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1
Discipline and divergence: evidence of specificity in EAP
Hyland, Ken. - : Garnet Education, 2012
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Disciplinary identities: individuality and community in academic writing
Hyland, Ken. - : Cambridge University Press, 2012
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3
Learning to write: issues in theory, research, and pedagogy
Hyland, Ken. - : John Benjamins Publishing Company, 2011
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4
Looking through corpora into writing practices
Hyland, Ken. - : John Benjamins Publishing Company, 2011
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5
Projecting an academic identity in some reflective genres
Hyland, Ken. - : Asociacion Europea de Lenguas para Fines Especificos, 2011
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6
English for professional academic purposes: writing for scholarly publication
Hyland, Ken. - : University of Michigan Press, 2010
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7
Discursive practices in EAP: unpacking specificity in academic writing
Hyland, Ken. - 2010
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8
"Dinosaur teens were keen on sex": proximity in professional and popular science
Hyland, Ken. - 2010
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9
Knowledge transfer and academic context: specificity in EAP
Hyland, Ken. - 2010
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10
Reflecting on teaching writing: applying research to the classroom
Hyland, Ken. - 2010
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11
Let’s be specific: disciplinary writing and EAP
Hyland, Ken. - 2010
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12
Community and individuality: performing identity in applied linguistics
Hyland, Ken. - : Sage Publications, Inc., 2010
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13
Researching writing
Hyland, Ken. - : Continuum International Publishing Group, 2010
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14
Writing for publication
Hyland, Ken. - 2010
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15
Academic lexis and disciplinary practice: corpus evidence for specificity
Hyland, Ken; Tse, Polly. - : Universidad de Murcia * Servicio de Publicaciones, 2009
Abstract: The presence of unfamiliar words and expressions in academic texts is a serious obstacle to students reading in a second language. EAP has responded to this challenge by taking the view that there is a common core of academic vocabulary which is frequent across an academic register. This paper briefly considers this view by examining the range, frequency, collocation, and meaning of items on the Academic Word List (AWL) in a large multidisciplinary corpus. Our corpus analysis shows that individual lexical items on the list often occur and behave in different ways across disciplines and that words commonly contribute to 'lexical bundles' which also reflect disciplinary preferences. Our findings question the widely held assumption that there is a single core vocabulary needed for academic study and suggests that teachers should assist students towards developing a more restricted, disciplinary-based lexical repertoire.
Keyword: P Philology. Linguistics; Z004 Books. Writing. Paleography
URL: http://wrap.warwick.ac.uk/48526/
http://dialnet.unirioja.es/servlet/articulo?codigo=3104270
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16
Metadiscourse: mapping interactions in academic writing
Hyland, Ken. - : Goeteborgs Universitet * Engelska Institutionen, 2009
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17
Corpus informed discourse analysis: the case of academic engagement
Hyland, Ken. - : Continuum International Publishing Group, 2009
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18
Reformulation in academic writing: shaping disciplinary argument
Hyland, Ken. - 2009
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19
Specificity in EAP
Hyland, Ken. - 2009
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20
Discipline and gender: constructing rhetorical identity in book reviews
Tse, Polly; Hyland, Ken. - : Palgrave Macmillan Ltd., 2009
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