Academic Writing in a Second or Foreign Language: Issues and Challenges Facing ESL/EFL Academic Writers in Higher Education Contexts
Editat de Ramona Tangen Limba Engleză Hardback – 11 ian 2012
| Toate formatele și edițiile | Preț | Express |
|---|---|---|
| Paperback (1) | 265.55 lei 6-8 săpt. | |
| Bloomsbury Publishing – 6 noi 2013 | 265.55 lei 6-8 săpt. | |
| Hardback (1) | 1037.73 lei 6-8 săpt. | |
| Bloomsbury Publishing – 11 ian 2012 | 1037.73 lei 6-8 săpt. |
Preț: 1037.73 lei
Preț vechi: 1206.66 lei
-14% Nou
Puncte Express: 1557
Preț estimativ în valută:
183.64€ • 214.15$ • 161.23£
183.64€ • 214.15$ • 161.23£
Carte tipărită la comandă
Livrare economică 16-30 ianuarie 26
Preluare comenzi: 021 569.72.76
Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781441112163
ISBN-10: 1441112162
Pagini: 272
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.54 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Continuum
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1441112162
Pagini: 272
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.54 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Continuum
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
Examines
the
various
ways
students
and
scholars
learn
to
write
for
academic
purposes.
Notă biografică
Ramona
Tangis
Assistant
Professor
at
the
National
Institute
of
Education,
Singapore.
Cuprins
Acknowledgements
Contributors
Chapter
1.
Introduction:
The
Issues
and
Challenges
Facing
Academic
Writers
from
ESL
/
EFL
Contexts:
An
Overrview,Ramona
TangPart
I:
Learning
to
Write
for
Academic
PurposesChapter
2.
Identifying
and
Addressing
Challenges
to
International
Publication
Success
for
EFL
Science
Researchers:
Implementing
an
integrated
training
package
in
China,Margaret
Cargill
&
Patrick
O'ConnorChapter
3.
Text
and
Corpus
Work,
EAP
Writing,
and
Language
Learners,Giuliana
DianiChapter
4.
The
Impact
of
Experience
and
Beliefs
on
Chinese
EFL
Student
Writers'
Feedback
Preferences,Guangwei
Hu
&
Hongwei
RenChapter
5.
Thesis
and
Dissertation
Writing:
Moving
beyond
the
text,Brian
Paltridge
&
Lindy
WoodrowPart
II:
Features
of
ESL/EFL
Learner
DiscoursesChapter
6.
The
Challenges
of
Writing
a
Successful
Thesis
Conclusion,Jo
LewkowiczChapter
7.
EFL
/
ESL
Writers
and
the
Use
of
Shell
Nouns,Hilary
Nesi
&
Emma
MoretonChapter
8.
Writing
in
Tables
and
Lists:
A
study
of
Chinese
students'
undergraduate
assignments
in
UK
universities,Maria
LeedhamPart
III:
Identity
Work
and
Professional
Opportunities
in
Academic
WritingChapter
9.
Writing
and
Researching
Between
and
Beyond
the
Labels,Hanako
Okada
&
Christine
Pearson
CasanaveChapter
10.
Identity
Without
the
'I':
A
study
of
citation
sequences
and
writer
identity
in
literature
review
sections
of
dissertations,Suganthi
JohnChapter
11.
Two
Sides
of
the
Same
Coin:
Challenges
and
opportunities
for
scholars
from
ESL
/
EFL
backgrounds,Ramona
TangAfterword,
English
Medium
Writing
for
Academic
Purposes:
foundational
Categories,
Certainty
and
ContingencyTheresa
LillisIndex
Recenzii
This
collection
is
both
thought-provoking
and
motivating
for
the
teacher,
as
well
as
researcher
...
The
book
would
be
relevant
to
applied
linguists,
academic
writing
teachers
and
their
postgraduate
students.
Recommended.
Welcome in its honesty and attempt at balancing out what is gained and what is lost by our having one language at present that is privileged over others.
This book consists of an eclectic selection of issues in academic writing relevant to ESL/EFL background scholars and their teachers. The book's contributors, from many countries, offer perspectives on writers from a range of Asian and European backgrounds, at a range of professional levels, and from a range of writing contexts... The book provides a valuable contribution to those areas of applied linguistics concerned with issues of academic writing, with issues faced by users of English as an additional language, and with some ways in which academic English discourse norms can be made more transparent. While the book will be of particular interest to anyone involved in supporting the academic work of ESL/EFL writers, it also offers, in several chapters, valuable and practical information for writers of any background, English L1 included, who want greater insight into specific academic English discursive norms... The afterword adds a refreshingly provocative overview of some major issues of concern for those interested in some of the broader philosophical issues and assumptions.
highly interesting for academics engaged in research on the real world academic practices of academics and PhD students who want to make justified choices in relation to their careers, but also for the wider academic community, the administrators, and the policymakers who strive for a more equitable and just system that enables knowledge exchange and accessibility among individuals and communities located in different parts of the world.
