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==Professional writing unit== | ==Professional writing unit== |
Revision as of 01:41, 10 August 2019
IFLS 306: Academic English Writing (Spring 2019)
Kent Lee, IFLS, Korea University
Mon/Wed 10.30 - 11.45am (3 hours/week), Class location: 국제관 212 (International Studies Hall)
- Mailbox: 국제관 208A
- Office & office hours: 국제관 720, by appointment
Contents
- 1 Course description
- 2 Weekly materials & assignments
- 3 Citation systems
- 4 Week 8: Midterm
- 5 Genre analysis
- 6 Discourse & style issues
- 7 Professional writing unit
- 8 Major assignments (summary)
- 9 Pedagogy (ideas for teachers or tutors)
- 10 Notes and references
1 Course description
This course is designed mainly for juniors and seniors in social science and humanities fields (other majors are welcome, too). It will require you to write critically about your field of study, and thus entails at least a junior level knowledge of your field. The goals of the course are as follows:
- Improving your English writing skills; expressing yourselves better in academic English
- Learning the expectations, conventions (standards) and style of academic writing
This will include addressing common issues and problems that Korean writers of English have, such as essay structure, style, wording, and genre issues. We will also learn about the writing process, as we take a process and genre based approach to writing.
This course is equivalent in contents to ENGL 434, which I have previously taught.
1.1 Readings and materials
- There is no textbook for this course, but there is a course packet available from the 공문화사 print shop (the Academic English Writing Manual) [AEWM].
- You will need to bring academic / scholarly articles (research papers / essays) by researchers / scholars in your field of study, for some of our class activities and assignments.
- Other handouts and materials will be provided on this website, or by email.
2 Weekly materials & assignments
Click on the 'Expand' applet on the right to see or collapse past assignments and materials.
Weekly materials and assignments are below; you may need to click the 'Expand' link to the right.
2.1 Weeks 1-2: Writing process
- Read AEWM ch. 1 (Intro); read ch. 2 (writing process)
- Google Form #1: Fill out this form of basic information about yourself, and submit it. This counts as a minor grade. (The form works, though it won't send you a confirmation.) The link will have been sent to you by email from the Blackboard system.
- Google Form #2: Fill out this form to assess your writing strategies. Your results will be tallied and emailed back to you afterwards. The link will have been sent to you by email from the Blackboard system.
- Writing process paper (see below)
2.1.1 Writing process & strategies
For this paper, you are to introspect on your your own writing process and strategies when you do writing assignments. Reflect on and evaluate your writing process, strategies, motivation, and difficulties. This is about what you actually do, not what you think you should do. Your paper should address some of the following questions.
- How effective are your writing methods and writing process, e.g., brainstorming, drafting, and revision?
- How similar / different your writing process is for different kinds of projects or courses, or for English versus Korean assignments?
- What problems do you have with writing, and how do you / can you overcome them? (E.g., motivational problems, writer's block, procrastination...)
- What motives and strategies influence your writing? (Refer to the writing strategies inventory and Google Form #2). How effective are your writing strategies?
- How confident do you feel about your writing abilities, English abilities, and/or your ability to improve in these areas?
See also the questions in the book. The focus of this assignment is mainly the contents, so don't worry too much about minor grammatical or mechanical errors (spelling, punctuation, etc.). Since this is a reflective / self-evaluative essay, this will be somewhat informal, including use of first-person.
Your write-up should be at least 2-3 pages (1.5x or double spaced; you can print double-sided pages to save trees), in hard copy format (printed out). See the Appendix for standard college paper format.
Due date: 20 March (Wednesday) in class
2.2 Weeks 2-3: Evaluating sources
2.2.1 Internet sources
Look at the following websites. Discuss: how reliable and trustworthy are these sites? What criteria can help you distinguish good sites and sources from bad ones?
2.2.2 Newspaper article samples
Now look at the following news stories about a border controversy in Hong Kong. Which seem biased, neutral, informative, or reliable, and why?
- Global Times [1]
- South China Morning Post [2]
- CNN [3]
- Reuters [4]
- New York Times [5]
- Business Insider [6]
2.2.3 News outlets
Look at the following news outlets, and discuss the following.
- Which ones seem reliable?
- Which ones would be worth citing for information in a college paper?
- For Korea (or your own country), which news outlets would be more reliable, and which ones would be less reliable?
