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    Reading and writing at university – raising genre awareness as initiation into a discourse community (Pre-published version)

    Citation

    O’Keeffe, A. and Binchy, J. (2003) “Reading and writing at university – raising genre awareness as initiation into a discourse community”. In G. Shiel and U. Ní Dhálaigh (Eds) Other Ways of Seeing: Diversity in Language and Literacy. Dublin: Reading Association of Ireland, pp. 220-228.
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    Book Chapter (127.5Kb)
    Date
    2003
    Author
    O'Keeffe, Anne
    Binchy, James
    Peer Reviewed
    Yes
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    O’Keeffe, A. and Binchy, J. (2003) “Reading and writing at university – raising genre awareness as initiation into a discourse community”. In G. Shiel and U. Ní Dhálaigh (Eds) Other Ways of Seeing: Diversity in Language and Literacy. Dublin: Reading Association of Ireland, pp. 220-228.
    Abstract
    The theoretical concepts of 'genre' and 'discourse community' will be drawn on in this paper to evolve a theoretical model that we hope to apply to the context of academic writing and to attainment at third level. Genre is a much talked about and less frequently used notion across a wide range of research and it has been criticised for offering a model that is not easy to operationalise (cf. Hasan 1992; McCarthy 2000). Latterly, the work of Swales has looked at genre in the context of 'discourse communities' offering a more socially-constructed basis for genre (see Swales 1988; 1990 and Askehave and Swales, 2001). For our purposes, the synthesis of the notions of genre and discourse communities offers a useful theoretical framework for our empirical research into the linguistic barriers posed by the academic institutional norms of the genre of writing required at university level. Essentially, we attempt to explore the discourse community of 'academia' within which, we propose, a certain linguistic level of competence is required in order to achieve high grades in essays and exams. We investigate the hypothesis that successful students are those who have intuited and mastered the generic norms of academic discourse and conversely, those who underachieve at third level are those who have not assimilated the norms in this discourse community. In this paper we will detail some of these 'norms' and, using student essay samples, we will explore the connection between essay grades and conformity to these norms.
    Keywords
    Reading
    Writing
    University
    Genre
    Awareness
    Discourse
    Language (ISO 639-3)
    eng
    Publisher
    Reading Association of Ireland
    License URI
    http://reading.ie/
    URI
    https://dspace.mic.ul.ie/handle/10395/2875
    ISBN
    9780952651147
    Collections
    • English Language and Literature (Peer-reviewed publications)

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