The Journal of Teaching Language Skills (JTLS)
7 (4), Winter 2016, ISSN: 2008-8191
pp. 1-28
Minoo Alemi
Assistant Professor
Islamic Azad University, Tehran-west Branch
alemi@sharif.ir
Atefeh Rezanejad ∗
PhD Candidate
Allameh Tabataba'i University
rezanejad_a85@yahoo.com
Abstract
Acknowledgments are vital since students/researchers can
demonstrate their genuine appreciation through them and more
importantly shape their (local/global) academic identity. In line with
this significance, the present study examined the move patterns of 503
Persian dissertation acknowledgements from two major universities
in Iran, from 1981 to 2014 and from sixteen various disciplines
including soft and hard science disciplines. Overall, 65,323 words
were analyzed. By and large, a careful examination and analysis of
the corpus indicated that Iranian university students follow a threetier moves pattern in writing a dissertation acknowledgments, namely
a “Framing move” (including six micro steps), a main “Thanking
move” (consisting of nine micro steps), and a “Closing move”
(containing four micro steps). Moreover, the results indicated that the
longest and shortest acknowledgments were 986 and words
respectively. The results also indicated that there was a significant
difference in the complexity of acknowledgments in hard and soft
science disciplines. The results of this study can hold valuable
implications for both university students and professors who aspire
an appropriate, coherent, and to the point display of scholarly
competence and academic identity.
Keywords: Generic structure, Persian, dissertation acknowledgments
1. Introduction
In recent decades, many researchers have been immersed in studies done in
the realm of genre analysis. Since the publication of Swales’ Genre Analysis
Received: 01/11/2015
∗
Corresponding author
Accepted: 10/02/2016
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(1990), the field has experienced a greater than ever scholastic interest in the
generic analysis of the rhetorical structure of various types of scholarly texts
such as research articles (Posteguillo, 1999; Swales, 1990), textbooks and
educational materials (Hyland, 2002), research theses (Bunton, 2002;
Thompson, 2001), conference papers (Rowley-Jolivet, 2002), grant
proposals (Halleck & Connor, 2006), as well as book reviews (Nicolaisen,
2002).
Swales’ (1990, 1996) taxonomy of academic genre (Table 1) divided
the system of academic genre (i.e. texts produced for scientific purposes in
educational or scientific contexts such as universities) into three broad
categories. The categories were classed according to the audience type
addressed by the text and took both oral and written forms of discourse into
account. According to this taxonomy the first class is identified as primary
or research-process genres and is employed for peer-communication,
whereas the second class serving instructive purposes are named as
secondary, derived, didactic, or pedagogic genres. There is still a third
category called occluded genres which deal with confidential or semiconfidential exploit of texts in scholastic contexts. They are employed with
the aim of exchanging subject material and information between the
academia (e.g. researchers, students, professors, publishers, editors, &
referees).
Table 1. The academic genre system (Based on Swales, 1990, 1996)
Nevertheless, considering the academic genre of gratitude and
acknowledgment, Hyland (2003) couldn’t fit them into any of the mentioned
THE GENERIC STRUCTURE OF ACKNOWLEDGMENTS …
3
categories. He claimed that acknowledgments belong to a different group
called a Cinderella genre. Like the heroine in the children’s fairy tale,
acknowledgements are a taken-for-granted part of the background, a practice
of unrecognized and disregarded value deserving of greater attention.
Neither strictly academic nor entirely personal, acknowledgements stand
outside the research record but have a considerable sociopragmatic
relevance which makes them integral to it. They are central to the academic
practice of reciprocal gift giving and for this reason are particularly
important to students (p. 243).
This widespread pervasiveness of acknowledgments across various
disciplines and over different fields of studies symptoms its “interpersonal
significance” and also reflects “an increasingly collaborative environment
and the acceptance of a community-oriented ethos” (Giannoni, 2002, p. 5).
The point is even much more striking when one considers the optional and
“non-mandatory nature” (Giannoni, 2002, p. 5) of acknowledgments in
research papers, dissertations, and any other academic genre generally. As
prospective candidates of the academic community in each country, postgraduate students are expected and required to build an intuitive awareness
regarding the ethics and regulations in their specific academic context. In
this study, the researchers discuss the generic framework and textualization
of Iranian MA and PhD Persian dissertation acknowledgments over the time
span of 1981 to 2014. To be more specific, the move structure of 503
acknowledgments written by Iranian university students is analyzed.
2. Review of Literature
Acknowledgments are currently regarded as one of the key features of
scholastic interactions in academic communities and this is proved by their
appearance in more than half of the whole published research papers
(Cronin, McKenzie, & Stifler, 1992). Equating acknowledgments with
apologies, condolences, greeting, or congratulations, Salager-Meyer,
Alcaraz-Ariza, Briceno, and Jabbour (2011) state that acknowledgments in
academic publications are in fact “illocutionary acts that occur in response to
social expectations” (p. 764).
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In a study, Cronin (1995) investigated the length and frequency of
acknowledgements written in research articles found in nine diverse journals
between 1971 and 1990. He mainly focused on three variables of “articles
with acknowledgements”, “acknowledgements of intellectual support”, and
“number of peers who were credited in acknowledgments”. The results of
his study revealed that interestingly the number of research articles with an
acknowledgement section experienced a sharp increase between the
mentioned years. Whereas an average mean of 42.9% of research articles in
1971 included a section devoting to thanking and acknowledging, in 1990 an
average of 61.2% of research papers found in journals emphasized on the
significance of putting aside a space for thanking.
