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1
Conceptualisations of critical thinking in academic writing at a master’s level
Drybrough, Andrew Gordon. - : The University of Edinburgh, 2019
Abstract: Critical thinking is often considered to involve a set of skills required by graduates of higher educational institutions in the UK. However, the conceptualisation of critical thinking by university tutors varies across disciplines and is not always particularly clear. In a UK higher educational context where proportionally increasing numbers of postgraduate students are international, often from educational traditions where critical thinking is less of a priority, it is important to compare international student understanding of critical thinking with that of postgraduate course tutors. This thesis aimed to compare the conceptualisations of critical thinking skills by postgraduate students and tutors, and gauge how these skills are connected to academic writing at a UK Russell Group university. To do this, a mixed methods approach was adopted involving three main stages: a student questionnaire, focus groups and interviews with students, and interviews with tutors. The questionnaire asked 235 students to rate the importance of different statements describing features of academic writing based on aspects of written argumentation and cognitive skills. Results show that clear argumentation was ranked highly, alongside the skills of comparing and evaluating content. Analysis of the findings from the focus groups and interviews with students and tutors resulted in three main themes: that critical reading was an essential component of critical writing; that clear argumentation and voice are important features of critical academic writing, and that there was what appeared to be a phase in the process of academic writing which I have labelled as a ‘(re)construction’ phase. For students, this involved the importance of comparing and evaluating different viewpoints and perspectives, while for tutors it involved the need for academic writers to make connections between theory, evidence and practice. A final question looked at what were perceived to be the most effective approaches to teaching and learning critical thinking at a postgraduate master’s level. Both students and tutors agreed that an ‘infusion’ approach to teaching critical thinking could be most effective. This involves the teaching of critical thinking skills explicitly within specific disciplines. Although a separate generic course on critical thinking was less popular, the role of current research methods courses and (to a limited extent) study skills courses were key elements involved in the second most popular response, which involved a mixture of different approaches. Pedagogical implications of these findings include the need to focus on the role of tutors in teaching explicitly what it means to be critical within a discipline, and the role that research methods courses can have in reinforcing more generic aspects of critical thinking.
Keyword: academic writing; critical thinking; master's level
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/1842/36206
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2
Exploring young learner's foreign language anxiety in China
Hu, Xiaoyi. - : The University of Edinburgh, 2019
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3
Investigation of students’ responses to Arabic and English used by EFL teachers depending on their L1 background in a Saudi Arabian university
Bukhari, Shams Mahdi Amin. - : The University of Edinburgh, 2017
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4
Investigation into the differential effects of subtitles (first language, second language, and bilingual) on second language vocabulary acquisition
Li, Mingyue. - : The University of Edinburgh, 2016
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5
Impact of workshops on seven EFL teachers’ beliefs and practices concerning L1 use in a Saudi Arabian university
Baeshin, Sarah. - : The University of Edinburgh, 2016
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6
Engaging second language teachers in videoconference-integrated exchanges: towards a social constructivist perspective
Roura Planas, Sergi. - : The University of Edinburgh, 2015
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7
English as a lingua franca in a Japanese context: an analysis of ELF-oriented features in teaching materials and the attitudes of Japanese teachers and learners of English to ELF-oriented materials
Takahashi, Reiko. - : The University of Edinburgh, 2011
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8
Early-stage french as a foreign language in Taiwan : a case study involving L2 oral proficiency, motivation and social presence in synchronous computer mediated communication (CMC)
Ko, Chao-Jung. - : The University of Edinburgh, 2010
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9
The use of dictogloss to encourage discussion of language use
In: Edinburgh working papers in applied linguistics. - Edinburgh 14 (2005), 1-17
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10
A Description of LE in Mandarin Chinese and its pedagogical implications
Wu, Haiying. - 2005
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11
Key concepts in ELT - Transfer-Cross-linguistic influence
In: ELT journal. - Oxford : Oxford University Press 56 (2002) 1, 68-70
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12
Transfer/cross-linguistic influence
In: ELT journal. - Oxford : Oxford University Press 56 (2002) 1, 68-70
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13
Transfer/Cross-linguistic influence
Benson, Cathy. - : Oxford University Press, 2002
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14
Ser ou não ser?: a study of cross-linguistic influence between two foreign languages
Benson, Cathy. - : The University of Edinburgh, 1999
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15
"ser" ou "não ser"? : A study of Spanish-Portuguese cross-linguistic influence
In: Edinburgh working papers in applied linguistics. - Edinburgh 1 (1990), 124-138
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