphs.
• Write well-structured introductions, discussions
and conclusions.
• Express yourself in a cohesive, coherent and
logical manner (signposting).
• Be aware of the dangers of plagiarism and will
do some thorough training to avoid this issue.
7. Lectures
- Ratio: To go over basic principles of
Academic Writing, which all students have
to be familiar with at the end of the course
8. Tutorials
- Homework: to be completed BEFORE the
tutorial!
- Where do I find the homework?
Blackboard
9. Assignment
1 paper, 2 courses
Link between Introduction to the Areas and
Academic English
10. Deadlines
• Introduction to Area Studies: 23
November, at 15.59, upload via Safe
Assign.
• Academic Writing: three paragraphs in
week of 5 November (not mandatory, but
highly recommendable).
• 17 December at 15.59, one hard copy in
a box provided (we will tell you where).
12. Marking
• Either pass of fail
• Pass: a CEFR level of B2.2 (B2+) or
higher
• If insufficient: resit in June
13. Style sheet
Style Sheet posted on Blackboard:
• Font
• Line spacing
• Style of referencing (MLA)
• Name, student number, number of words,
name of tutor
15. Course Book
- Academic writing in English. A process-based
approach, Janene van Loon, Arnoud
Thüss, Nicole Schmidt and Kevin Haines,
Coutinho. ISBN 978 90 469 0256 I
16. Audience: who do you write for?
- Normally: scholars in your field
- In this course: your peers and your tutor
- The tutorials provide you with an
audience for your writing so it is
absolutely essential that you do the
writing tasks before you come to class
- You need to give feedback to other
students’ writing, and be open to
feedback from others
Academic Language Centre
17. Advantages of peer review:
- Learners often find it easier to notice
flaws in other people’s writing than in their
own
- Reading and analysing somebody else’s
text will increase your own critical thinking
skills
- Peer review increases your awareness of
different aspects of your own writing
Academic Language Centre
18. 5 steps to effective peer feedback:
1. First draft (homework task)
2. Give feedback on each other’s writing,
and discuss
3. Revise your draft
4. Rate the helpfulness of the feedback
you were given
5. Give feedback on revised draft
Academic Language Centre
20. Academic Writing is a complex task:
As a student you need to learn two
processes simultaneously:
1.Writing is a process of drafting, writing,
and revising
2.Academic writing requires the use of a
formal register.
Academic Language Centre
21. Two Models for Writing:
1. Writing as a linear process of pre-writing,
drafting, revising, fine-tuning, editing and
post-writing
2. Writing as a recursive process of
exploring, structuring, polishing and
publishing, incubating and unloading
Do task 4b, p. 25
Academic Language Centre
22. Organisation of an academic paper:
- Introduction, with a thesis statement,
problem statement, research question or
hypothesis
- Main body, with arguments arranged in a
logical order
- Conclusion, which addresses the
statement presented in the introduction
- Do task 7, p. 29
Academic Language Centre
23. Purpose and audience in Academic
Writing (1):
- Expository essay: aims to explain a (new)
body of knowledge to the reader, using
facts and statistics in a logical order, with
examples
Do task 10, p. 31
- Argumentative essay: has a debatable
topic, presents arguments for and
against, takes a clear position
Do task 14, p. 37
Academic Language Centre
24. Purpose and audience in Academic
Writing (2):
- Scientific article: describes the results of
the writer’s own research, critically
reviews someone else’s research, or
develops new theories on the basis of
other people’s research.
- Its organisation is based on the IMRD
model: Introduction, Methodology,
Research and Discussion
Academic Language Centre
25. Avoiding plagiarism
Definition:
Plagiarism is a form of intellectual
dishonesty or theft. When a person
plagiarises he or she “steals” someone
else’s words or ideas by passing them off
as their own.
Academic Language Centre
26. That was plagiarism!
The sentence on the previous slide was
found in someone else’s text and not
acknowledged as such. It was taken from:
www.services.unimelb.edu.au/llsu
Academic Language Centre
27. Purpose and audience in Academic
Writing (3):
- Investigative Business Reports present
information and recommendation in report
format (using headings).