Years later in a well-known study, Hyland (2003) analyzed a corpus of
240 M.A. and Ph.D. dissertations from different fields of studies by
nonnative English speaking students at five universities from Hong Kong.
The corpora were later analyzed and coded through a concordance program
named MonoConc Pro, along with interviews with two M.A. and Ph.D.
students from each discipline. Hyland divided the main results of his study
into two major sections of “participants acknowledged (classified as:
academic, friends, family, organizations, and others) “Activities
acknowledged (classified as academic, access, mora, other)”. The results of
the study indicated that students of all fields of studies, whether M.A. or
Ph.D., acknowledged the significance of gratitude and thanking, with some
degrees of more appreciation among students of hard sciences.
In addition, Salager-Meyer, et al. (2011) focused on the spread and
existence of acknowledgments in research papers published in the discipline
of medicine. Their corpus originated from five different countries, namely,
Spain, France, Venezuela, UK and also USA, covering a time period of
years between1950 to 2010. Their study was conducted with an eye to the
different generic features of three selected genres: research papers, reviews
and case reports. Eighteen papers from two medical journals for each
category, i.e. an overall number of 54 papers, was selected and analyzed.
In one of the most recent studies, Rattan (2014) examined the generic
structure of acknowledgements (along with their frequency distribution,
types, and acknowledgements per article) which appeared in the DESIDOC
THE GENERIC STRUCTURE OF ACKNOWLEDGMENTS …
5
Journal of Library & Information Technology (DJLIT) between the years
1998 to 2013. The texts were analyzed using the typologies proposed by
previous researchers (Cronin, 1995; Koley & Sen, 2013; Tiew & Sen, 2002).
The results indicated that the practice of acknowledgements was not that
much widespread in the aforementioned journal as only 9.04% of the
research studies included acknowledgements. Nevertheless, the highest
number of acknowledgements was related to “Peer interactive
communication support” (29.16 %), followed by “Moral support” (26.04%),
“Unclassifiable” (13.55 %).
Nevertheless, regarding the studies focusing on Persian dissertation
acknowledgments, although some studies have focused on Persian
dissertation acknowledgments, to the best of the researchers’ knowledge no
study has ever been considerably specific and meticulous regarding the
moves. Previous studies either examined a small corpus, fewer than a
hundred dissertations (e.g. Jalilifar & Mohammadi, 2014; Lasaky, 2011), or
mainly relied on previous established frameworks (e.g. pattern proposed by
Hyland, 2004) and tried to configure matches and mismatched (e.g. Lasaky,
2011; Mohammadi, 2013).
It is as well noteworthy that the entire above-mentioned studies
investigated the acknowledgment sections of a limited set of disciplines.
They at most focused on five or six fields of studies in general. What
remain to be added to this list is a more comprehensive analysis of the
Persian dissertation acknowledgments in a much wider scope regarding the
disciplines, along with a more detailed, shrewd, and vigilant attention to
their very generic framework and schematic moves and sub-moves.
Moreover, a second focus of this study, neglected in previous ones, would
be examining discrepancies in hard science and soft science disciplines.
Therefore, in response to the mentioned niche in the literature, the following
research questions were formulated to guide the study:
(1) What generic structure do Iranian Persian dissertation
acknowledgments from soft science and hard science disciplines adhere to?
(2) Is there any significant difference in the complexity of dissertation
acknowledgments from soft science and hard science disciplines?
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3. Method
3.1 Corpus and procedure
Care was taken to collect a wide range and highly representative sample of
acknowledgements from soft and hard science disciplines. The corpus for
the present study was brought together from the two most prominent
universities of Iran, namely “University of Tehran (UT)” and “Sharif
University of Technology (SUT)”.
Table 2. Spread of texts over years
Overall, sixteen disciplines were selected, half from soft science
disciplines and half from hard science. The soft science disciplines
constitute: “Accounting (UT)”, “Geography (UT)”, “Physical Education
(UT)”, “History (UT)”, “Art (UT)”, “Law (UT)”, “Management (SUT)”,
and “Theology (UT)”. In addition, the eight disciplines from hard sciences
included: “Electronic Engineering (SUT)”, “Computer Engineering (SUT)”,
“Petroleum Engineering (SUT)”, “Agriculture Engineering (UT)”,
“Aerospace Studies (SUT)”, “Physics (SUT)”, “Energy Engineering
(SUT)”, and “Materials Engineering (SUT)”. Table 3 depicts the number of
texts taken from each field of study. In addition, the frequency of
dissertation acknowledgments from different year spans is depicted in Table
2. As illustrated the corpus came from years between 1981 and 2014. Each
dissertation acknowledgment was analyzed individually through recursive
readings and figuring out a detailed scheme of the steps used by the writers.
The point is that in the entire dissertations observed, the type of help
received and the reason for thanking was clearly evident and that made the
THE GENERIC STRUCTURE OF ACKNOWLEDGMENTS …
7
steps explicit. However, Hyland’s (2004) move structures of dissertation
acknowledgments was used as a basic model to guide the study. Moreover,
in order to make sure of the inter-coder reliability, some samples of texts
were also coded by a second rater.
