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KATHERINE MORAN TESOL 2013 DALLAS, TX Exploring undergraduate disciplinary writing: Expectations and evidence in psychology and chemistry

Katherine Moran TESOL 2013 Dallas, Tx

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Exploring undergraduate disciplinary writing: Expectations and evidence in psychology and chemistry. Katherine Moran TESOL 2013 Dallas, Tx. Outline of presentation. Impetus for the study Research questions Methodology Corpus collection Multidimensional analysis Results Discussion. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Katherine Moran TESOL 2013 Dallas,  Tx

KATHERINE MORANTESOL 2013DALLAS, TX

Exploring undergraduate disciplinary writing: Expectations and evidence

in psychology and chemistry

Page 2: Katherine Moran TESOL 2013 Dallas,  Tx

Outline of presentation

Impetus for the studyResearch questionsMethodology

Corpus collection Multidimensional analysis

ResultsDiscussion

Page 3: Katherine Moran TESOL 2013 Dallas,  Tx

Impetus for the study

“There is…a clear consensus on the importance of written texts in academic life – a recognition that understanding the disciplines involves understanding their discourses” (Hyland, 2000)

Programs designed to prepare students for university study “must be tied directly to the content and practices of a university curriculum” (Carson, Chase, Gibson & Hargrove 1992)

Page 4: Katherine Moran TESOL 2013 Dallas,  Tx

Research Questions

1. How much and what type of writing are undergraduate students expected to do at each course level (1000-4000) in Psychology and Chemistry?

2. What are faculty expectations of undergraduate student writers at each level of study? What are students’ experiences learning to write for their discipline and of their instructors’ writing expectations?

3. What types of writing are undergraduate students exposed to through their course readings throughout their academic careers in Psychology and Chemistry?

4. What is student writing like at the highest levels of undergraduate study in Psychology and Chemistry and how does it compare to the writing they were exposed to through course readings?

Page 5: Katherine Moran TESOL 2013 Dallas,  Tx

Methodology

Twelve focal courses selected from each disciplineCourse syllabi, handouts, rubrics, & lab manuals

were analyzed for writing assignmentsCourse readings (textbooks, lab manuals, journal

articles) were compiled into a reading corpus for each discipline

Writing samples from upper-division students were compiled into a writing corpus for each discipline

Multidimensional Analysis (MDA) was conducted for each corpus

Page 6: Katherine Moran TESOL 2013 Dallas,  Tx

Methodology: The corpora

Psychology reading corpus: 15 texts (primarily textbooks) 377,970 words

Chemistry reading corpus: 14 texts (textbooks and lab manuals) 300,048 words

Psychology student writing corpus: 57 texts 90,076 words

Chemistry student writing corpus: 34 texts 52,424 words

Page 7: Katherine Moran TESOL 2013 Dallas,  Tx

Multidimensional Analysis

Method of linguistic analysis based on factor analysis used to discover how sets of linguistic features co-occur in various registers of language use (Conrad & Biber, 2001)

Biber (1988) establishes 7 dimensions of register variation across written and spoken English

Each dimension functions as a continuum based on the presence of the linguistic features identified for that dimension

Dimensions are named descriptively based on functionBiber’s (1988) 7 dimensions have been used to study other

registersResearchers have also formulated new dimensions based on

a multi-dimensional factor analysis of a new data set

Page 8: Katherine Moran TESOL 2013 Dallas,  Tx

MDA: Gray (2011)

Gray (2011) conducted a new MDA of academic writing in research articles from 6 disciplines

Four dimensions were formulated: Dimension 1: academic involvement vs. informational

density Dimension 2: contextualized narration vs. procedural

discourse Dimension 3: human vs. nonhuman focus Dimension 4: ‘academese’

Page 9: Katherine Moran TESOL 2013 Dallas,  Tx

The present study

Not enough texts for a new MDAGray’s (2011) dimensions were formulated

for academic writing Applying these dimensions to different

registers of academic writing helps to strengthen the dimensions

Page 10: Katherine Moran TESOL 2013 Dallas,  Tx

Obtaining dimension scores

Corpora were tagged for lexico-grammatical features using an automatic tagger developed by Biber (see Biber 1988)

Tags are counted by the program and normed per 1,000 words to standardize the occurrences

Z-scores were calculated for each linguistic feature in each dimension

A mean score for each register and discipline was obtained for each dimension

The mean scores were plotted on the dimensions

Page 11: Katherine Moran TESOL 2013 Dallas,  Tx

Results

Page 12: Katherine Moran TESOL 2013 Dallas,  Tx

Dimension 1: academic involvement vs. informational density

Positive Features 

 

