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Keefe, Karin; Shi, Ling – TESL Canada Journal, 2017
Many universities have instituted intensive English for Academic Purposes (EAP) programs to support international students. This qualitative study used interviews to gain insights into the experiences of 8 non-native English speaking (NNES) students who completed an EAP program before they enrolled in disciplinary courses at a Canadian university.…
Descriptors: English for Academic Purposes, Second Language Learning, Second Language Instruction, Foreign Students
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Shi, Ling; Dong, Yanning – Canadian Journal of Higher Education, 2015
This study examines 143 graduate assignments across 12 faculties or schools in a Canadian university in order to identify types of writing tasks. Based on the descriptions provided by the instructors, we identified nine types of assignments, with scholarly essay being the most common, followed by summary and response, literature review, project,…
Descriptors: Graduate Students, Writing Assignments, Task Analysis, Foreign Countries
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Shi, Ling – Journal of Second Language Writing, 2012
The present study is based on interviews with 48 students and 27 instructors in a North American university and explores whether students and professors across faculties share the same views on the use of paraphrased, summarized, and translated texts in four examples of L2 student writing. Participants' comments centered on whether the paraphrases…
Descriptors: North Americans, English for Academic Purposes, Second Language Learning, Writing (Composition)
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Shi, Ling – Applied Linguistics, 2010
This article explores the citing behaviors of 16 undergraduates in a North American university. After completing a research paper for their disciplinary courses, each participating student was interviewed to identify in his/her writing words and ideas borrowed from source texts and to explain why and how the relevant texts were appropriated with…
Descriptors: Research Papers (Students), Writing Skills, Citations (References), Undergraduate Students
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Shi, Ling – Research in the Teaching of English, 2011
The present study is based on interviews of students (n = 48) and instructors (n = 27) from various disciplines in a North American research university and explores participants' comments on examples of some students' unacknowledged texts appropriated and drawn from published sources, classroom learning, or unidentified prior reading. Although…
Descriptors: Research Universities, College Students, Student Attitudes, Cultural Background
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Shi, Ling – TESL Canada Journal, 2009
Many universities in Mainland China hire native-speaking teachers of English annually to teach English writing. Having been trained in Western Europe or North America, these native-speaking teachers of English are on the front line of global education contact zones as they introduce their writing instruction in an English as a foreign language…
Descriptors: Global Education, Foreign Countries, Cultural Differences, English (Second Language)
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Shi, Ling – Canadian Modern Language Review, 2003
Reports on the writing and teaching experiences of nine Western-trained Chinese Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages (TESOL) professionals in China. Findings show that participants were all conscious of their biliterate/bicultural intellectual identity. Most participants were persistent in promoting a direct and linear English approach…
Descriptors: Chinese, English (Second Language), Foreign Countries, Language Teachers
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Shi, Ling – Language Awareness, 2006
This study examines interviews with 46 undergraduates to explore if participants with differing language and cultural backgrounds view plagiarism or textual appropriation primarily as a) a language problem because of a lack of words of one's own, or b) a cultural challenge as a result of either some first language (L1) cultural training to…
Descriptors: Plagiarism, English (Second Language), Undergraduate Students, Cultural Differences
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Shi, Ling – Written Communication, 2004
This study examines how first language and the type of writing task affect undergraduates' word usage from source readings in their English writing. Of 87 participating university undergraduates, 39 were native English speakers from a 1st-year writing course in a North American university, whereas 48 were 3rd-year Chinese students learning English…
Descriptors: English (Second Language), Native Speakers, Transfer of Training, Writing (Composition)
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Shi, Ling; Beckett, Gulbahar H. – TESL Canada Journal, 2002
Investigated the learning experiences of 23 Japanese students in a one-year academic exchange program in a Canadian university. Participants either wrote an opinion task or a summary task at the beginning of the program using preselected source texts. Analyses of interview data and comparisons of the original and revised texts indicate that…
Descriptors: College Students, English (Second Language), Foreign Countries, Foreign Students