Table 3. Acknowledgment corpus in hard and soft sciences
4. Results and Discussion
4.1 The generic structure of acknowledgments
The thorough analysis of the acknowledgments indicated that the Iranian
MA and PhD students follow a basic three-tier procedure in order to allocate
credit and thank to all individuals who by some means made a contribution
to their research project. The acknowledgments observed were classified
into three broad categories, each dividing into some more sub-steps shown
in Table 4. The point is that, these moves or sub-steps were seen in most of
the acknowledgments. However, only in three cases the texts included all
moves. As the figure illustrates, the three general moves include: 1) Framing
move, 2) Thanking move, and 3) Closing move.
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Table 4. The move structure of Persian dissertation acknowledgments
A. Framing move
This beginning section may seem rather marginal and insignificant to the
main body of acknowledgments. However, it seems that this move functions
as setting the scene for the next section of thanking to come forth. It
resembled a place to show one’s personal beliefs, attitudes, and views. Like
the whole acknowledgment texts, this section may also be a reflection of
social and cultural backgrounds of the writer in their language choice
(Hatipoğlu, 2007). One’s social, intellectual, and cultural background may
well play a leading role not only in the type of language one would choose
(e.g. syntactic structures, lexicon, & sentence formations), but also would
affect one’s priorities and norms in representing one’s attitudes and beliefs.
It seems that in this move graduates tried to demonstrate their focal beliefs
in life. They craved to declare my dissertation is not the sole significant
obsession in my life and that I still have several more vital things to be
THE GENERIC STRUCTURE OF ACKNOWLEDGMENTS …
9
presented first. In the following section, each sub unit in this move will be
discussed in detail.
A-1. In the name of God. It is argued that research is “firmly
embedded within its discourse community” (Giannoni, 2002, p. 9). In the
same lines, the undeniable influence of religious norms is evident in this
sub-step. The corpus in this study was collected from an Islamic society and
in this culture people strongly believe that by starting each activity with the
name of God, they would surely attain better results and achieve success.
This sub-step occurred in 5.76% (Table 4) of case. However, the point
is that this belief in beginning tasks by the name of god may have different
manifestations and can be illustrated in various ways. The most evident
manifestation goes back to the main thanking move of the
acknowledgments. The students may have not started the actual
acknowledgment with an expression like “In the Name of God”, but in the
other main or sub sections of their acknowledgement they would approve
their gratitude and thankfulness to God for all his help and assistance. That
may in fact be the reason for not observing this move in its explicit form
throughout all the acknowledgments.
A-2. Title. In the majority of (76.54%) dissertation acknowledgments
observed, writers preferred to opt for a title for their acknowledgment page.
The titles evidently indicated the foremost intentions of the page and the
main considerations and mind obsessions of the writer. They were all
synonymous Persian words meaning acknowledging and thanking, namely
“Sepagozari”, “Taghdir”, “Taghdir va sepas”, “Tashakkor va ghadrdani”.
The titles were placed either in the right margin (as in Persian we write from
right to left!) or in the middle of the page over the main text of
acknowledgment. This step is regarded as particular to Persian
acknowledgments. To the best of researchers’ knowledge, no other study in
any language has ever reported the existence of such step.
A-3. Dedication. In the next stage, writers had a chance to escape the
restrictions of academic writing policies and take a more informal and kind
language to show their appreciation to their beloved ones. 61.82% of
graduates from different fields of studies (46.48% hard science and 77.73%
soft science) mostly used a very nice literary language when dedicating their
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dissertation and even sometimes used a different font or color to emphasize
this section. They even occasionally underlined the ones they dedicated their
dissertation to in order to emphasize more on their significance in their life
and career.
Parallel to our study, in 46% of cases, Chinese students in the study
done by Yang (2012) were prone to dedicating the thesis to their favoured
ones. Hyland (2004) also reported that 4% of acknowledgments by hard and
soft science students were allotted to dedication.
An interesting point observed in this sub-step, which seems to be
exclusive to Iranians, is their own downgrading of the whole work.
Surprisingly, in some cases, the writer stated that this work may not be that
worthy to be dedicated. They continued they would like to dedicate their
dissertation if it’s worthy and valuable. In fact, in several cases the Persian
writers downgraded the work in order to show “Shekasteh-nafsi” (i.e.,
modesty in English; the term introduced by Sharifian, 2005). Being humble
is in fact a sign of politeness in Iranian culture and people try to show their
modesty in different ways, one of which is relegating their own work, even
when they know their work is valuable and precious.
This is indeed very analogous to another somewhat complex cultural
schema particular to Iranians, namely “Taarof” (Rezanejad & Rezaei, 2013).
We Iranians try to observe courtesy, politeness, civility, and respect to social
positions through both social behaviors of “Taarof” and “Shekasteh-nafsi”.
In the same lines, Alemi, Eslami, and Rezanejad (2014) also indicated that
Iranian EFL students observed the principles of “Taarof” and “Shekastehnafsi” while responding to compliments. They tended to reject compliments
or accept them with hesitation in order to be polite, respectful, and humble.