- Fox News http://www.foxnews.com
- Breitbart http://www.breitbart.com
- New York Times http://www.nytimes.com
- New York Post http://www.nypost.com
- Washington Times http://www.washingtontimes.com
- Washington Post http://www.washingtonpost.com
- Der Spiegel http://www.spiegel.de
- Frankfurter Allgemeine http://www.faz.net/aktuell
- El País (Spain) http://www.elpais.com
- Le Monde (France) http://www.lemonde.fr
- Wall Street Journal http://www.wsj.com
- Time Magazine http://www.time.com
- McClean’s http://www.macleans.ca
- The Guardian http://www.theguardian.com
- The Independent http://www.independent.co.uk
- BBC News http://www.bbc.com/news
- The Sun http://www.thesun.co.uk
2.2.4 Science news sources
Now look at the following science news websites; which ones seem reliable or worth citing?
- National Geographic http://www.nationalgeographic.com
- Wired http://www.wired.com
- New Scientist http://www.newscientist.com
- Scientific American http://www.scientificamerican.com
- Science News http://www.sciencenews.org
- IFLScience http://www.iflscience.com
2.2.5 Science news examples
Now look at the following sites reporting on an issue in health and biomedical news. Which ones seem more reliable, and why?
- The Independent Does spending too much time on smartphones ...
- Tech Advisor How much screen time for kids
- Very Well Family Negative effects of too much cell phone use
- Forbes Phone addiction is real ...
- Psychology Today Too much screen time ...
For the Psychology Today article, discuss the following.
- Click on the links in the text, where you see names and years inside parentheses. What are these articles? What kinds of articles are these? How reliable and credible are they? Can you understand them?
- What are the references at the end?
- From the different sources in the table above about phone / device usage, which ones might you cite if you were writing a college paper on the topic?
- If you were writing a college paper on the topic, would you cite sources like those that are cited in the Psychology Today article?
2.3 Weeks 2-3: Sources and article discussion
Use these links to fill out the following form assignment, Google Form #3. Now look at the following sites regarding academic discussion of cognitive / mental differences between men and women. In the Youtube video, Stephen Pinker argue for the reality of sex-based differences--subtle differences in cognition (not overall qualitative differences between males and females), and the articles present opposing viewpoints.
- Pinker on male/female differences on Youtube
- The Guardian: The truth about sex differences ... (also in the course book, p. 38)
- Psychology Today: The male and female brain are more similar than once assumed
- Psychology Today: Male - female differences in variability
Note: 'Sex' refers to biological male / female differences; gender refers to a more complex psycho-social construct.
- Assignment
- See the Pinker on male/female differences on Youtube
- Google Form #3: Evaluating sources (24 March) [7] regarding the Pinker video
2.4 Overview of sources
Note: See the page on Academic versus non-academic sources and the EW Youtube video on evaluating sources (#1: intro video).
2.5 Genre analysis unit
See the genre analysis section below for more.
- Homework assignments
- Questions about your major: Due 05 May
- Questions about papers in your major: Due 12 May
3 Citation systems
The following are some commonly used citation systems; you can use any one of these for your papers in this course.
Style | Typical field & notes |
---|---|
* APA (overview) & APA guide (complete guide) | social sciences (e.g., psychology, education, sociology, applied linguistics); for a more detailed guide, see the complete APA guide |
* Harvard style | an older style for various fields, which is very similar to APA style |
* MLA 7 & MLA 8 | literature studies |
* IEEE | engineering |
* Chicago Manual, short & long footnote styles | humanities (This is a more semi-formal citation style; end references are still required with footnotes) |
* Chicago Manual (parenthetical) | humanities (This is a more formal style with Author+Year in parenthetical in-text citations) humanities |
* Chicago Manual | complete guide to all versions |
If you have a lot of media sources, you might find APA inconvenient for citing these sources; you might find Chicago or MLA easier to use.
4 Week 8: Midterm
You will write a position paper by expanding on and revising one of the previous set of homework assignments. Delineate, develop and defend your own specific position as you consider and address possible counter-arguments. Options:
- Gender/sex issues (what we discussed and wrote about in class)
- A specific topic in your field. This must be a specific position or issue on which academic people in the field disagree about.
You will submit it by uploading it on the assignment page on Blackboard.
