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Academic Style What is academic writing? Source: www.oxbridgeessays.com

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Academic Style. What is academic writing?. Source: www.oxbridgeessays.com. Lecture Outline. Features of academic writing Examples of what it is NOT! Academic assignments -1 st year Quiz!. What is academic writing?. Academic writing in English is direct One central theme - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Academic Style

Academic Style

What is academic writing?Source: www.oxbridgeessays.com

Page 2: Academic Style

Lecture Outline

• Features of academic writing

• Examples of what it is NOT!

• Academic assignments -1st year

• Quiz!

Page 3: Academic Style

Academic writing in English is direct

• One central theme

• Every part contributing to the main argument

• Informative

• Uses standard written form of English

What is academic writing?

Page 4: Academic Style

MAIN IDEA

Page 5: Academic Style

1.complex

2. formal

3.unbiased

4.clear

5.hedged

6. responsible

7.precise language (the right word)

8.accurate language (used correctly)

MAIN FEATURES

Page 6: Academic Style

Written texts are complex and dense:

• Longer, more complex words and phrases

• Grammar more complex

1. Complex

Page 7: Academic Style

X The cities in Switzerland had once been peaceful, but they changed when people became violent.

Academic Style:Violence changed the face of once peaceful Swiss cities.

1. Complex

Page 8: Academic Style

X Because the technology has improved its less risky than it used to be when you install them at the same time, and it doesn't cost so much either.

Academic Style:Improvements in technology have reduced the risks and high costs associated with simultaneous installation.

1. Complex

Page 9: Academic Style

Do not use:

colloquial words and expressions

"stuff", "a lot of", "thing", "sort of"

2. Formal

Page 10: Academic Style

Do not use:

abbreviated forms

"can't", "doesn't", "shouldn't"

2. Formal

Page 11: Academic Style

Do not use:

two word verbs (phrasal verbs):

"put off", "bring up“, “add up to”, “come across”

2. Formal

Page 12: Academic Style

Do not use:

sub-headings, numbering and bullet-points in formal essays

2. Formal

Page 13: Academic Style

Do not ask questions in formal academic essays

“Why is this happening?” X

2. Formal

Page 14: Academic Style

When you use information, dates or figures.

Do not use “a lot of people”, “about….” Use “50 million people”, “approximately…”

3. Precision

Page 15: Academic Style

In general, avoid words like "I", "me", "myself“

Don't write: "In my opinion, this a very interesting study.“

Write: "This is a very interesting study."

4. Objective

Page 16: Academic Style

Make it clear to your reader how various parts of the text are related.

These connections can be made clear by the use of different signaling words.

…this outflow was realized. Partly this was because the… …control of the land. Similarly, Marx was interested…….between orders and bishops. For example, in the …

5. Explicit (clear)

Page 17: Academic Style

Acknowledgment of the source of the ideas:

…McGreil (1977) has shown that though Dubliners ….

5. Explicit

Page 18: Academic Style

Accurate vocabulary. Choose the correct word.

meeting assembly gathering conference

money revenue currency capital funds

6. Accuracy

Page 19: Academic Style

Cautious language, often called "hedging" or "vague language“ shows the writer’s stance.

It may be said that the commitment…

…symptoms seem to be…

It could be the case that…

It is important to develop…

7. Hedging

Page 20: Academic Style

Demonstrate understanding of the source text.

• Paraphrasing

• Summarising

• Acknowledging the source (citations, references)

8. Responsibility

Page 21: Academic Style

• Examples of what it is NOT!

Page 22: Academic Style

Fiction / Novels X

Page 23: Academic Style

Newspapers / Magazines / Journalism X

Page 24: Academic Style

Poetry XShall I compare thee to a summer's day?Thou art more lovely and more temperate:Rough winds do shake the darling buds of May,And summer's lease hath all too short a date:Sometime too hot the eye of heaven shines,And often is his gold complexion dimmed,And every fair from fair sometime declines,By chance, or nature's changing course untrimmed

Page 25: Academic Style

The 2007–2012 global financial crisis, also known as the Global Financial Crisis and 2008 financial crisis, is considered by many economists to be the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression of the 1930s. It resulted in the threat of total collapse from large financial institutions, the bailout of banks by national governments, and downturns in stock markets around the world. In many areas, the housing market also suffered, resulting in evictions, foreclosures and prolonged unemployment.

Wikipedia X

Page 26: Academic Style

Global Financial Crisis by Anup Shah

The global financial crisis, brewing for a while, really started to show its effects in the middle of 2007 and into 2008. Around the world stock markets have fallen, large financial institutions have collapsed or been bought out, and governments in even the wealthiest nations have had to come up with rescue packages to bail out their financial systems.

http://www.globalissues.org

Page 27: Academic Style

Global Mobility Unaffected by Financial Crisis, as Remittances Remained Resilient

Press Release No:2012/DEC/506

WASHINGTON, June 14, 2012 – The global financial crisis of 2008/09 has not sent migrant workers streaming back home, despite worsening employment prospects and anti-immigration rhetoric in some destination countries, says a new book on migration and remittances, published by the World Bank.http://www.worldbank.org/financialcrisis/

Page 28: Academic Style

The euro zone crisisThe ECB and OMT: OTT, OMG or WTF? Sep 7th 2012, 9:01 by Buttonwood Everyone knows that the Germans are the paymasters of Europe, and yet the Bundesbank opposed the programme. How credible can the ECB be in the long run if it is consistently opposed by the Bundesbank, the bank it was set up to replicate?

http://www.economist.com/blogs/buttonwood

Blogs X

Page 29: Academic Style

(Academic) Journals

Page 30: Academic Style

What is Academic Writing?

News stories

Poetry

Magazine articles

Novels

University texts

Typical high-school English texts

Wikipedia

Source: flikr.com

Page 31: Academic Style

Academic Sources?

SOURCE MATERIAL

Always check WHO wrote it and WHY

Is it reliable? Is the writer qualified?

Page 32: Academic Style

• Academic writing -1st year

Page 33: Academic Style

Planning and Structuring

Brainstorm• Write down all the ideas

you have relevant to the topic

Eliminate• Select ideas which can be

linked together coherently

Outline• Introduction• Body• Conclusion

Page 34: Academic Style
Page 35: Academic Style

Planning and Structuring

Draft • Write your first draft once you have a complete plan

Proofread

• After you have finished writing, proofread

Edit • Make improvements

Page 36: Academic Style

Style

Do not use clichés or idioms

• Every coin has two sides…• What’s more…• As we all know…• Nowadays…

Page 37: Academic Style

…does not use idioms (figurative language):

Every coin has two sides…. X

There are two sides to every coin…. X

Get out of hand… X

Go with the flow… X

Academic Language…

Page 38: Academic Style

…is very precise:

As everybody knows…. X

People always say…. X

Academic Language…

Page 39: Academic Style

Academic writing does not (usually) contain any humour.

Page 40: Academic Style

It does not contain any ‘emotive’ or personal opinion words. (horrible, terrible, nasty, lovely).

Page 41: Academic Style

Students’ Assignments

A logical argument

A clear structure

Show independent thinking

A formal style

Logic and reason (be analytical)

Supporting evidence

Reference list and citations

Source: www.d-evidence.com

Page 42: Academic Style

Students’ Assignments

There are many approaches to academic writing. 

Reports, for example, should be presented in a very different manner to essays. 

Whenever you have to write for university, you should always find out the precise details from the lecturer or tutor or the unit.