Furthermore, what enthralled the researchers regarding this step was the
position of dedications in dissertation acknowledgments and also their
extent. With regard to the first factor, it appears that in almost all previous
studies (e.g. Hyland, 2004; Yang, 2012a), it was observed that this sub-step
is placed in the very last section of the acknowledgment. However, in the
case of Iranian Persian acknowledgments it could be observed that in more
than 96.43% of cases, writers preferred to place this sub-step at the
beginning of their acknowledgment page or in a separate page previous to
THE GENERIC STRUCTURE OF ACKNOWLEDGMENTS …
11
the main acknowledgment page (Figure. 7). They first preferred to offer
their work to their beloved ones (e.g. God, religious figures, family
members, professors, or friends) and then show their gratitude and
thankfulness to different people who were involved in their research project
in some direct or indirect ways. Though in many cases those to whom the
dissertation was dedicated to were also thanked again during the thanking
move. Merely in eighteen cases (3.57%) of the dissertations, the dedication
section was placed at the end of the acknowledgment page.
Pertaining to the second point, i.e. the extent of dedication step, it was
observed that the dedication entailed either broad or specific categories.
They were either dedicated to a very broad concept such as the whole world
or society or dedicated to a very small group such as a sister or an old friend.
The dissertations were dedicated to different ones namely, God, spiritual and
religious figures, faculty members, parents and siblings, and also friends. In
some cases the writers insisted much on the inclusion of all their loved ones
in the dedication section which resulted in too long and wordy texts,
neglecting the other moves and steps of writing a standard
acknowledgement. This attitude was even evident in the title they selected
for their acknowledgment page. Such students preferred titles such as:
Dedication and Thanking [Taghdim va Tashakkor] or Gratitude and
Dedication [Sepasgozari va ehda].
A-4. Literary/Qur’anic verse. In 12.12% of dissertations writers
frequently mentioned a short poem, a famous quote, or as in many cases a
short verse from Quran. What needs to be mentioned is that the main theme
of all these pieces of writings was thanking and gratitude. In nearly half of
such cases, writers tried to show their belief in a famous Prophetic saying.
According to a famous saying by Prophet Mohammed, we Muslims are
highly encouraged to express thank and gratitude to others. The saying is as
follows:
"He who does not thank people, would not thank Allah"
In several cases, the students from different fields of studies referred to
this saying and tried to legitimize their wordings through referring to this
prophetic saying. Once more the obvious and noticeable role of culture,
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The Journal of Teaching Language Skills, 7(4), Winter 2016
social norms and values, and religious principles was conspicuous in this
step.
In the same lines with our study, Al-Ali (2010) also found a similar
trend in the opening section of Jordanian Arab PhD dissertations. That is to
say, 8% of the Arab dissertations started with a Qur’anic verse followed by a
5% utilization of Prophetic sayings. A point worth mentioning is that both
groups of students in these two studies enjoy the same religion (i.e. Islam)
and this may be the main rationale for such resemblance.
A-5. Reflection. Acknowledgments and gratitudes shape a
“metatextual, reflective commentary” on the whole research which
somehow aim at “retracing its development and pointing to the author’s
personal history” (Giannoni, 2002, p. 8). In this sub-step the writers had a
chance to contemplate on their dissertation writing experience, the whole
Masters or doctoral educational period, and even in some cases their whole
educational moments since primary school. It sounds as if the writers tended
to share some of the experiences they encountered while writing the
dissertation in order to implicitly let the readers see and feel the
complexities of writing a dissertation and the challenges they had to
overcome. This step occurred in 16.5% of the observed acknowledgments.
In accordance with our study, Yang’s (2012a) study indicated that 26%
of doctoral Chinese students were allocated to this step. Likewise, this step
occurred in more than half (58.3%) of the sixty MA thesis acknowledgments
observed by Afful and Mwinlaaru (2012), in which students mostly
emphasized on the significance of assistance of other people in decreasing
the stress of writing a dissertation. Moreover, in the study by Karakas
(2010), it was reported that while only 6% of native Turkish students used
this move in their acknowledgments, native American students used the
same step in 32% of their acknowledgments (i.e. six times more than
Turkish students).
Nevertheless, our findings in this section are still in contrast with
Lasaky (2011) who denied the existence of any such step among Persian
ELT students writing English acknowledgments. This contrast might have
originated from the discrepancies in the suggested format of dissertations
presented to the students by the universities. Different universities may
THE GENERIC STRUCTURE OF ACKNOWLEDGMENTS …
13
follow different procedures and students mostly follow them exactly.
Moreover, the role of imitation cannot be denied. Observing a zero percent
occurrence of a step may be originated from the fact that usually students try
to imitate other dissertations provided by libraries.
A-6. Presenting participants and emphasizing necessity of thanking.
This step was typically not much extended, frequently one or two short
sentences. Although not present in all texts, this sub unit enjoyed a nonnegligible nature as it occurred in more than half (52.28%) of the whole
corpus. This step is the last step in the framing move and seems to be
functioning as a bridge between this move and the next move of thanking. In
this step writers not only presented and introduced the ones to be thanked,
but also explicitly emphasized on the inevitability of thanking those to be
thanked. Hyland’s (2004) study was also in line with our results. He also
reported a 28% occurrence of this step in 240 dissertations. In the same
lines, 58% of doctoral dissertation by Chinese students in Yang’s (2012a)
study was allotted to this step by presenting participants to be thanked in the
acknowledgment.
