Title of article :
Academic Writing Courses in Applied Linguistics Master's Programs Through Student-instructor Lenses: Avenues for Improvement
Author/Authors :
Alinasab, Mahsa Urmia University , Gholami, Javad Urmia University , Mohammadnia, Zhila Urmia University
Abstract :
The importance of incorporating graduate students' needs into academic
writing courses has established a good reputation in EAP/ESP research. In
addition, writing and publishing research articles (RA) is a universally
established benchmark for students' academic flourish. The present study
examines the status quo of academic writing courses in graduate programs
to determine the extent academic writing needs of Applied Linguistics
students, mainly RA writing needs, are addressed and practiced in the
course. Drawing insights from the literature on academic writing, we
developed two similar interview protocols for graduate students and
course instructors to capture these key stakeholders' retrospective views
on the course. We found that the course mainly focuses on proposal/thesis
writing, not regarded as a critical need based on students' perspectives.
Moreover, both students and instructors echoed the importance of RA
writing as a significant area to be covered while emphasizing the need to
integrate RA genre literacy into classroom practices. In this paper, we call
for the reconsideration of students' primary needs in designing and
running graduate writing programs and suggest that RA writing with a genre-based orientation become an instrumental component of academic
writing courses in English as an Additional Language context (EAL).
Keywords :
Academic Writing , Genre Literacy , Needs , Perspectives , Research Article , Status Quo
Journal title :
Teaching English as a Second Language Quarterly