SemesterSpring Semester, 2020
DepartmentForeign Language Center
Course NameAcademic English:Writing & Speaking II
InstructorHUANG SHU-CHEN
Credit0.0
Course TypeElective
Prerequisite
Course Objective
Course Description
Course Schedule







 


































































































































































週次



Week



課程主題



Topic



課程內容與指定閱讀



Content and Reading Assignment



教學活動與作業



Teaching Activities and Homework



學習投入時間



Student workload expectation



課堂講授



In-class Hours



課程前後



Outside-of-class Hours




  1.  



Course orientation




  • In-class writing: My academic language narrative

  • Audience, purpose and strategy, and organization (pp. 1-14)

  • In-class writing “Briefly describe and explain one current controversy in your field”




  • Analysis and Discussion: Tasks #1.1-1.8

  • Homework: Task #1.9



3



4.5




  1.  



General-specific organization




  • Student presentation of Task #1.9

  • GS & SG texts in academic writing

  • Openings with general statements, statistics, and definitions




  • Analysis and Discussion: Tasks #2.1-2.5



3



4.5




  1.  



Specific-general organization




  • Writing definitions

  • SG organization




  • Analysis and Discussion: Tasks #2.6-2.23



3



4.5




  1.  



Problem-solution texts




  • Structure of problem-solution texts

  • Participles, active voice




  • Analysis and Discussion: Tasks #3.1-3.12



3



4.5




  1.  



Procedures and processes




  • Information flow

  • Flow of ideas in process descriptions

  • Introducing the solution




  • Analysis and Discussion: Tasks #3.13-3.20



3



4.5




  1.  



Data commentary




  • Strength of claim

  • Structure of data commentary

  • Location elements and summaries




  • Analysis and Discussion: Tasks #4.1-4.4



3



4.5




  1.  



Data commentary




  • Highlighting statements

  • Organization

  • Concluding a commentary




  • Analysis and Discussion: Tasks #4.5-4.17



3



4.5




  1.  



Data commentary




  • Dealing with graphs

  • Dealing with chronological data




  • Analysis and Discussion: Tasks #4.18-4.22



3



4.5




  1.  



Guidelines for authors




  • Conference presentation proposals

  • Journal paper submissions




  • Analysis and Discussion: journal and conference websites



3



4.5




  1.  



 



Writing summaries




  • Considerations before writing a summary

  • Some notes on plagiarism

  • Paraphrasing




  • Analysis and Discussion: Tasks #5.1-5.6



3



4.5




  1.  



 



Writing summaries




  • This and summary phrases

  • Careful use of synonyms

  • Syntheses of more than one source




  • Analysis and Discussion: Tasks #5.7-5.15



3



4.5




  1.  



 



Writing critiques




  • Book reviews

  • Evaluating a published article




  • Analysis and Discussion: Tasks #6.1-6.10



3



4.5




  1.  



 



Writing critiques




  • Critical reading

  • Reaction papers

  • On manuscript review for a journal




  • Analysis and Discussion: Tasks #6.11-6.20



3



4.5




  1.  



 



Constructing a research paper I




  • Type of journal publication

  • Longer Research Papers

  • Positioning ourselves in the chosen field



Tasks #7.1-7.10




  • Task 7.1 complete before class

  • Tasks 7.2, 4-5: RP

  • 7-T6-10: Methods

  • 7-T10: 3 Assignment options



3



4.5




  1.  



 



Constructing a research paper I




  • Longer research papers

  • Results sections

  • (Style and cross-cultural differences in academic language)



Tasks #7.11-7.20




  • 7-T12: Corpus

  • 7-T18: Choice of 2 exercises on Results

  • 7-T20: Produce a Results section from your own work



3



4.5




  1.  



Constructing a research paper II




  • Introductions: CARS

  • Creating a research space

  • Review lit

  • Establish Niche

  • Using Google Scholar to identify potentially useful phrases (task 16)



Tasks #8.1-8.20




  • 8-T6 & 8 Corpus

  • 8-T9: Read 8 summaries of research papers on self-citing. Then organize a lit review

  • 8-T10 Corpus: tenses of citations

  • 8-T11 2 choices for citations practice

  • 8-T16: Google Scholar

  • 8-T17 uses corpus



3



4.5




  1.  