B. Thanking move
According to Gesuato (2004, p. 311) “the semantic richness of the
acknowledgments (which clusters relevant concepts around each
benefactor’s act of kindness) shows that the writer remembers, values, and
likes what he has received and who he has received it from”. In order to
have a better analysis of the thanking made by students, this study made an
effort to have a new contribution and so focused on two distinct aspects in
the thanking move namely, the person thanked and the reason for thanking.
Each of these two sub-steps was further classified into some more sub-units.
Our overall investigations of Persian dissertations largely indicated that
university students insisted on thanking five focal groups for four key
reasons.
B-1. Who to be thanked?
B-1-1. Thanking Allah (God). Dissertation acknowledgment
explorations revealed that 40.35% of the writers (41.79% of hard science
and 38.86% of soft science students) employed this step. It, reflecting
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The Journal of Teaching Language Skills, 7(4), Winter 2016
Muslim’s attitude toward their religious beliefs and conceptions, allowed the
writers to demonstrate their gratitude for the spiritual support and aid they
received from God in accomplishing their dissertation. As the texts were
collected form a predominantly Muslim society (though with people from
different ethnic groups) and with an eye to the interdependence of religious
laws and personal and social life, most of the writers considered God as their
source of inspiration without whom they would have never finished the
thesis. This sub-step may not be the most dominant one in this move, but
whenever it occurred in the gratitude, it was placed at the beginning of the
list of those to be thanked.
Castleton (2006) believes praising and thanking God occurs a lot in
academic texts because of its high frequency in other daily activities in the
community. The recurrent practice of these expressions “derives from
reflections on and responses to Allah’s influence over every aspect of human
life” (p.76). He further continues that “as a direct result of the deep
connection they feel to their religion and creator, native Arabic speaking
Muslims look at the events of daily life in terms of God's relationship to that
event or interaction” (p.77). Allah is considered to be “the source of
inspiration, health, patience, perseverance and strength. According to the
Qur’anic prescriptions, thanking and praising Allah for his munificence
result in increasing the graces of Allah and getting very close to His mercy.”
(Al-Ali, 2010, p. 20).
This finding is in line with Al-Ali (2010) who also observed this substep in 70% of the dissertation acknowledgement written by Jordanian Arab
students. Hyland (2004) also reported some references to God and his moral
support among graduate’s gratitude. Moreover, in the study by Afful and
Mwinlaaru (2012), 25% of MA students in three sub-disciplines of
Education at Ghana University thanked God in the main thanking move of
their thesis acknowledgments. The following excerpt may give a clearer
picture of this sub-step:
B-1-2. Thanking committee members. Through acknowledgments,
hidden incentives are rested for the writers “in terms of prestige (when the
acknowledgees are prominent scholars or organizations) and celebrity (since
modern scholarship is per se collaborative)” (Giannoni, 2002, p. 8). Persian
THE GENERIC STRUCTURE OF ACKNOWLEDGMENTS …
15
master’s and doctoral students didn’t miss this boat and insisted on thanking
their professors, advisors, supervisors, and even examiners and in some
cases dean of the faculties and principals at the university in the best
imaginable way in this sub-step.
Thanking committee members enjoyed the highest percentage of
occurrence in the acknowledgments. Overall, 95.62% of the
acknowledgments (99.21% of hard science and 91.90% of soft science
students) enclosed thanking committee members mainly for academic
support (74.90%). This finding is in line with some previous studies
(Hyland, 2004; Cheng, 2012) who also reported the highly concurrent nature
of this step in dissertation acknowledgments. Graduate students attempt to
achieve credit, create good impression, pay off their intellectual debts, and
somehow pave the way for their future accomplishments through being
polite and naming all their professors and senior professionals in the
acknowledgment page.
Moreover, these committee members are in fact those who are going to
be involved in the marking procedure. Students may assume thanking their
advisor, supervisor, and even examiners may have an impact on the future
mark assigned to their dissertation. This assumption was proved in the study
done by Hyland (2004). In the same vein, studies on Chinese students by
Cheng (2012) also confirm our findings. They also found that advisors and
supervisors were the most acknowledged ones in dissertations. Nonetheless,
Yang’s (2012) results were not in tandem with our findings. Surprisingly,
advisors and supervisors in his study were among the least thanked people.
Only 10.32% of the 120 PhD dissertation acknowledgements written by
native Taiwanese students included thanking advisors.
An interesting point observed in this step relates to the specific
viewpoint held by Iranian students toward their professors. It may seem that
an advisor’s first and foremost responsibility is providing the supervisees
with guidelines and help. This is to some extent similar to the current views
in western academic culture, in which “advisors are regarded as joint
partners rather than authorities” (Yang, 2012). However, Persian graduate
students considered this a very big favor from their professors and tried to be
grateful to them in the best possible way like by calling them in their full
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The Journal of Teaching Language Skills, 7(4), Winter 2016
name with all their titles (e.g. Doctor, Professor, Engineer, Ayatollah, Mr.,
and Mrs.) in a very respectful way. This trend may be attributable to the
very specific cultural and religious beliefs of Iranians which is to a great
extent influenced by Arabic culture. There is a very well-known saying by
Imam Ali in Islamic culture which says: “I would always be enslaved by one
who has taught me one word”. This saying is very famous in Iran and used a
lot in school books or even by ordinary people.
