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1
COVID-19 in the news: The first 12 months
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2
Fostering student engagement with feedback: an integrated approach
Zhang, Zhe (Victor); Hyland, Ken. - 2022
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3
Pithy persuasion”: Engagement in 3-minute theses
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4
Metadiscourse across languages and genres: An overview
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5
Responding to supervisory feedback: Mediated positioning in thesis writing
Zhang, Yan (Olivia); Hyland, Ken. - 2022
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6
Stance in academic blogs and three-minute theses
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7
Second Language Writing Instruction
Hyland, Ken. - : Springer, 2022
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8
Teaching and Researching Writing:4th edition
Hyland, Ken. - : Routledge, 2022
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9
Lexical bundles academic articles by EAL authors
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10
“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
Na, Lau; Hyland, Ken. - 2021
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12
A tale of two genres: Engaging audiences in academic blogs and three-minute thesis presentations
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13
Delivering relevance: The emergence of ESP as a discipline
Hyland, Ken; Jiang, Fang (Kevin). - 2021
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14
Academic naming: Changing patterns of noun use in research writing
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15
The Covid infodemic: Competition and the hyping of virus research
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16
Advice-giving, power and roles in theses supervisions
Zhang, Yan (Olivia); Hyland, Ken. - 2021
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17
“I believe the findings are fascinating”: stance in Three-Minute Theses
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18
Elements of doctoral apprenticeship: community feedback and the acquisition of writing expertise
Zhang, Yan (Olivia); Hyland, Ken. - 2021
Abstract: Academic writing expertise, we argue, is acquired through long practice and by the mentoring of significant others in a socialisation process which resembles an ‘apprenticeship’. The way that feedback provided to novice writers by community-sanctioned experts can scaffold research writers’ development of texts and their scholarly identities as writers, which, however, has been relatively little studied. In this paper, we examine the interactions around two L2 writers’ engagements with PhD thesis and research article writing at an English medium university. Focusing on the literature review of these genres, we use thematic and intertextual analyses to explore interconnections between apprenticeship patterns, feedback messages, and expertise acquisition. The analyses present feedback as an apprenticeship: a multi-dimensional scaffolding and an interconnected mentorship oriented towards the process of learning and the nurturing of a writerly self.
URL: https://ueaeprints.uea.ac.uk/id/eprint/80847/1/Apprenticeship_manuscript_final.pdf
https://ueaeprints.uea.ac.uk/id/eprint/80847/
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jslw.2021.100835
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19
“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
Hyland, Ken. - : Peter Lang, 2020
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