Embedding students’ academic writing development in early-career disciplinary lecturers’ practice
Journal article, 2023

This study proposes a theoretically grounded and resource-efficient triadic model with the aim of supporting early-career subject lecturers in learning how to understand discipline-specific academic writing and teach it to their students. The model constitutes a ‘bottom-up’ collaboration process among a subject lecturer, an English for Academic Purposes (EAP) lecturer, and an academic developer. Adopting a case study approach, qualitative data were collected at multiple points in the process and were analysed using both thematic and linguistic analysis. Results indicate that the collaboration's genre-based, dialogic and egalitarian nature enabled the subject lecturer to grow her understanding of students’ writing development. She acquired some metalanguage to conceptualise and articulate her expectations in terms of her students’ assignments and was able to co-create learning tasks. Our study contributes novel insights into debates around where and how students’ academic writing development should be delivered, and, importantly, early-career lecturers’ role in that delivery. Finally, we propose an extension of the EAP lecturers’ remit to encompass working with early-career subject lecturers in a developmental role.

EAP

early-career lecturer

dialogism

task

academic writing

professional development

Author

Lisa McGrath

Sheffield Hallam University

Helen Donaghue

Queen Margaret University Edinburgh

Raffaella Negretti

Chalmers, Communication and Learning in Science, Language and Communication

Journal of Academic Language and Learning

1835-5196 (ISSN) 1835-5196 (eISSN)

Vol. 17 1 134-151

Subject Categories

Didactics

Learning

General Language Studies and Linguistics

Learning and teaching

Pedagogical work

More information

Latest update

3/20/2024