B-1-3. Thanking non-committee members. This sub-move was in some
way or another considered to be a place for the students to show a warm,
cordial, and heartfelt gratitude to their relational partners namely father,
mother, siblings, wife/husband, children, and even relatives. Hyland and Tse
(2004, p. 269) believe that thanking parents and family members is a sign of
“intrinsic commitment” done by the writers. Overall, 41.15% of the students
tried to be polite and show curtsy and their affection and love to their
beloved ones through some praises, compliments, and also explicitly
mentioning all their help and support throughout the long and burdensome
process of completing their dissertation.
Graduate students thanked their family for tolerating all the difficulty
and also all their encouragements. Interestingly in some cases, even parents
were thanked before advisors and supervisors (Figure 17). When thanking
family, parents came first. Fathers and mothers, whether alive or dead, were
the first ones to be thanked. This was evident in virtually all dissertations
observed.
Such finding can be justified by reference to the Iranian’s social,
cultural, and religious norms and principles coming from Holy Quran which
have been injected into students’ minds since their very beginning formal
educations at schools. Islam believes that parents are to be treated in the best
possible way at all times. Here is an excerpt pointing the belief from Holy
Quran:
“Thy Lord hath decreed that ye worship none but Him, and ye be kind to
your parents.” (Qur'an, 17. V. 23)
B-1-4. Organizations. Organizations were the next to be thanked in
Persian acknowledgments (18.88%). Ministries, institutes, schools,
universities, libraries, or laboratories can for sure be of great help to the
THE GENERIC STRUCTURE OF ACKNOWLEDGMENTS …
17
graduate students in perusing the accomplishment of the dissertation.
Nevertheless, they cannot be that much named or appreciated in the main
body of the research and still the students feel so much indebted that in some
cases they admitted without their cooperation their research would not have
been possible in the first place. Students also tried to be very specific in
many cases by giving the exact names of the heads and organizers. 3.96% of
hard science (nearly twofold) and 1.78% of soft science students applied this
step, which sound logical due to the nature of the specific fields of studies.
B-1-5. Friends. Friends, roommates, colleagues, and classmates were
another group to be thanked. 26.64% of acknowledgments contained this
sub-step. The list mostly included the friends and classmates at the graduate
course. But in some cases even more were to be appreciated. Friends were
like hidden angels supporting the dissertation writer through various
procedures. They were cordial, understood the writer, had experienced
similar trends, and were cooperative through typing, data collections, and
even in some cases data analysis.
B-2. What to be thanked for?
B-2-1. Academic support. 81.25% of hard science and 68.42% of soft
science acknowledgments were dedicated to thank for the academic support
provided by the academia, mainly through naming senior professors.
Though not exclusively, but this step was to a large extent allocated to
thanking the advisor and supervisors. Overall, in 74.95% of
acknowledgments, advisors were thanked for accepting the guidance of the
dissertation, introducing novel topics in the field to be worked on, as well as
providing the students with feedback, guidelines, and critical comments on
the dissertation.
Our finding is in harmony with Hyland (2004) who also asserted the
acknowledgment of senior professionals was far more prevalent in the PhD
texts in the sciences and engineering where, because of increasing
specialization of both research and funding, the mentoring tradition seems
stronger. Here, winning the protection and goodwill of established figures is
often vital for gaining post-doctoral grants, a lab to work in, or a teaching
position.
18
The Journal of Teaching Language Skills, 7(4), Winter 2016
Similarly, thanking the academia for academic support was more
apparent among the hard science students of the present study. Moreover,
Yang’s (2012) study demonstrated 100% occurrence of thanking for
academic support among 120 Chinese doctoral students.
B-2-2. Moral support. Demonstration of commitments to family and
friends was the next most frequent concern of the Persian students. In this
step students tried to offer their gratitude to different people, though mostly
family members, for their patience, understanding, encouragements,
psychological and spiritual support, and all their kindness. Overall, 57.25%
of acknowledgments (nearly half shared between hard and soft science
disciplines) contained thanking for moral support.
Graduate students, especially PhD graduates, seemed so desperate in
the final stages of writing their dissertation and were seeking an opportunity
to thank all their beloved ones for tolerating the different self they were
experiencing through writing the dissertation. They thanked family members
for providing them with a silent atmosphere to be able to concentrate and
overcome the difficulties of the work and that way felt indebted to them.
Nevertheless, such thanking was not exclusively dedicated to family
members. In many cases even advisors and supervisors were thanked for
their moral support and encouragements throughout the accomplishment of
the research project.
In the same lines, 61% of dissertations analyzed by Al-Ali (2010) also
showed the existence of moral support in the gratitude. Similarly, in the
study by Tiew and Sen (2002), it was observed that 13% of
acknowledgments were allocated to thanking for moral support.
Accordingly, the study by Rattan (2014) revealed that 26.04% of journal
article acknowledgments thanked for moral support. In addition, all (100%)
of Chinese students in Yang’s (2012) study thanked their acknowledgees for
their moral support.
B-2-3. Technical support. Throughout the acknowledgments, 17.69%
of graduate students needed to also thank specific people or institutes for
providing some technical support, i.e. access to data bases, along with
provision of necessary facilities and equipment. This thanking could also be
as specific as thanking a friend or a family member for typing or
THE GENERIC STRUCTURE OF ACKNOWLEDGMENTS …
19
proofreading the dissertation or even assisting statistical analyses.
Interestingly such people were called for a little bit more informally through
some more informal titles. They were sometimes called as “brothers” or
“sisters” who came forth to help the writer.
