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Humour loss in the Indonesian translation of Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone
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Language learning motivation of students from a special educational school in Hong Kong
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Supporting online L2 academic reading comprehension with computer-mediated synchronous discussion and elaborative feedback
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Bown, A. - : The Reading Matrix, Inc, 2018
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Constructing identities online- an exploratory study of Saudi youths' strategies
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Direct teaching of vocabulary after listening: is it worth the effort and what method is best?
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Elaborative feedback to enhance online second language reading comprehension
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Bown, A. - : Canadian Center of Science and Education, 2017
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Chinese learners' perceptions towards teachers' language use in lexical explanations: A comparison between Chinese-only and English-only instructions
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Expressionist Analysis Of Wilfred Owen's Poems: Anthem For Doomed Youth, Dulce Et Decorum Est, A Terre, Futility And Strange Meeting
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Using a Virtual Learning Environment for the Development of L2 Academic Reading
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Bown, AN. - : Macquarie University, 2015
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Digital technologies & language teaching: real innovation or just another fad?
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Language teaching for European citizenship: insights for teacher education
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14 |
Scaffolding essay writing skills for accounting students: a collaboration
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Oral communication skills for development for Pharmacy students: a shared space
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Embedding writing development in the discipline of Law: how far have we come?
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Oxley, L. - : Applied Linguistics Association of New Zealand (ALANZ) and the Applied Linguistics Association of Australia (ALAA), 2013
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Abstract:
Following Swales' seminal work on genre (1990), many studies of student academic discourse, including my analysis of undergraduate writing in Law (1997), concluded that academic language proficiency is best developed in a disciplinary context. Early genre-based English for Specific Purposes (Genre/ESP) courses were designed chiefly for international students with English as an Additional Language (EAL), and while embedded language programs are now commonplace in Australian universities, curriculum development has been slow. With widening student participation, language support is now considered necessary for all students, with the result that Genre/ESP language programs for EAL students are merging with academic literacy programs for native English-speaking students. This paper surveys recent literature on embedded writing development programs in Australian university Law courses. It investigates the models of support currently offered and their debt to Genre/ESP pedagogy, claiming that Genre/ESP has an important contribution to make to academic literacy development for all students.
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Keyword:
Applied Linguistics and Educational Linguistics; Communication and Culture; Language; Linguistics
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URL: http://ecite.utas.edu.au/108352
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19 |
Embedding L2 writing skills development in an Accounting course: a collaboration
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Exlamatives and exclamatory acts in English and Vietnamese
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To, VT. - : Australia - Asia Research and Education Foundation, 2012
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