Discourse appropriation, construction of identities, and the complex issue of plagiarism: ESL students writing in graduate school

被引:106
|
作者
Abasi, Ali R. [1 ]
Akbari, Nahal [1 ]
Graves, Barbara [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Ottawa, Ottawa, ON K1N 6N5, Canada
关键词
identity construction; discourse(s); textual borrowing; plagiarism; authorship; students-as-ethnographers;
D O I
10.1016/j.jslw.2006.05.001
中图分类号
H0 [语言学];
学科分类号
030303 ; 0501 ; 050102 ;
摘要
Recent research on academic writing has established the intersection of writing and identity. However, it is not clear whether writers themselves are aware of this link. In this study, we investigated five ESL graduate students' awareness of the identities that they constructed through the appropriation of others' words and ideas in their texts. Moving beyond prevalent moral explanations, we further sought alternative reasons for students' inappropriate textual borrowing practices, often categorized as plagiarism. Our findings suggest that, depending on their enculturation into disciplinary discourses, students exhibit different levels of awareness of the available and privileged identity options in the social contexts of writing. We argue that student textual plagiarism can best be viewed as an issue of authorial identity construction. The findings indicate that the roots of students' production of institutionally unacceptable texts lie in their epistemological orientation as well as their authoritative view of source texts. We finally reflect on the implications of the findings for academic writing instruction. Drawing on the notion of students-as-ethnographers, we suggest that writing instruction can raise students' awareness of the link between writing and self-representation as well as the epistemology underpinning academic authorship, as two important dimensions of successful writing. (c) 2006 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:102 / 117
页数:16
相关论文
共 31 条
  • [1] Graduate Students' Construction of Researcher Identities Explored Through Discourse Analysis
    Davis, C. Amelia
    Lester, Jessica N.
    [J]. QUALITATIVE RESEARCH IN EDUCATION, 2016, 5 (01): : 49 - 76
  • [2] Teaching writing to ESL graduate students: A model and an illustration
    Biggs, J
    Lai, P
    Tang, C
    Lavelle, E
    [J]. BRITISH JOURNAL OF EDUCATIONAL PSYCHOLOGY, 1999, 69 : 293 - 306
  • [3] CAUSES OF WRITING ERRORS AMONG SECONDARY SCHOOL ESL STUDENTS
    Yahya, Muhammad Yasir
    Hashim, Nor Hashimah
    [J]. INTED2014: 8TH INTERNATIONAL TECHNOLOGY, EDUCATION AND DEVELOPMENT CONFERENCE, 2014, : 1197 - 1204
  • [4] Arab ESL Secondary School Students' Attitude Toward English Spelling and Writing
    Al-Sobhi, Bandar
    Rashid, Sabariah Md
    Abdullah, Ain Nadzimah
    [J]. SAGE OPEN, 2018, 8 (01):
  • [5] Argumentative writing by junior high school students: discourse knowledge and writing performance
    Malpique, Anabela
    Veiga-Simao, Ana Margarida
    [J]. INFANCIA Y APRENDIZAJE, 2016, 39 (01): : 150 - 186
  • [6] Weeds in the flower garden: An exploration of plagiarism in graduate students' research proposals and its connection to enculturation, ESL, and contextual factors
    Gilmore, Joanna
    Strickland, Denise
    Timmerman, Briana
    Maher, Michelle
    Feldon, David
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL FOR EDUCATIONAL INTEGRITY, 2010, 6 (01): : 13 - 28
  • [7] Plagiarism as an academic literacy issue: the comprehension, writing and consulting strategies of Portuguese university students
    Festas, Isabel
    Seixas, Ana
    Matos, Armanda
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL FOR EDUCATIONAL INTEGRITY, 2022, 18 (01)
  • [8] Plagiarism as an academic literacy issue: the comprehension, writing and consulting strategies of Portuguese university students
    Isabel Festas
    Ana Seixas
    Armanda Matos
    [J]. International Journal for Educational Integrity, 18
  • [9] Discourse Organization in High School Students' Writing and Their Teachers' Writing Instruction: The Case of Taiwan
    Chien, Shih-Chieh
    [J]. FOREIGN LANGUAGE ANNALS, 2011, 44 (02) : 417 - 435
  • [10] Japanese Graduate School Students' Writing in English: Facilitating Pathways towards `Design'
    Toh, Glenn
    [J]. WRITING & PEDAGOGY, 2016, 8 (03): : 561 - 575