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Abdi, Reza; Saeedakhtar, Afsaneh; Teymouri, Simin – Language Teaching Research Quarterly, 2021
Writing for social engagement in an academic context indicates the authors' attitude towards the propositional content and the text's audience through metadiscursive maxims markers employment. This study tried to determine whether there are any differences in metadiscourse marking in research articles across different disciplines and different…
Descriptors: Journal Articles, Academic Language, Intellectual Disciplines, Audience Awareness
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Gouvea, Julia; Appleby, Lara; Fu, Liren; Wagh, Aditi – CBE - Life Sciences Education, 2022
Writing a lab report can be an opportunity for students to engage in scientific thinking. Yet students' lab reports often do not exhibit evidence of such engagement. Students' writing can appear focused on "filling in" required components and reporting on predetermined conclusions. We conducted a design experiment in an introductory…
Descriptors: Scientific and Technical Information, Persuasive Discourse, Reports, Science Laboratories
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Pereira, Andrew – Pedagogies: An International Journal, 2018
This paper explores how a multimodal argument might take shape. Looking specifically at how students might conceive of a multimodal argument through their own digital literacy practices in design, I combine the theories of Richard Lanham's rules of attention economy with Kress and van Leeuwen'svisual grammar to investigate the rhetorical…
Descriptors: Persuasive Discourse, Multiple Literacies, Two Year College Students, Foreign Countries
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Young, Debra Dimond; Morgan, Rachel – Composition Studies, 2020
In this study, we examine the use of community-engaged writing pedagogy and the authentic, contextualized writing projects it creates to determine if students better understand the concept of audience and incorporate that foundational knowledge into their writing process. Thematic analysis of student reflections and interviews found students view…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Service Learning, Critical Thinking, Community Organizations
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Blackburne, Brian D.; Nardone, Carroll Ferguson – Journal of Technical Writing and Communication, 2018
This research explores a presumed link between today's use of digital media and an ever-increasing lack of rhetorical awareness in students. Specifically, the study pilots a method for measuring rhetorical awareness through students' e-mail transactions with faculty in technical writing service courses, questioning whether rhetorical awareness has…
Descriptors: College Students, Electronic Mail, Social Media, Rhetoric
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Schieber, Danica L. – Business and Professional Communication Quarterly, 2016
Much research shows that students do not transfer learning well from one class to the next. This study was designed to investigate if students were transferring rhetorical strategies from their disciplinary courses to advanced writing courses. The findings suggest that business majors not only transferred rhetorical knowledge from their other…
Descriptors: Transfer of Training, Writing Instruction, Advanced Courses, Rhetoric
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Propen, Amy D.; Schuster, Mary Lay – Written Communication, 2010
Through interviews with judges and victim advocates, courtroom observations, and rhetorical analyses of victims' reactions to proposed sentences, the authors examine the features that judges and advocates think make victims' arguments persuasive. The authors conclude that this genre, recently imposed upon the court, functions as a mediating device…
Descriptors: Victims of Crime, Civil Rights, Context Effect, Writing (Composition)
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Pope-Ruark, Rebecca – International Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning, 2011
Students are experts at sizing up instructors, but many do not extend this analysis to non-instructor audiences, which can reduce their effectiveness in new communication situations. Audience, therefore, is a crucial threshold concept not only in Rhetoric and Composition, but in any discipline that values communication skills. How can instructors…
Descriptors: Fundamental Concepts, Audience Awareness, Audience Analysis, Undergraduate Students
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Hyland, Ken – English for Specific Purposes, 2008
Despite his considerable influence on the development of ESP and all our professional lives, almost nothing has been written about John Swales' distinctive prose style. Based on a 340,000 word corpus comprising 14 single-authored papers and most chapters from his three main books, this paper sets out to identify the main features of this style.…
Descriptors: Applied Linguistics, Discourse Analysis, Writing (Composition), English for Special Purposes
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Katz, Susan M. – Journal of Business Communication, 1998
Offers a case study describing how the rhetorical expertise of a young woman (at the lowest professional level in a male-dominated bureaucratic organization) gave her the power to revise the processes by which her organization did its work, to rewrite the job descriptions of the managers within the organization, and to create a unique role for…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Case Studies, Communication Research, Higher Education
Beason, Larry – Composition Chronicle, 1995
A study of 10 freshman composition argumentative textbooks shows that there is a common core, grounded in but not dependent on classical rhetoric (Aristotelian rhetoric in particular). A cursory glance--which is all that many teachers can afford to give such books--might suggest they are all clones. But such is not the case. The authors forefront…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Freshman Composition, Higher Education, Persuasive Discourse
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Pelkowski, Stephanie G. – Composition Forum, 2000
Argues that writing teachers ultimately need to view their prompts rhetorically. Argues that writing teachers should consider carefully the role that students have as audiences, writing audience responses to teachers' texts through their essays. Argues that a rhetorical analysis of the prompt will help students criticize the cues of a real-world…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Higher Education, Rhetoric, Student Role
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Ceccarelli, Leah – Technical Communication Quarterly, 1994
Argues that, by identifying physicist Erwin Schrodinger's book "What is Life?" as inspirational community-forming discourse, it is possible to recognize the rhetorical artistry of his negotiation between two audiences. Notes that the book builds common ground, applies productive ambiguity at a key point of collision, and skillfully…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Communication Research, Content Analysis, Discourse Analysis
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Haswell, Richard H.; Briggs, Terri L.; Fay, Jennifer A.; Gillen, Norman K.; Harrill, Rob; Shupala, Andrew M.; Trevino, Sylvia S. – Written Communication, 1999
Replicates C. Haas and L. Flower's 1988 think-allowed reading study. Finds that, when reading a passage on a topic more familiar to first-year students, the undergraduates generated substantially more rhetorical comments than they did with the Haas and Flower passage. Cautions researchers and teachers to avoid hasty assumptions about underlying…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, College Freshmen, Context Effect, Graduate Students
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Wong, Albert T. Y. – System: An International Journal of Educational Technology and Applied Linguistics, 2005
This paper studies the composing strategies employed by four advanced L2 writers when they wrote in an academic setting and the rhetorical context of composing, i.e. their mental representations of the intended audience and of the rhetorical purpose for writing. Four student-teachers majoring in English and attending a postgraduate teacher…
Descriptors: Writing Strategies, Protocol Analysis, Preservice Teachers, Writing (Composition)
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