This finely-edited and timely collection represents a splendid analysis of issues and challenges facing ESL/EFL academic writers at textual and sociocultural levels. It achieves this by profiling wide-ranging geographical and learning contexts and presenting a kaleidoscope of research topics and approaches. Without doubt, the book will remain a landmark anthology and a standard citation in research on ESL/EFL academic writing in years to come.
Ramona Tang has assembled a collection of chapters that brings together a wealth of practical knowledge and experience of teaching and researching academic writing, together with insightful discussion of the position of and practices that surround English in higher education and academia more generally. This book captures the breadth of current thinking around academic writing and will be invaluable for practitioners and researchers.
Overall, this collection has brought to the fore a wide range of topics under the theme of 'academic writing in a second or foreign language' for the sake of both scholars under pressure to publish in the medium of English (Lillis, 2006) and tertiary-level students from non-English-speaking backgrounds facing L2 writing difficulties (Kroll, 2003). Diverse in research topics, sites, participants, methodologies and approaches, this volume should prove to be of great use to academic writers, especially non-native English students and scholars, and can provide insightful teaching implications for EAP instructors as well. - Nana Xu is a graduate student majoring in second language acquisition in the English language department at Nankai University. Her research interests focus on classroom reticence and self-regulated language learning.
This collection is both thought-provoking and motivating for the teacher, as well as researcher. It reflects the wide-ranging nature of the study of academic writing, indicating future thinking, including closer links with writing in the profesions. The book would be relevant to applied linguists, academic writing teachers and their postgraduate students.
This is an interesting and innovative collection ... from leading contributors in their fields ... [It] is both thought-provoking and motivating for the teacher, as well as the researcher.
Welcome in its honesty and attempt at balancing out what is gained and what is lost by our having one language at present that is privileged over others.
This book consists of an eclectic selection of issues in academic writing relevant to ESL/EFL background scholars and their teachers. The book's contributors, from many countries, offer perspectives on writers from a range of Asian and European backgrounds, at a range of professional levels, and from a range of writing contexts... The book provides a valuable contribution to those areas of applied linguistics concerned with issues of academic writing, with issues faced by users of English as an additional language, and with some ways in which academic English discourse norms can be made more transparent. While the book will be of particular interest to anyone involved in supporting the academic work of ESL/EFL writers, it also offers, in several chapters, valuable and practical information for writers of any background, English L1 included, who want greater insight into specific academic English discursive norms... The afterword adds a refreshingly provocative overview of some major issues of concern for those interested in some of the broader philosophical issues and assumptions.
highly interesting for academics engaged in research on the real world academic practices of academics and PhD students who want to make justified choices in relation to their careers, but also for the wider academic community, the administrators, and the policymakers who strive for a more equitable and just system that enables knowledge exchange and accessibility among individuals and communities located in different parts of the world.
This finely-edited and timely collection represents a splendid analysis of issues and challenges facing ESL/EFL academic writers at textual and sociocultural levels. It achieves this by profiling wide-ranging geographical and learning contexts and presenting a kaleidoscope of research topics and approaches. Without doubt, the book will remain a landmark anthology and a standard citation in research on ESL/EFL academic writing in years to come.
Ramona Tang has assembled a collection of chapters that brings together a wealth of practical knowledge and experience of teaching and researching academic writing, together with insightful discussion of the position of and practices that surround English in higher education and academia more generally. This book captures the breadth of current thinking around academic writing and will be invaluable for practitioners and researchers.
Overall, this collection has brought to the fore a wide range of topics under the theme of 'academic writing in a second or foreign language' for the sake of both scholars under pressure to publish in the medium of English (Lillis, 2006) and tertiary-level students from non-English-speaking backgrounds facing L2 writing difficulties (Kroll, 2003). Diverse in research topics, sites, participants, methodologies and approaches, this volume should prove to be of great use to academic writers, especially non-native English students and scholars, and can provide insightful teaching implications for EAP instructors as well. - Nana Xu is a graduate student majoring in second language acquisition in the English language department at Nankai University. Her research interests focus on classroom reticence and self-regulated language learning.
This collection is both thought-provoking and motivating for the teacher, as well as researcher. It reflects the wide-ranging nature of the study of academic writing, indicating future thinking, including closer links with writing in the profesions. The book would be relevant to applied linguists, academic writing teachers and their postgraduate students.
This is an interesting and innovative collection ... from leading contributors in their fields ... [It] is both thought-provoking and motivating for the teacher, as well as the researcher.