ACADEMIC WRITING SKILLS

ACADEMIC WRITING SKILLS

Marta Guglielmi, Giovanni Licata

Instructional goals

The Academic Writing Workshop aims to equip students with the theoretical knowledge and practical competence necessary to produce formal academic writing which is clear and well-organized, concise, and grammatically and orthographically accurate. This competence is developed by engaging in activities which enable students to produce the kind of writing which is indispensable for the final research paper.

Intended learning outcomes

Knowledge and understanding: Students will be introduced to the issues related to writing effectively in academic and professional contexts. Through critical analyses of written discourse, they will gain awareness of the tools and strategies available to improve their academic writing skills. Focus will be given to how to structure clear and concise argumentation. Applying knowledge and understanding: Students will apply the acquired writing strategies to academic situations such as essays, summaries, personal statements, research papers, etc. They will use the methods acquired to demonstrate their mastery to devise and sustain clear, coherent argumentation. Making judgements: The course materials are designed in such a way as to encourage comparison and evaluation of alternative sources, stances and text organization, and to express resultant conclusions in a language and form appropriate to the specific context. Feedback from the course instructor along with self-evaluation will allow students to independently fine-tune and adapt their skills to deal with future tasks. Communication skills: At the end of the course, students will be able to use the appropriate lexical range, accuracy and appropriacy to operate effectively in contexts linked to their degree course and future career. They know how to structure their ideas coherently and adapt their discourse depending on the purpose and context. They are able to communicate effectively with the broader academic community, conveying their conclusions clearly and unambiguously, and providing relevant supporting arguments. Learning skills: By putting into practice the methodologies learned during the interactive workshops, students will learn to assess their own performance in view of fine-tuning the acquired strategies when faced with tasks related to their academic and professional careers.

Course Contents

The Workshop is divided into 12, 90-minute lessons. The following Skills will be focused on: Organizational skills Comparative analysis Critical vs descriptive writing Editing and proof-reading Formulating and supporting an argument Paragraphing Paraphrasing Summarizing

Reference Books

Bespoke handouts are provided on-line. They have been designed using in a variety of materials put together by the teaching team for the particular purposes of this Writing Lab.

Teaching Methods

The workshop approach is highly interactive and involves participation in activities such as critical reading and analysis of texts, discussions, group discussions, written work, revision and editing, and group work. At every class meeting the teacher will provide input on specific language and text features and engage students in carrying out related tasks.

Assessment Method

Students must attend regularly (at least 70% of the total hours taught) and submit the required number of assignments. Students are evaluated on their participation and performance on a variety of in-class and out-of-class assignments (75%), and final in-class paper (25%) At the end of the course, students will receive a pass marks if they have successfully completed all the course requirements. A certificate of attendance will be awarded with mention (pass, good, very good, excellent)

Thesis assignment criteria

No final assignment. The course is assessed on the basis of a portfolio of student work

Week 1

Introduction to Academic Writing Focus: mastering the characteristic features of Academic Writing: genre, style, tone, lexis, organization In-class tasks: Experimenting with genre: academic vs journalistic paragraph on same issue; drafting email to professor requesting letter of recommendation Assignment: take notes on formal debate on the pros and cons of the UN, write up formal statement of one of the speakers

Week 2

Personal Statement Content, Structure, Focus, Register Analyzing Effective and less Effective Statements Task: Write personal statement for an application to a program of your choice Tone: how to express meaning through tone Lexical items to vary tone Transferring tone from oral discourse to written.

Week 3

Reading skills: arguments and evidence Brainstorming and Outlining PEEL model Read “Artificial Intelligence, White Guy Problem” by Kate Crawford

Week 4

Argument Paragraph: AI bias Task

Week 5

Essay Writing Skills I Pro/con Essay Planning Dealing with an assignment/Writing a two-part Essay How to read an assignment Troubleshooting Addressing the question Structuring the reply

Week 6

Essay Writing Skills II Finding sources and planning Assignment 2

Week 7

Essay Writing Skills III. Summarising and Reporting Understanding the hierarchy of ideas: main claim plus supporting ideas Summarising vs paraphrasing Reporting verbs

Week 8

Research skills I Introduction to writing a research paper

Week 9

Research skills III Sources, paraphrasing, summarising, and quoting

Week 10

Research skills IV Citation guidelines, editing

Week 11

Library Workshop Online. How to locate secondary resources using the LUISS library tools.

Week 12

Assessment: Assignment 3 Research Paper: Iran Editing and revising