Constructing a research paper II




  • Discussion sections

  • Titles

  • Abstracts

  • Acknowledgements

  • Presentation of our work



Tasks #8.21-8.33




  • 8-T23 Corpus: Discussion & Conclusion

  • 8-T27: Write or rewrite Discussion section

  • 8-T29: Using corpus (Titles)

  • 8-T30: S’s own paper titles

  • 8-T32: Draft an abstract for one of your research projects

  • 8-T33: Write acknowledgments section



3



4.5




  1.  



 



Presentations




  • Final showcase of portfolio

  • Reflection and Forward-looking



 



3



4.5




 









 





Teaching Methods
Teaching Assistant

To be announced


Requirement/Grading

  • Attendance and participation (discussions, language exercises, self-assessment, peer review, meeting deadlines, presentations, etc.): 20%

  • Corpus of texts from your field 10%

  • Writing assignments (drafts, peer review, revision report, final version): 50%

  • Final presentation of written work (including Q&A): 20%



 



ATTENDANCE, PUNCTUALITY & ASSIGNMENT POLICIES




  • Attendance, punctuality and participation are required for all class sessions.

  • Homework assignments will be discounted on a daily basis when it is overdue.



 



WRITING EXERCISES & ASSIGNMENTS



Exercises include analysis, practice, and short writing tasks in the textbook. During the first half of the course, writing assignments include part-genres, or texts that are incorporated into more-lengthy academic works. These assignments help the writers develop their academic writing awareness and to understand their positioning as a scholar in their field. The genres, chosen based on overall needs of enrolled students, will be selected from among: problem-solution, definition, general-specific/specific-general, problem-solution with process, data commentary, position, or critique. In the second part of the course, students will produce components of a typical research paper in their field. These will include Methods, Results, Introduction, Limitations, and Discussion. Abstracts and Acknowledgements will be covered. For each major assignment, writers will turn in 1) a draft, 2) peer review documents and feedback, 3) the revised version incorporating peer feedback comments with a revision report explaining the revision. Much of the assigned work will be based on the collection of research articles that learner/researchers/writers build throughout the semester.


Textbook & Reference

Required text:




  • Academic Writing for Graduate Students: Essential Tasks and Skills (3rd edition) ISBN: 978-0-472-03475-8


    • Published by The University of Michigan Press

    • Copies will be available at the campus bookstore (政大書城) Sold by Crane Books





Supporting texts and resources:




  • Academic Writing Handbook for International Students http://cw.routledge.com/textbooks/bailey/

  • Strunk, W. Jr. and White, E. B. (2000). The Elements of Style (4th edition). Longman.

  • The Corpus of Contemporary American English (COCA): https://corpus.byu.edu/coca/

  • American Psychological Association (APA). Publication Manual (6th ed.) Arlington, VA: APA.

  • Roe, S. and den Ouden, P. H. (2003). Designs for disciplines: An introduction to academic writing (1st edition). Toronto: Canada Scholars’ Press.

  • Feak, C. & Swales, J. (2009). Telling a research story: Writing a literature review. Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press.

  • Feak, C. & Swales, J. (2011). Creating contexts: Writing introductions across genres. Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press.

  • Swales, J. & Feak, C. (2009). Abstracts and the writing of abstracts. Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press.

  • Swales, J. & Feak, C. (2011). Navigating academia: Writing supporting genres. Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press.

  • Purdue University Online Writing Lab (OWL): https://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/

  • Dictionary/Thesaurus:



http://www.dictionary.com/



http://www.freecollocation.com/



http://www.ozdic.com/



https://www.oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com/definition/english/



https://www.merriam-webster.com/



http://www.macmillandictionary.com



http://www.thefreedictionary.com



http://www.learnersdictionary.com



http://www.americancorpus.org



http://www.visuwords.com



http://www.visualthesaurus.com



            http://www.thesaurus.com/


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