Academic Language Centre
28. Characteristics of informal
writing
- Short, simple sentences
- Phrasal verbs (to carry out), colloquial and
slang expressions
- Simple linking words (and, or, so, but)
- Informal punctuation: !, ?,
- Contractions used (it’s, doesn’t)
- Active voice (people say)
- Personal tone, use of 1st person (I think)
Academic Language Centre
29. Characteristics of informal
writing
- May not be clearly or logically organised
(Oh, by the way, I forgot to mention)
- Use of abbreviations (asap, fyi, etc.)
Academic Language Centre
30. Characteristics of formal writing
- Long, complex sentences (use relative
clauses, embedded sentences, inversion)
- One-word verbs of Greek or Latin origin
(to conduct)
- More sophisticated use of linking words
and phrases (in addition to, alternatively, as
a result, however, etc.)
- Formal punctuation (e.g. including semi-
colons)
Academic Language Centre
31. Characteristics of formal writing
- Full forms (does not, it is, etc.)
- Passive voice (it is said)
- Impersonal tone (in my opinion)
- Clear organisation sign-posted by linking
words; rephrasing of vocabulary items
(use of synonyms / antonyms); clear
referencing (this phenomenon, one of the
reasons)
- Words written out in full (as soon as possible,
for your information)
Academic Language Centre
32. British or American English?
The need to be consistent
British English: American English:
- Differences in - fall, resumé
vocabulary (autumn,
curriculum vitae)
- Differences is spelling - Program, center, color,
(programme, centre, realize
colour, realise, etc.)
Academic Language Centre
33. Resources supporting academic
vocabulary
- www.academicvocabularyexercises.com
- Academic Word List (AWL)
- Lextutor
- Phrasebank
cf. p. 228
Apps:
Advanced Learners’ Dictionary (Audio)
Chambers’ Thesaurus
Academic Language Centre
34. The Blackboard site
The Blackboard site:
[1213]Academic English for International Studies
5181VACEN2-1213FGW
Welcome to this first lecture for Academic Writing, the second part of your Academic English course, the first being the Presentation component. My name is Philomena Dol, I am the coordinator and the head of the English section at the Academic Language Centre. I will deliver the four lectures included in this course. First a few practical points: next sheet
Introduce self:
Self-evident, go over
At the end of this lecture it should be clear to you how this course is structured, and what is expected of you. It should be clear what the general content of this course is going to be NB: I have heard here and there from course tutors that some of you are really worried about this course. Those of you who have had some formal training in essay writing probably have a failry good idea of what this course is going to be about. Ask by a show of hands how many students have been trained in an Anglo-Saxon environment (UK, US, Australia etc.) / Ask how many have completed an International Baccalaureate Programme? / and how many have completed a Dutch or other European Secondary School Programme. This often does not include formal training in essay writing. For those of you who are relatively inexperienced: this course is your chance to learn how to do this: take it seriously, and you will benefit from it for the rest of your academic career. Speak for myself: I was trained in an American system, and completed an International baccalaureate Programme, so I was pretty well-trained in essay writing, and indeed, sailed through my english studies without problems, completed a PhD thesis (450 pages) in 5 years, then plodded through an MA degree programme in Law with lots of essay-writing without too much trouble (I have yet to complete my MA-thesis though), and indeed, completed a However, when I was first asked to teach an Academic Writin course I couldn’t help thinking: I wish I had had something like this at the beginning of my studies. I felt it would have been extremely useful, and it would have saved me lots of time. So, even for Native Speakers, don’t take the the English bit
This course is worth 3 ECTS, which amounts to 84 hours of work. Together with your Presentations course, which was 2 ECTS, this works out to be 5 ECTS of Academic English. 4 pleanary lectures, name dates, not on 22 October as that is your study-week, no tutorials either. The tutorials start this week, there are 8 of them. Attendance is mandatory. Tutorials also start this week, there are 8 of them. So while the lectures finish in week 8, the tutorials will go on until week 12 of the semester. Groups are the same as the Presenting groups, tutors are also the same, apart from a few. I will deliver the 4 lectures Note that attendance at tutorials is mandatory!
