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Pomerantz, Anne; Kearney, Erin – Journal of Second Language Writing, 2012
This paper offers a narrative framework for understanding how multilingual graduate students make sense of the continuous and frequently contradictory talk they engage in as they write. It illustrates how attention to the telling, form, and content of the stories such students relate about their ongoing interactions around academic writing can…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Discourse Communities, Graduate Students, Multilingualism
Ouellette, Mark A. – Journal of Second Language Writing, 2008
While plagiarism is often viewed in terms of ethical binaries, scholars in composition studies have recognized plagiarism as part of literacy practices governing identity construction. In this light, what is at stake is how writers construct identity by positioning stance-claims according to the standards of respective discourse communities. For…
Descriptors: Educational Principles, Self Concept, Cultural Context, Discourse Communities
Cheng, An – Journal of Second Language Writing, 2006
Academic criticism is defined in this paper as a statement which reflects a discrepancy between the stance of a researcher/author, on the one hand, and that of another researcher or the discourse community as a whole, on the other (Salager-Meyer & Alcaraz Ariza, 2003). Despite researchers' awareness of the potential difficulty academic criticism…
Descriptors: Researchers, Discourse Communities, Criticism, Literacy
Li, Yongyan – Journal of Second Language Writing, 2006
Despite the rich literature on disciplinary knowledge construction and multilingual scholars' academic literacy practices, little is known about how novice scholars are engaged in knowledge construction in negotiation with various target discourse communities. In this case study, with a focused analysis of a Chinese computer science doctoral…
Descriptors: Discourse Communities, Knowledge Level, Graduate Students, Doctoral Programs

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