- Due date:
- Either a simple, more informal paper format (first example in part 1 of the Appendix) is needed, or a cover page / title page (following examples in Appendix part 1) format.
- Length: I am not too concerned with the length (though I would recommend at least two pages), but I am more concerned with good development of ideas.
- Contents: You should anticipate and address likely objections to your position and engage in counter-argument / rebuttal.
- Sources: For this, it would be logical and necessary to cite at least two sources, as you are developing and defending your position (referring to at least one source) and likely citing a counter-argument. Use any of the citation systems in the section above.
- Grading criteria: See evaluation criteria for major writing assignments in the Appendix of the course book.
5 Genre analysis
- Bring sample papers from your field to class. These should be published scholarly works, preferable from academic journals. Hard copies are recommended, so you can easily pass them around, discuss them, and write on them.
- Read the section in the book on genre analysis
- Read the wiki page on Theories after our discussion of academic theories[1].
- Sentence types
- Paragraph styles
- Homework assignments
- Questions about your major: Due 05 May
- Questions about papers in your major: Due 12 May
5.1 Essay assignment: Genre analysis - How to write academic papers in your field
You are to write an essay on how to write academic papers in your field. This may include important questions such as:
- What your field is about, e.g., your field (or subfield) as an academic community / culture, with its unique goals, purpose, driving questions, core concepts, the type of research that people do, and why
- The main type[s] of research methods, and how one writes them up.
- The structure and style of academic papers
- How one develops and supports arguments - including the types of arguments or theses that papers present, the types of evidence presented, how one develops arguments, and such
- See also the course packet section on genre analysis, the GA essay assignment, and an example. Be sure to cite at least 3 examples in your paper - examples from published research articles.
We will do only one version of this assignment (in past semesters, a draft and revision were required).
- Bring a hard copy (printed version) to class for peer editing
- Length: 2 pages minimum
- Due date:
FYI:
- Genre analysis: Feedback on draft. See past genre analysis feedback here.
5.2 Paraphrasing, citation, plagiarism
- Read the section in the book on plagiarism, source use, and citation systems.
- Read the chapter on argumentation, particularly p. 69 and following on counter-argumentation.
- Handouts
- Writing literature reviews
- Argumentative_phrases_for_essays
- Reporting_verbs_(introduction)
- Reporting_verbs
6 Discourse & style issues
Read the relevant course packet chapters on coherence / transitionals, cohesion, reporting verbs, and word choice. We may go through some of this quickly in class, as this is rather dry. Please look at the examples and bring your questions, as you may or may not understand why some examples are given, or are flagged as problematic.
- ESL/EFL word choice & Konglish errors to avoid
- Overview of style problems (transitionals or connectors, etc.)
- Overview of problematic verbs & predicates
- Capitalization
- Adjectives
- Colloquialisms
- Commas
- Colons and semi-colons
- Delimiters
- L2 connector errors (East Asians)
- Modal verb problems
- Phrasal verb errors
- Korean English errors
- Unprofessional tone
7 Professional writing unit
- See the chapter in the course booklet
- CV guide and CV sample
- Résumé guide and Résumé sample
- General guides for CVs and résumés (Purdue OWL website)
- Simple checklist for a proper résumés
- Rubric / criteria for proper résumés, CV, cover letter, SOP
- SOP guide and sample
- Cover letters for academic job applications
- Academic cover letter (for professorship)
- Academic cover letter (language teaching job)
- Application letter (non-tenure track academic position)
7.1 Research statements
- Sample research statement for postdoc application
- Sample research & teaching statement for professorship application
- Teaching statement for a university teaching position
- Budget justification for grant proposal
- Project Summary.pdf for grants, or for preliminary exam / pre-dissertation process
- Grant proposal #1 (for a university grant, which was successful)
- Grant proposal #2 (for a university grant)
- Grant proposal #3a and second part, #3b
- Grant proposal #4 (National Science Foundation grant; a good but unsuccessful application)
- Optional: Biographical sketch for grant proposals (or other purposes)
7.2 Teaching statements
This includes more formal teaching philosophy statements (TPS) for university teaching jobs.