Write academic texts : for an academic audience Use correct reference, grammar and style : referencing we use is the MLA system (Modern Language Association). Common for Humanities. We ask you to use this system for all your written work within the International Studies Programme . There are other systems: for instance, APA (American Psychology Association), used for Social Sciences, Education and Business); Chicago (Turabian), used in many fields. Use dictionaries and thesauruses : Show hands: how many of you know what a thesuarus is? Do you know how to use it? I will show you some sources later in the lecture when we go through the BB site. Use correct collocations, punctuation and register : punctuation , for example, you know (use of full stops, comma’s colons etc. Collocations have to do with groups of words that naturally go together in a language: for example you take notes , you don’t make notes . Wrong combination. English has many of these, and they are also easy to get wrong, especially if you are not a native speaker. Even non-native speakers who are very proficient still get these wrong. You wil be made aware of collocations, and learn to work with them and where to look them up. Register has to do with adapting language to the occasion: the language I use now is different from what I would use with a six-year old child. When writing a letter to my best friend, I will use a different type of language than when I write an academic article. These are examples, and will be discussed in the lectures and in the tutorials. The goal is to make you more aware of the structure and vocabulary of english (and indeed language in general), and to learn to apply these concepts when using english. This will expand your knowledge of English, and will make you a more proficinet language user. NB: This also applies for Native Speakers (show hands). Write well-structured paragraphs : e.g. each paragraph presents one idea, one step in your argument; Write well-structured introductions, discussions and conclusions : a well-formed introduction includes a thesis statement: what you are writing about. This statement should return in a conclusion. Also, your conclusion should not contain any new ideas or new arguments. Especially if you are writing a larger paper, students sometimes find this difficult. This has to do with planning, which we will go into in detail during this course. Express yourself in a cohesive, coherent and logical manner (signposting ): take your reader by the hand: e.g. use for example when you present an example; use however , when you present an opposing point of view; and use moreover when you present another argument in favour of what you are arguing. Be aware of the dangers of plagiarism and will do some thorough training to avoid this issue : we’ll go into this!
Academic Writing is a practical skill: You cannot learn to write by listening to someone talking about writing. So why these lectures? Because there is some basic knowledge pertaining to, for example, register, punctuation, plagiarism, struturing a paper etc. That all students have to become familiar with. This knowledge is delivered during the lectures. Armed with this knowledge, students then come to the tutorials to practice.
Please make sure you do your homework BEFORE the tutorial. If you do not do your homework, you cannot attend the tutorial in a meaningful way. The assignments you do for homework will be used during the tutorial. An important note: Shuold you inadvertently not have completed your homework, then please do come to the tutorials! You will miss even more if you do not attend. Your tutors will not be upset with you (maybe mildly is you miss out on doing homework more than once....) Homework is assigned every week, check your course outline for homework. Homework is on the BB site (we’ll look at it during the second half of the lecture), show them where they can find the course outline. This course outline is your lifeline: it tells you everything you need to know. We will go over BB at the end of the lecture
You will write a paper of no more than 2,200 words for your course “ Introduction to the Areas ” in which you argue, in an expository essay, why you picked the area that you wish to focuson during the remainder of your Bachelor’s Degree Programme. You will hand in this paper on 23 November for your course “ Introduction to the Areas ”. Your tutors in that course will mark your paper on the basis of content. This paper will be regarded as a draft by us for this course. We will help you to improve the language and stylistic aspects of your first paper using the skills you learn during this course. We will also look at format (referencing). At the end of the course you hand in your rewritten, revised paper We will assess it using language criteria. You hand in your paper for Academic English on 17 December. Before that, in the week of 5 November, you are asked to hand in your introduction, your conclusion and one paragraph, of your choice, during your tutorials, to your tutor. They will give you feedback on these within two weeks. During the course yuo will also peer-review each other’s work (like in the Presentation course). You will get maximum mileage out of one paper, which should be good news
Recap this and tell them it will also be announced on BB. Why a hard copy? See if questions.