It is worth noting that this finding does not seem to be in agreement
with previous ones which reported a greater involvement of this step. For
instance, Al-Ali (2010) reported the occurrence of this step in 62% of Arab
doctoral dissertations. Moreover, Hyland (2004) also reported that thanking
for resources was done by 66% of master’s and doctoral students. Similarly,
99% of dissertation acknowledgements by soft and hard science students in
Yang’s (2012a) study thanked for the provision of resources.
B-2-4. Financial support. As depicted in Table 4, merely 0.79% of the
acknowledgments based their thanks on provision of monetary support.
Though a very little number, the percentage was a little bit higher in hard
science (1.17%) than the soft science (0.40%) disciplines. This might in fact
be attributable to the very different nature of the two groups, as research
studies done in the domain of hard science may require some equipment and
facilities. The results are contrasting Tiew and Sen’s (2002) and Rattan’s
(2014) findings who reported 12% and 5.21% of acknowledgments,
respectively, were concerned about thanking for financial support. Similarly
66% of acknowledgments in Hyland’s (2004) study were allotted to this
step.
C. Closing move
C-1. Invoke a blessing/making a wish. In 22.66% of the
acknowledgments, a different step to thank the acknowledgees was
observed. In such cases, all attention was turned to Allah and his almighty
power in invoking blessing and happiness to the ones to be thanked. This
step could be considered as reinforcement of the students’ religious
affiliation and their belief in God and his powers. As a sign of being
thankful and grateful, the acknowledgers asked the acknowledgees’ health,
success, and prosperity from God. Moreover, some acknowledgers were apt
to make a wish either regarding the acknowledgees or the fulfillment of the
major aims of the dissertation in the context of the society.
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The Journal of Teaching Language Skills, 7(4), Winter 2016
C-2. Offering an apology. From among the 503 dissertation
acknowledgments inspected, a new step was discovered particular to Persian
students. To the best of researchers’ knowledge, no other study on the
generic structure of dissertation acknowledgments has ever reported this
step, named “offering an apology”. In 2.18% of Persian acknowledgments
(2.73% of hard science students and 1.61% of soft science students), writers
felt it is a must to apologize their family members for all troubles they
experienced during the years of their studies and specifically writing the
dissertation. These apologies were more conspicuous (nearly twofold)
among hard science students as well as in PhD degrees. This may have been
originated from the very different nature of the two fields. For sure, students
in hard science disciplines experience longer periods working on their
dissertations due to nature of their discipline.
Besides, this step was more evident and cordial in cases where the
writers were fathers or mothers, especially in doctoral degrees. Father and
mother post-graduate students were inclined to principally thank their
children, in some cases babies as little as a year, for being patient and in
some way or another apologized for not dedicating all their time and energy
to them. Moreover, the observed cases indicated that these apologies were
more frequent among women than male students. Seemingly, these writers
were mothers considering their main duty being a mother and taking care of
their babies. They were remorseful they couldn’t do this responsibility in the
best possible way and were seeking a chance to apologize their family,
especially children and husband.
C-3. Accepting responsibility. As depicted in Table 4, only a handful of
Persian students observed this step. Merely 0.39% of the writers
demonstrated their inclination to accept the responsibility of any probable
mistake and drawback in the thesis. To be more specific, this step was solely
observed in two dissertation acknowledgments in the field of management,
equally shared by male and female students. Obviously, the very nature of
the courses these students undergo may have influenced their basic
foundational viewpoint and attitude toward their deeds. Management
students are excessively reminded of the probable outcomes of a right or
THE GENERIC STRUCTURE OF ACKNOWLEDGMENTS …
21
wrong decision and are implicitly or explicitly taught to be a good manager
by accepting responsibilities.
In the same lines, Lasaky (2011) also found that Iranian non-native
English students didn’t observe this move while writing PhD dissertation
acknowledgments. Of course this result concerns Persian students writing an
English acknowledgment. Furthermore, Yang (2012a) also found a zero
percentage for this step among doctoral Taiwanese Chinese students in hard
and soft sciences. The results concerning this step are nonetheless in tandem
with Hyland (2004) who reported a 7% occurrence of this step
C-4. Signature. In more than one tenth of cases (12.32%), Persian
students preferred to end the acknowledgments with their own full name
along with the exact date they finalized their dissertation acknowledgment
(Figure 27). It seems that through this signing off, the students were prone to
act politely, still in an academic manner. The resemblance of this step to
how we would finish a formal letter, may suggest that such writers
considered the genre of acknowledgment a formal one which requires a
formal style of writing. Interestingly, Al-Ali (2010) as well reported a 40%
occurrence of something like a signature at the end of the acknowledgments.
Some of the Arab writers used to write their own name at the end as some
type of signing off and claiming the ownership of the dissertation.
To wrap up this section, Table 5 below depicts the frequency and percentage
of acknowledgments with each step in hard and soft science disciplines.
Table 5. Acknowledgments in Hard and Soft
science
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The Journal of Teaching Language Skills, 7(4), Winter 2016
4.2 Complexity of dissertation acknowledgments
Previously, it was argued that the length of a particular text can be linked to
its actual complexity. That is to say, longer acknowledgments are perhaps
more complex, comprehensive, and elaborate (Gesuato, 2004). Moreover, it
is believed that through putting more effort and energy into writing a text,
authors of longer acknowledgments are about to prove how important an
acknowledgment is to them among the different sub-parts of a dissertation
(Hyland, 2004; Hyland & Tse, 2004). Such acknowledgments are replete
with various names and titles (e.g. parents, professors, colleagues, friends) to
be thanked for a diversity of reasons. Accordingly, number of words per text
in each discipline along with the average word frequency of that field is
presented in Table 6.