Pronouns: nominal pronouns, pronoun it, 1st person pronouns, demonstrative pronouns

Nouns: nouns of cognition Adjectives: predicative adjectives, evaluative attributive adjectives Verbs: verb be, verb have, causative verbs Modal Verbs: modals of prediction, modals of possibility, modals of necessity Adverbs: general adverbs, stance adverbials, adverbials of time Conjunctions: subordinating conjunction—conditional, adverbial conjuncts,

subordinating conjunctions Finite Clauses: that-clauses controlled by nouns of likelihood, that-clauses controlled by

verbs of likelihood, that-clauses controlled by factive adjectives, that-clauses controlled by attitudinal nouns, that-clauses controlled by factive nouns, wh-clauses

Non-Finite

Clauses:

to-clauses controlled by stance adjectives,to-clauses controlled by verbs of probability

Negative Features

 

Nouns: nouns, process nouns Verbs: past tense verbs Passives: passive postnominal modifiers, agentless passive voice verbs Other: prepositions, type-token ratio, word length

Page 13: Katherine Moran TESOL 2013 Dallas,  Tx

Dimension 1: academic involvement vs. informational density

Page 14: Katherine Moran TESOL 2013 Dallas,  Tx

Dimension 1: academic involvement vs. informational density

Psychology tends to favor more features of involvement than chemistry Identify the writer’s personal stance Acknowledge and include the reader (textbooks)

Student writing tends to be more informationally dense than course readings (textbooks) No personal pronouns Lots of nouns and passive voice constructions

Page 15: Katherine Moran TESOL 2013 Dallas,  Tx

Dimension 2: Contextualized narration vs. procedural description

Positive Features 

 

Pronouns: 3rd person pronouns

Nouns: group nouns, nominalizations, animate nouns

Adjectives: topical attributive adjectives, attributive adjectives indicating time

Verbs: past tense verbs, aspectual verbs, perfect aspect verbs, communication verbs, present progressive verbs

Conjunctions:

phrasal coordinating conjunctions, clausal coordinating conjunctions

Finite Clauses:

that-relative clauses, that-clauses controlled by non-factive verbs, wh-questions

Non-Finite Clauses:

to-clauses controlled by verbs of modality, causation and effort, to-clauses controlled by verbs of desire, to-clauses controlled by stance nouns

Other: word length, word count, type-token ratio

Negative Features 

 

Nouns: technical nouns, quantity nouns, concrete nouns

Adjectives: attributive adjectives indicating size

Page 16: Katherine Moran TESOL 2013 Dallas,  Tx

Dimension 2: Contextualized narration vs. procedural description

Page 17: Katherine Moran TESOL 2013 Dallas,  Tx

Dimension 2: Contextualized narration vs. procedural description

In psychology positive features are used in highly narrative sections of the text, but not evenly throughout a text (examples to follow)

Chemistry uses a high number of concrete and technical nouns to explain procedures

Page 18: Katherine Moran TESOL 2013 Dallas,  Tx

Psychology excerpts

Psychology 4020 textbook:

Walter Gretzky, the father of hockey great Wayne Gretzky, has always considered himself to be a lucky man. But on October 13, 1991, at the age of 58, his luck almost ran out. Walter was painting, when he suddenly felt dizzy and developed a splitting headache. He wanted to go to his room and lie down for a while, but a friend of his daughter's was visiting and insisted on driving him to the hospital. She almost certainly saved his life. Walter immediately underwent 5 hours of emergency surgery for a burst blood vessel on the surface of his brain. The reduced blood supply to his brain caused a stroke. Strokes are the leading cause of disability in the United States and the third leading cause of death. Approximately 700,000 Americans suffer a stroke each year.

Page 19: Katherine Moran TESOL 2013 Dallas,  Tx

Psychology excerpts

Psychology 4020 textbook (same chapter):

Schemas are mental representations of objects or categories of objects (Fiske & Taylor, 1991; Hastie, 1981; Smith, 1998). You possess distinct schemas for apples, fathers, your own father, justice, robins, the moon, danger, your social psychology professor, and countless other things. Another term that is sometimes used for schemas is concepts (see Kunda, 1999; Medin, 1989). Schemas or concepts contain mental representations of objects or categories, which contain the central features of the object or category as well as assumptions about how the object or category works. Your schema for apples probably includes the points [that they are red and grow on trees.]