Vocabulary range : Basically, your use of vocabulary, formal language, your range refers to how many words you use Accuracy : Do you use your words accurately, do you use your grammar accurately, can you use complex sentences. Coherence : how do you organise your text, what types of connectors do you use (and, or, despite, furthermore, but also words I mentined earlier, such as however, moreover etc). How coherent is your text in the end, is it jumpy, does the reader have to make an effort to understand the link between two points, or do you use connectors to guide the reader through the text? Argument : Can you develop your argument systematically, using detailed supporting evidence. Can you develop an argument with various point of view. Can you pick out relevant issues and leave irrelevant ones, and specifically, how do you signal this in your use of language? Orthographic control : spelling, layout, consistent paragraphing, correct use of comma’s, full stops etc (punctuation). These come from the Common European Framework of Reference, which we will go into later (on BB). Incidentally, if you attend the lectures and tutorials, it should be maneageable to fulfill these criteria up to the expected level. What is that level? Next sheet
Level is needed to successfully complete this course of studies in English. About the CEFR (Common European Framework: more to follow later, in the second half of the lecture, when we will have a look at the BB site). By the time you reach your BA thesis, should be C1, normally this is manageable. If you do not reach this level yet, don’t despair: an additional course (English for Academic Purposes), but also self study should suffice. Mind you, students themselves are responsible for reaching this. level: if not up to scratch, should follow a course. The resit: in June, three hours to write an academic essay on a topic which will be handed to you then.
Wil be posted this on BB, we will have a look a this later. Important you stick to this, it makes marking easier for us.
We will now move on to the actual reason for being here, namely the study of academic writing.
Why this book: Written by Academic Language department at University of Gronmingen. Taught courses to Bachelor’s degree Students for years, and relaised that there was not really a good book available for non-native speakers of English who needed to learn how to write. This book provides for this niche in the market. Note: Some of you are native speaker of English: you may not find all of the language exercises useful, but wou will still benefit from the content of this book regarding style, structure, conventions etc. I have taught academic writing to mixed gropups (native and non-native, and many native speakers have come up to me stating that they found the courses useful, even the ‘languagy’ aspects of it, for instance the distinction between formal and informal language.
Just by a show of hands, ask the students the following questions: Who likes writing? Probably very few of them. Who writes letters by hand? – probably fewer still Who agrees with the following statement? 30 years ago, students did a lot more writing than we do nowadays – the majority will probably think that this is true. However, today’s students actually write quite a lot, only they don’t think of it as such. They are on Twitter, What’s App, and what have you, almost all their waking hours and do a lot of writing / typing – all of which is (highly) informal. So ask the question again: Who likes writing? Again by a show of hands, ask the students: Who writes mostly in English? – a minority probably, depending on the students’ nationality So as learners you have a double task: You need to learn to write in a formal, academic way You need to learn to do this in English That’s why we offer this course.
Students often see writing as a pproduct: they write one piece and consider tha tto be the final product. They may run a grammar and spelling check on a pc, but that is it. What students are usually familiar with is informal, spoken English. In the Netherlands, the distinction between formal and informal English is often not taught explicitly More on this later. Writing is still seen as a complex and difficult task for the simple reason that it requires a lot of thinking on the writer’s part. Ordering your thoughts, trying to put them into words, and conveying your meaning to the reader is not a task that comes naturally to most people. Also remember that of the 4 skills Writing is the skill that we learn last, and typically only in an educational context. Students often see writing as a product: they write one piece and consider that to be the final product. They may run a grammar and spelling check on a pc, but that is usually it. They need to learn, however, that this is only a draft, a document to be worked on, revised, and edited. They will need to learn to do this themselves as university tutors will not do this for them. What students are usually familiar with is informal, spoken English. In the Netherlands, the distinction between formal and informal English is often not taught explicitly at school. There are quite a few textbooks which are used in secondary schools which do not explain the difference even if they do offer both forms.
1. The chapters in this book are organised according to this linear process 2. For many writers, however, writing is not always such a structured, logical process: new ideas may come up during the writing process and need to be incorporated at a llater stage. The “ Developing your Textt” section at the end of each chapter takes this recursive model into account. The chapters in this book are organised according to this linear process, suggesting that you start at the beginning and work your way through, step by step, till you have the final product. While this is perfectly doable with a short piece of writing, for longer ones it does not always work. It suggests that what you get to read first was also written first, but especially with theses and dissertations, this is not likely to be the case. Introductions, for example, are often easier to write once you have written the main body of your text. For many writers, however, writing is not always such a structured, logical process: new ideas may come up during the writing process and need to be incorporated at a later stage. The “ Developing your Text” section at the end of each chapter in the book takes this recursive model into account.
