132x Filetype PPTX File size 0.11 MB Source: www.pwr.psu.edu
Graduate Writing Center • All types of writing • All stages of the writing process • One-on-one consultations (50 min) • Hours posted Fridays at 4pm • See brochure for scheduling information Goals of the Workshop • Discuss some of common obstacles faced by new graduate workers as they adapt to the conventions of academic English. • Present strategies and tools to address common problems in terms of genre-awareness, composing, paraphrasing, grammar, etc. • Workshop models of writing practices to enable utilization of resources you already posses (i.e. multiple language repertoires, cosmopolitan perspectives, social capital, etc.) The Rhetorical and Socialization Approaches to Academic Writing • Based on an antifoundational philosophical consensus, where all knowledge is viewed as field specific and subject to its own frameworks of reality. • All written-knowledge is contextual and relational. It aims for an audience and its meaning is always co- constructed between the writer-the text-the audience. • As new members become familiar with their disciplines, supported by material, cognitive, and social resources, they develop its dispositions, skillsets, practices, essentially “go-native” or negotiate-nativeness. • Questions: • Writing is a process. • You only learn writing by working with your mentors, peers, and advisors, and doing the work for it in the field. • Developing writing skills is a slow and recursive process. Ever try writing your final paper in poetic form or poetic register? WHAT IS ACADEMIC WRITING?
no reviews yet
Please Login to review.