Table 6. Word frequency in different disciplines
However, the point is that the length of the acknowledgments may be
somewhat misleading. We couldn’t solely rely on the number of words in
order to decide over the complexity of the acknowledgments written by the
students. Therefore, in the next stage we decided to focus on the frequency
of the moves and steps used by the students in each group. The results
concerning this phase are depicted below in Table 7.
THE GENERIC STRUCTURE OF ACKNOWLEDGMENTS …
23
Table 7. The frequency of the moves and steps in each discipline
As can be seen, doctoral dissertations from the field of geography
enjoyed the most complex acknowledgments. The average frequency of
moves in this discipline was 9.4. Moreover, it was found that the least
complex dissertation acknowledgment was written by PhD students of
aerospace field of study with average frequency of 4 words. Furthermore,
the results depicted that by and large dissertation acknowledgments from
soft science disciplines were more complex than their counterparts in hard
science.
The findings of our study, in this section, corroborate some previous
studies. For instance, Giannoni’s (2002) study on acknowledgments found in
research articles also indicated that humanities students were prone to use
more complex forms of thanking than science students. In addition, the same
results concerning the complexity of acknowledgments were discovered by
Hyland and Tse (2004). They also asserted that soft science students were
more apt to write more complex gratitude than the hard science students.
Similarly, Yang (2012) illustrated that dissertation acknowledgments from
soft science disciplines tended to contain more moves and sub-steps than the
hard science acknowledgments.
In addition, we were interested to probe the existence of any significant
difference in the complexity of the investigated Persian dissertation
acknowledgments among hard and soft science students. To this aim the
statistical procedure of chi square was run. As depicted in Table 8, the
results indicated that there was a significant difference (X2=63.09, df (18),
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The Journal of Teaching Language Skills, 7(4), Winter 2016
p<.05) in the complexity of acknowledgments in hard and soft science
disciplines.
Table 8. Chi-square results
5. Conclusion and Implications
As graduate students, being aware of the specific conventions attributed to
generic structures in the academic community is one of the indisputable
necessities. The generic structure of the acknowledgements is of momentous
values since “it reveals how each component of the text contributes to the
overall communicative function of conveying gratitude and thankfulness”
(Al-Ali, 2010, p. 22). The main purpose of the present study was examining
the generis structure, i.e. the overall organization, of Iranian Persian
dissertation acknowledgments written by students at hard and soft science
disciplines in MA and doctoral levels. The results indicated that Persian
acknowledgments follow a three-tier procedure in order to thank their
acknowledgees. The steps were overall grouped in three macro levels of
“Framing move”, “Thanking move”, and “Closing move”, each embracing
some more sub-steps.
Moreover, our investigation revealed some situational and culturalspecific features in the generic, lexical, and structural components taken by
the Persian graduate students. Whereas some moves were just as prevalent
as other previous studies, there were also steps particular to the Persian
context. To mention some, it was observed that they were prone to
commence the very beginning of acknowledgments with “In the Name of
God”, set a “Title” for the page, and carry on with some “Qur’anic verse”,
along with placing “Dedication” in the introductory section. Persian writers
THE GENERIC STRUCTURE OF ACKNOWLEDGMENTS …
25
also followed their own particular arrangements and orders in thanking five
main groups for four chief reasons. In addition, in the closing section, they
were inclined to end with “Invoking a blessing” upon acknowledgees to
prove their genuine gratitude. Besides, some Persian students thought it was
imperative to “Offer an apology” to their adored ones for any inconvenience
due to their studies.
Further, lack of existence of some steps and moves (e.g. Move C-3) in
Persian acknowledgments is indeed really alarming. The point is that, the
existence of each move is to a great extent dependent on the educational
system of the country. For instance, the Iranian students were not willing to
thank any organization or university for providing resources of any kind
especially grants and financial support. Unfortunately only 0.23% of
graduate students thought it would be necessary to thank the academia for
financial support. The foremost motive of course goes back to a genuine
absence of such funding.
Appropriate selection of suitable language while thanking in the
academia can be of an undeniable significance in maintaining social
relationships. By nature, thanking and acknowledging is regarded a faceenhancing act. Nevertheless, through ignoring social and contextual factors,
personal elements, status, degree, role of power, and an improper use of
language, it can transform into a face-threatening act functioning vice versa
causing the hearer or reader get irritated or even offended.
That is why we are greatly concerned with raising awareness of Iranian
graduate students toward the significance of the dissertation
acknowledgment genre and encouraging them to compose more
comprehensive, well-organized, and better worded acknowledgments,
through which their very own identity will be manifested by their sincere
appreciation and thanking. Our main concern regards the necessity of a
uniform education for all the academia regarding the various genres and
generic conventions particular to the relevant discourse community. We
presume such dearth of enough information on generic conventions can be a
prodigious hamper for the students, scholars, and academics pursuing their
scholastic adventure toward efficacious academic communication.
26
The Journal of Teaching Language Skills, 7(4), Winter 2016
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