This depends on the kind of paper you are writing 3. This makes the paper circular in argument Whether you write a thesis statement, a problem statement, research question or hypothesis, depends on the kind of paper you are writing. Thesis statements are typically found in argumentative essays as they tend to be debatable statements. Problem statement are typically used in business reports; research questions and hypotheses in research papers. The main body presents information in a way that is logical to the reader. As a writer, you need to put yourself in the shoes of the reader. As a writer it is your job to make the life of the reader easy. Your reader must not be left with any questions, everything must be clear and easy to follow. It it is not, then as a writer you have not done a good job. The conclusion makes the paper circular in argument, as it addresses the point raised in the introduction. Care must be taken that it is not a mere repetition of anything that has been said before.
Audience is one of the first considerations when starting to write – anything., really. Your audience determines whether your writing needs to be informal, formal, or neutral. Your friend would be offended if you wrote something very formal to them, a future employer would throw a letter of application written in an informal way straight into the bin. A 2000-word expository essay is what the students will need to write during this course, so you may want to point out the Expository Essay Structure on p. 32 at this stage. NB. I think there is a mistake in task 10: it says “ exponential essay”, but I am pretty certain it should be “expository essay”
Before showing the next slide: The reliabillity of a scientific article is of crucial importance, and therefore the integrity of the author. Elicit issues such as plagiarism, scientific fraud, manipulating data, citation kartels – all of which have been in the news in recent times. Ask students what they think constitutes plagiarism, etc. If you have students from non-Western cultures, ask them what the attitude is like in their society
This is a plagiarised definition as no source is given ! Ask students if they think anything is wrong with this definition Then show the next slide.
Practically all Western universities will explain their policy towards (suspected cases of ) plagiarism on their website. What they will also find on the website is the preferred method of citation – some universities have their own, others follow that of a famous university such as Harvard. What is confusing for students is that sometimes it may differ from one faculty to another, so it is crucial to find out.
Briefly . Point out to students that although Business Reports are not dealt with during this course, students may have to write one later during their studies, eg. while on work placements.
Informal language is probably what is most familiar to students. In some textbooks by Dutch publishers they even teach the contracted forms only ! In pairs, ask students to write down what the formal version would be for every bullet point, and give examples. Do not discuss yet.
In pairs, ask students to write down what the formal version would be for every bullet point, and give examples. Then show the next two slides and compare with what they have.
You may have to give examples of relative clauses, embedded sentenes, and inversion. What is easy to explain is that the average length of a written sentence is 12 words. Anything shorter than 6 words is unlikely to occur. An educated reader has no trouble reading a sentence of up to 20 words, so the best rule of thumb is to write sentences between 12 and 20 words. If you attempt anything longer than that, your grammar would have to be exceptionally good !
Students do not always realise what the differences are. Students do not always realise what the differences are. Although I myself prefer British English, I do not mind students using American English, but I draw the line at a mix of the two. Point out that if they use “Word” on a pc, it will automatically change the spelling to American English unless you reset it to British English.
Plus anything else that you may know of.
Any announcements will appear in your e-mail Nevertheless, check BB regularly (3 times a week) for details Have a look at the site: Course outline: show them: under course information Links to MLA-format referencing; under course documents: referencing. This also contains a word of warning concerning plagiarism. PULL UP. Read out the last paragraph. We will return to this, but they can refer to this if they are unsure. Extra exercises: Under course materials, extra exercises . Few more to com: we will put this in announcements. For now, print out and have with you to the tutorials every time. Some will be used, some not, at the discretion of the tutor. (e.g a group weak in coherence and cohesion will deal with the linking Words exercise (which is pretty basic, but nevertheless useful to go over); a group which is stronger will not, tutor may also choose to recommend exercises to some and not to others. The Toolbox: explain that developed as a project between language centres in the Netherlands and Belgium, puts together free resources for learners / users of English in show some of the writing tools: under toolbox Also grammar, if areas weak can go here: toolbox / practice / grammar (last one): check out what a collocation is. Show Practice / Writing . Don’t go to Purdue, as that takes you out of BB…….
practical tool for setting clear standards to be attained at successive stages of learning and for evaluating outcomes in an internationally comparable manner. the competences necessary for communication, ii) the related knowledge and skills and iii) the situations and domains of communication. The CEFR defines levels of attainment in different aspects of its descriptive scheme with illustrative descriptors scale. It’s in BB as well: Tool Box under Assessment: CEF writing assessment grid.