TY - JOUR
T1 - A Case Study of Academic Vocabulary in a Novice Student’s Writing at a UK University
AU - Therova, Dana
PY - 2021/12/31
Y1 - 2021/12/31
N2 - Mastering appropriate writing style is one of the challenges frequently experienced by
novice student writers entering higher education. Developing academic writing skills is,
however, crucial for students new to academic settings since written assignments constitute
the main form of assessment in tertiary education. Novice student writers thus need to
acquire the writing conventions used in academic settings to achieve success in high-stakes
assessment. Underlying success in academic writing is the usage of academic vocabulary
regarded as a key feature of academic writing style. Through textual analysis accompanied
by interview data utilising the ‘talk around text’ technique, this corpus-based case study
reports on the deployment of academic vocabulary in four genres of assessed academic
writing produced by one international foundation-level student at a UK university. The
findings reveal a small number of newly acquired academic vocabulary items deployed in
each written assignment with all new academic words having been acquired from reading
materials. In addition, the important role that the topic and genre play in student written
production becomes apparent. These findings have potentially important pedagogical
implication for contexts catering for novice student writers entering tertiary education, such
as foundation programmes or pre-sessional courses.
AB - Mastering appropriate writing style is one of the challenges frequently experienced by
novice student writers entering higher education. Developing academic writing skills is,
however, crucial for students new to academic settings since written assignments constitute
the main form of assessment in tertiary education. Novice student writers thus need to
acquire the writing conventions used in academic settings to achieve success in high-stakes
assessment. Underlying success in academic writing is the usage of academic vocabulary
regarded as a key feature of academic writing style. Through textual analysis accompanied
by interview data utilising the ‘talk around text’ technique, this corpus-based case study
reports on the deployment of academic vocabulary in four genres of assessed academic
writing produced by one international foundation-level student at a UK university. The
findings reveal a small number of newly acquired academic vocabulary items deployed in
each written assignment with all new academic words having been acquired from reading
materials. In addition, the important role that the topic and genre play in student written
production becomes apparent. These findings have potentially important pedagogical
implication for contexts catering for novice student writers entering tertiary education, such
as foundation programmes or pre-sessional courses.
UR - https://jeltl.org/index.php/jeltl/article/view/609/pdf
U2 - 10.21462/jeltl.v6i3.609
DO - 10.21462/jeltl.v6i3.609
M3 - Article
VL - 6
SP - 557
EP - 577
JO - Journal of English Language Teaching and Linguistics
JF - Journal of English Language Teaching and Linguistics
IS - 3
ER -