- TPS manual (with examples)
- TPS rubric - guidelines for a good TPS
- TSP example: Educational psychology
- TPS example: College language teacher Teaching statement
- TPS: language education
- Sample research & teaching statement for professorship application
7.3 Extra handouts: Interviews
- Typical job interview questions
- Interview questions for teaching or academic jobs
- Job interview mistakes to avoid
8 Major assignments (summary)
For essays (midterm, final draft, final essay), a cover / title page is required (and page numbers); see the Appendix in the book for examples. See also the Appendix for general grading criteria. Final versions of the midterm and final essays will be submitted via Blackboard. Other assignments can be submitted in hard copy (printed copy) in class, or if you are absent, you can turn in hard copies in my mailbox in room 208A (or email it to two of my email accounts).
8.1 Writing process
For this paper, you are to introspect on your your own writing process and strategies when you do writing assignments. Reflect on and evaluate your writing process, strategies, motivation, and difficulties. This is about what you actually do, not what you think you should do. Your paper should address some of the following questions.
See also the questions in the book. The focus of this assignment is mainly the contents, so don't worry too much about minor grammatical or mechanical errors (spelling, punctuation, etc.). Since this is a reflective / self-evaluative essay, this will be somewhat informal, including use of first-person.
Your write-up should be at least 2-3 pages (1.5 or double spaced; you can print double-sided pages to save trees), in hard copy format. See the Appendix for standard college paper format, as this alone will suffice (a title / cover page is not needed for this). This counts as a short essay assignment.
8.2 Midterm
Revise and submit the argument / counter-argument essay. A cover page or title page will be needed, along with page numbers (see the example in the coursebook Appendix). You will submit it by uploading it on the assignment page on Blackboard.
8.3 Final paper
For this, you will have three options:
- Revise and expand your midterm paper into a final paper
- Revise and expand your genre analysis paper into a final paper
- Take a major paper that you are working on in another course, and use it to fulffil the final paper requirement in this course. (Aren't I nice? Yes.)
- First paper draft
- Bring a hard copy (printed version) to class for peer editing, on 12 June (the last day of class).
- There are no specific length requirements, as this will depend on your particular course and major.
- If you cannot come to class for some reason, do peer editing with a classmate on your own outside of class, and email me a copy of the draft.
- Final version
This counts as the final essay for the course, due at the very end of Week 15 or 16.
- Length: Preferably, at least 3 full pages, double-spaced (not counting references, graphs, tables, etc.), though this may vary according to the expectations of papers in your course or major.
- Grading criteria: See the course booklet appendix for grading criteria for major writing assignments.
- Due date: 21 June, via Blackboard
8.4 Professional writing unit
Note: As of the Fall 2018 semester, we are not doing these as assignments. This is what we did in past semesters.
For the professional writing sample set, pick one of the following scenarios and develop a set of application materials. This counts as a short essay assignment.
-
Applying for graduate schools. Imagine you are applying for a Ph.D. program at an English-speaking university; maybe you want to apply for a combined Master's plus Ph.D. program, or you are finishing a Master's and want to transfer to another school for a Ph.D. Requirements:
- (1) Two versions of a statement of purpose, customized for two applying for different universities [at least 2 pages if single-spaced];
- (2) One CV [more than one page];
- (3) Imagine some kind of research that you might carry out as a graduate student, and for that, do one of the following items: (3a) A research grant application for a planned doctoral research project, or (3b) a research proposal for a dissertation topic [at least two pages if single-spaced].
-
Applying for a professorship or research position (post-doctoral position or full-time researcher):
- (1) Two cover letters, customized for two different job applications;
- (2) One CV [more than one page];
- (3) Either (3a) a research statement, research plan, or research proposal, describing your intended research; or (3b) a teaching statement, describing your teaching beliefs, experience, and teaching philosophy, and how you would teach specific courses at a university to which you are applying [at least two pages if single-spaced]
-
Applying for other teaching positions (college teaching assistant, secondary school teacher, etc.)
- (1) Two cover letters, customized for two different job applications [one page each];
- (2) One CV or résumé;
- (3) A teaching statement, describing your teaching beliefs, experience, and philosophy, and how you would teach specific courses at a school to which you are applying [at least two pages if single-spaced] .
9 Pedagogy (ideas for teachers or tutors)
- Outlining & paragraph exercise: Religions of Znarf Version 1 | Version 2]
- Teaching basic writing (younger learners)
- Teaching reading (young learners)
10 Notes and references
- ↑ There is also an older hard copy handout: Handout on theories, laws, models