Eapp Reviewer
Eapp Reviewer
Eapp Reviewer
Academic Writing
Purpose – Audience/Readers
Paraphrasing – what you understand/what you have understand
Grammar – no fancy word, direct to the point
Referencing – sources/stating resources to avoid plagiarism
Structure – the format, dependent to the purpose
ACADEMIC WRITING – refers to a style of expression that researchers use to define the intellectual boundaries of the
disciplines and their specific areas of expertise. Like specialist languages adopted in other professions, such as, law or
medicine, academic writing is designed to convey agreed meaning about complex ideas or concepts for a group of
scholarly experts
Academic text – is a kind of text that is commonly characterized with being formal, studied, researched, objective, exact,
direct, and has the ability to influence its readers.
Goal: to analyze, synthesize, and convey information and data in a prescribed manner.
Note: understanding what genre a text belongs to – in other words, what kind of text it is, matters most, whenyou begin
to understand different genres, you will be able to use this knowledge as a tool to approach new on unfamiliar academic
texts.
Textbooks
Shorter student texts: essays
Longer students texts: dissertations and theses
Research articles
Case studies
Reports
Structure – format
Language – more on formal
Content – concepts, theories
Reading strategies
1. Summarizing
2. Paraphrasing
3. Outlining
4. Quoting
SUMMARIZING
- Involve stating the main ideas and findings of a text into your own word.
- Presents a general overview, so is usually shorter than the original text.
- Includes and in-text citation that states the author’s last name and the publication year (Lee, 2016)
Own words
Main points with supporting details relevant to it
Restating conclusion by the author
Paragraph in length and much shorter
PARAPHRASING
OUTLINING
QUOTING
- Involves copying short sentences or passages from the original text word-for-word places copied wording within
“quotation marks”
- Includes an in-text-citation that states the author’s last name, the publication year, and the page or paragraph
number: (Lee, 2016,p.I)
Summarizing
Paraphrasing
Not copying the sentence and replacing or changing a few words to be different from the original (This is called
“patchwriting” and may trigger plagiarism-detecting programs)
You should paraphrase when the idea or point is more important than the actual words used
You should paraphrase when the words are complex but the point is simple
Paraphrasing should remain faithful to the meaning of the material
Outlining
- is the sentence that expresses the argument or claim of the writer on the topic. It is the main idea that controls
the flow and organization of information in the reading text.
- Informs readers of the content, the argument, and often the direction of a paper.
- Always and argument or claim/more details
- 1-2 sentences
Taken as a whole
Presents pros/cons
First – usually seen on the first paragraph
Support (supported by the details)
Catches interest – stimulates
Essential – very important in the paragraph
Example:
Thesis statement: The writer claims that flu is a costly disease; thus the writer argues that people should be prepared
for it.
Purpose of the thesis statement – informs the readers of the content, the argument, and often the direction of a paper
Things to consider:
Example:
1. Religion
2. Religion in public school curriculum
3. Religion as part of public school curriculum should be avoided
4. Religion as part of the school curriculum should be avoided because it can cause trouble.
5. Religion should not be part of the public school curriculum because it is a highly personal commitment and can
cause conflict with those who hold attentive beliefs