Page 20: Katherine Moran TESOL 2013 Dallas,  Tx

Psychology excerpts

Psychology student writing (psych 4020):

Just as behavior can affect attitude, attitude can affect behavior. This can happen in many

different ways. For instance, an attitude (or feeling) can be specific to a behavior. In the

film Mel Gibson treated his daughter differently than he treated the other women in his

life. It is possible [that this can be attributed to his feelings (attitudes) toward/for his

daughter.] Attitudes can dictate behavior when these feelings are obvious. For example,

at the end of the film Mel Gibson went to Helen Hunt and told her everything [that

happened]and what he had done for her. This demonstrates that attitude can shape

behavior when feelings are clear. If Mel Gibson’s character did not have feelings about

Helen Hunt’s character than he probably would not have done what he did.

Page 21: Katherine Moran TESOL 2013 Dallas,  Tx

Dimension 3: Human vs. Non-human focus

Positive Features 

 

Pronouns:

2nd person pronouns, 3rd person pronouns

Noun: process nouns Verbs: mental verbs, activity verbs, communication verbs,

present progressive verbs Finite Clauses:

that-clauses controlled by factive verbs, wh-clauses

Non-Finite Clauses:

to-clauses controlled by verbs of desire, to-clauses controlled by speech verbs

Negative Features 

 

Adjectives:

attributive adjectives, attributive adjectives indicating topic

Adverbs: general adverbs Other: prepositions

Page 22: Katherine Moran TESOL 2013 Dallas,  Tx

Dimension 3: Human vs. Non-human focus

Page 23: Katherine Moran TESOL 2013 Dallas,  Tx

Dimension 3: Human vs. Non-human focus

There is less difference between registers in each discipline

Psychology as a discipline has an inherent human focus, while chemistry does not

Page 24: Katherine Moran TESOL 2013 Dallas,  Tx

Dimension 4: ‘Academese’

Positive Features 

 

Nouns: nominalizations, process nouns, other abstract nouns

Adjectives: relational attributive adjectives Verbs: existence verbs Finite Clauses: that-clauses controlled by likelihood

adjectives, to-clauses controlled by stance adjectives

Other: word lengthNegative Features 

 

Adverbs: time adverbials

Page 25: Katherine Moran TESOL 2013 Dallas,  Tx

Dimension 4: ‘Academese’

Page 26: Katherine Moran TESOL 2013 Dallas,  Tx

Dimension 4: ‘Academese’

Very few features included in this dimensionDimension scores are close to zeroDifficult to make any claims based on findings

Page 27: Katherine Moran TESOL 2013 Dallas,  Tx

Discussion

Students are primarily reading textbooks which are linguistically different from the writing they do

Textbooks tend to be more involved in both disciplines

Student writing tends to be more informationalPsychology students show stance through

evaluative adjectivesPsychology students use features of contextualized

narration in summaries, part of many assignmentsChemistry students use agentless passives and

technical nouns, they use very few pronouns

Page 28: Katherine Moran TESOL 2013 Dallas,  Tx

Discussion

Students have to navigate many different rhetorical styles within one discipline Textbooks may have narrative and ‘familiar’ writing,

followed by content-heavy, dense sectionsStudents avoid using personal pronouns in

writing, even when expressing opinionsTextbooks frequently use personal pronounsStudents do not receive much input or examples

of the type of writing they are doing because their instructors (in my study) do not consider the assignments (at the lower levels) ‘disciplinary’

Page 29: Katherine Moran TESOL 2013 Dallas,  Tx

Extra discussion: What are students writing?

In chemistry, students are writing “lab reports” Range from 1 page with bulleted procedures and a

paragraph of discussion to 25 pages of analysis Professors expect the students to use passive voice

and no personal pronouns Students usually use agentless-passive constructions

with themselves as the implied agent (ex: an IR spectrum was taken to aid the rest of the process)

Textbooks frequently use active voice and passive by-phrases, with a non-human agent (ex: 1)These substances accelerate the iodine reaction… 2)Aromatic rings can be nitrated by reaction with a mixture of…)

Page 30: Katherine Moran TESOL 2013 Dallas,  Tx

Extra discussion: What are students writing?

In psychology 83% of the assignments (in this study) are a summary/reaction or application of theory to X In both categories students are expected to bring

class concepts to an outside experience Both involve summary writing These assignments are considered general (not

discipline specific)

Page 31: Katherine Moran TESOL 2013 Dallas,  Tx

As writing teachers, what do we do?

Preparatory writing course for ELLs seem to prepare students for their preparatory writing courses

Students are not writing research papers until their 3rd or 4th years (if at all)

In psych and chem students get extensive training for research papers or more intensive lab reports

Students all need to summarize and respond criticallyAssignments are typically short-2-3 pagesStudents are expected to demonstrate understanding

and critical thinking through writing assignments

Page 32: Katherine Moran TESOL 2013 Dallas,  Tx

Questions?

Thank you!Feel free to contact me for further discussion:

[email protected]