Research conceptualization in doctoral and master's research writing

被引:2
|
作者
Badenhorst, Cecile [1 ]
机构
[1] Mem Univ, Adult Educ Postsecondary Program, Fac Educ, St John, NF, Canada
来源
WRITING & PEDAGOGY | 2020年 / 12卷 / 2-3期
关键词
MULTILINGUAL WRITERS; DOCTORAL WRITERS; MASTERS WRITERS; RESEARCH WRITING; RESEARCH CONCEPTUALIZATION; PROBLEM FORMULATION; PROBLEM STATEMENTS; GRADUATE-STUDENTS; GENRE; STATEMENTS; WRITERS;
D O I
10.1558/wap.19542
中图分类号
G40 [教育学];
学科分类号
040101 ; 120403 ;
摘要
Research conceptualization is challenging for doctoral and master's writers, particularly multilingual students engaging in thesis writing or writing for publication. In doctoral and master's student writing research conceptualization appears in three genres: problem statements, research proposals and introduction sections or chapters. Swale's (1990; Feak and Swales, 2011) CARS model is most often used to analyze conceptualization in these genres. While very useful as an analytical tool, the CARS model does not translate well to pedagogy. I argue that Merriam's (2009) problem/purpose statement and questions (PPS&Q) format provides a flexible and accessible technique to make the process of research conceptualization visible and to help students focus their research throughout the writing process. Navigating problem formulation and gap spotting requires highly complex literacies and Merriam's method allows students to begin simply and build complexity. While genre visibility provides a way for doctoral and master's students to access high-level literacies demands, it can also be formulaic and constraining and needs to be taught with critical awareness.
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页码:423 / 444
页数:22
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