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Hits 101 – 120 of 255

101
Community and individuality: performing identity in applied linguistics
In: Written communication. - Beverly Hills, Calif. [u.a.] : Sage Publ. 27 (2010) 2, 159-188
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OLC Linguistik
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102
Community and individuality: Performing identity in applied linguistics
Hyland, Ken. - 2010
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103
English for professional academic purposes: writing for scholarly publication
Hyland, Ken. - : University of Michigan Press, 2010
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104
Constructing proximity: relating to readers in popular and professional science
Hyland, Ken. - : Pergamon, 2010
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105
Being Swales and Cameron: constructing identity in applied linguistics
Hyland, Ken. - 2010
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106
Discursive practices in EAP: unpacking specificity in academic writing
Hyland, Ken. - 2010
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107
"Dinosaur teens were keen on sex": proximity in professional and popular science
Hyland, Ken. - 2010
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108
Genre analysis: theory, analysis and pedagogy
Hyland, Ken. - 2010
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109
Knowledge transfer and academic context: specificity in EAP
Hyland, Ken. - 2010
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110
Reflecting on teaching writing: applying research to the classroom
Hyland, Ken. - 2010
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111
Let’s be specific: disciplinary writing and EAP
Hyland, Ken. - 2010
Abstract: It is now largely accepted that, for the moment at least, English should be taught to facilitate students’ studies at university and to encourage participation in global networks of scholarship, but what kind of English should be taught is more controversial. In this paper I argue that the emergence of community-oriented views of literacy and students’ writing experiences at university encourage us to attend to the specific contexts of language use. Because texts are only effective when writers employ conventions that other members of the community find familiar and convincing, these conventions are likely to differ across disciplines. Identifying the particular language features, discourse practices, and communicative skills of target groups therefore becomes central to teaching English in Higher Education, and teachers have to become researchers of the genres they teach. In this presentation I will revisit some of the arguments for specificity by drawing on my research over the last decade into both student and professional academic writing. Through analyses of different corpora, I will attempt to highlight something of the disciplinary-specific nature of genres and show how writers use rhetorical choices to create a recognizable social world.
Keyword: P Philology. Linguistics; PE English; Z004 Books. Writing. Paleography
URL: http://wrap.warwick.ac.uk/48598/
http://www.bilkent.edu.tr/~eapconf2010/ken_hyland.pdf
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112
Community and individuality: performing identity in applied linguistics
Hyland, Ken. - : Sage Publications, Inc., 2010
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113
Researching writing
Hyland, Ken. - : Continuum International Publishing Group, 2010
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114
Writing for publication
Hyland, Ken. - 2010
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115
Claiming a territory: relative clauses in journal descriptions
Tse, Polly; Hyland, Ken. - : Elsevier BV, 2010
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116
"The leading journal in its field": evaluation in journal descriptions
In: Discourse studies. - London [u.a.] : Sage 11 (2009) 6, 703-720
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OLC Linguistik
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117
Academic evaluation : review genres in university settings
Hyland, Ken (Hrsg.). - Basingstoke [u.a.] : Palgrave Macmillan, 2009
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UB Frankfurt Linguistik
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118
Teaching and researching writing
Hyland, Ken. - Harlow [u.a.] : Longman, 2009
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UB Frankfurt Linguistik
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119
Academic discourse : English in a global context
Hyland, Ken. - London [u.a.] : Continuum, 2009
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UB Frankfurt Linguistik
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120
Academic lexis and disciplinary practice: corpus evidence for specificity
In: International Journal of English Studies; Vol. 9 No. 2 (2009): Approaches to English as a Foreign Language Reading Comprehension: Research and Pedagogy ; International Journal of English Studies; Vol. 9 Núm. 2 (2009): Approaches to English as a Foreign Language Reading Comprehension: Research and Pedagogy ; 1989-6131 ; 1578-7044 (2009)
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