Authorial presence in L1 and L2 novice academic writing: Cross-linguistic and cross-cultural perspectives
Authorial presence in L1 and L2 novice academic writing: Cross-linguistic and cross-cultural perspectives
This study involved a corpus-based textual analysis of authorial presence markers in the argumentative essays of Turkish and American students. Utilising Hyland's interactional metadiscourse model (2005a) as the analysis framework, it aimed to compare the features of stance in L1 and L2 essays by Turkish learners of English with those in essays by monolingual American students. Also, discourse-based interviews with ten students contributed to an understanding of the use of markers in their L1 and L2 writing. The results indicate that the use of authorial presence markers in English essays by Turkish students was more similar to the use of these markers in writing by novice native English-speaking students than to the use of markers in the Turkish students' own writing in Turkish. The textual and interview data are discussed in relation to writing instruction, L1 writing conventions, and the institutional context.
192-202
Candarli, Duygu
4beb0fad-0664-499b-96aa-c2b9a33b4865
Bayyurt, Yasemin
d6b4ad58-fdff-4640-8eb8-5be10f46c00b
Martı, Leyla
e052698b-1213-4cea-b25e-98cd6c594b2a
December 2015
Candarli, Duygu
4beb0fad-0664-499b-96aa-c2b9a33b4865
Bayyurt, Yasemin
d6b4ad58-fdff-4640-8eb8-5be10f46c00b
Martı, Leyla
e052698b-1213-4cea-b25e-98cd6c594b2a
Candarli, Duygu, Bayyurt, Yasemin and Martı, Leyla
(2015)
Authorial presence in L1 and L2 novice academic writing: Cross-linguistic and cross-cultural perspectives.
Journal of English for Academic Purposes, 20, .
(doi:10.1016/j.jeap.2015.10.001).
Abstract
This study involved a corpus-based textual analysis of authorial presence markers in the argumentative essays of Turkish and American students. Utilising Hyland's interactional metadiscourse model (2005a) as the analysis framework, it aimed to compare the features of stance in L1 and L2 essays by Turkish learners of English with those in essays by monolingual American students. Also, discourse-based interviews with ten students contributed to an understanding of the use of markers in their L1 and L2 writing. The results indicate that the use of authorial presence markers in English essays by Turkish students was more similar to the use of these markers in writing by novice native English-speaking students than to the use of markers in the Turkish students' own writing in Turkish. The textual and interview data are discussed in relation to writing instruction, L1 writing conventions, and the institutional context.
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Accepted/In Press date: 7 October 2015
e-pub ahead of print date: 9 November 2015
Published date: December 2015
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 479303
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/479303
ISSN: 1475-1585
PURE UUID: 1d8bfa39-35d3-46de-8ebf-bc8e94d27590
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Date deposited: 20 Jul 2023 16:54
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:18
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Author:
Duygu Candarli
Author:
Yasemin Bayyurt
Author:
Leyla Martı
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