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Fostering student engagement with feedback: an integrated approach
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Pithy persuasion”: Engagement in 3-minute theses
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Abstract:
Academic communication crucially involves readers, or hearers, buying into an argument. The audience has to be hooked, involved and led to a desired conclusion, and this is perhaps no more urgent than in a Three Minute Thesis presentation (3MT). In this competitive environment, doctoral students present their research using only one static slide in just 180 seconds. Speakers are advised to tell a ‘story’ but they must still draw on familiar ways of ensuring their hearers can make connections in their presentation and be willing to accept their argument. In this paper we apply Hyland’s (2005) engagement framework to a corpus of 120 3MT presentations to explore how academics establish interpersonal rapport with non-specialist audiences. We find engagement to be a useful analytical tool in this monologic speech context and discover disciplinary preferences in the use of engagement features. Our findings have important implications for postgraduate speaking and for EAP teachers preparing students to orally present their research.
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URL: https://doi.org/10.1093/applin/amab017 https://ueaeprints.uea.ac.uk/id/eprint/79534/ https://ueaeprints.uea.ac.uk/id/eprint/79534/1/3MT_engagement_AL_R3.pdf
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5 |
Responding to supervisory feedback: Mediated positioning in thesis writing
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“The goal of this analysis …”: Changing patterns of metadiscursive nouns in disciplinary writing.
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11 |
International publishing as a networked activity: Collegial support for Chinese scientists
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12 |
A tale of two genres: Engaging audiences in academic blogs and three-minute thesis presentations
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14 |
Academic naming: Changing patterns of noun use in research writing
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The Covid infodemic: Competition and the hyping of virus research
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17 |
“I believe the findings are fascinating”: stance in Three-Minute Theses
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Elements of doctoral apprenticeship: community feedback and the acquisition of writing expertise
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“There are significant differences…”: the secret life of existential there in academic writing
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20 |
The communication of expertise: changes in academic writing
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