Title of article :
Inform and Entertain: An Oxymoron in Serious Science Communication?
Author/Authors :
Saidi, Mavadat Shahid Rajaee Teacher Training University, Tehran, Iran , Babaii, Esmat Kharazmi University, Tehran, Iran
Abstract :
The current study aimed to explore the nature of discursive strategies academics would use to share their
specialist knowledge to both specialists and non-specialists. To this end, a corpus of 40 academic
research articles and 40 popular science articles were randomly selected from the archive of four English
international peer-reviewed journals and four English popular magazines and newspapers in the field of
Nutrition. Appraisal Theory (Martin & White, 2005), a discourse framework to examine evaluative
and/or persuasive language, was used to analyze the data. The results revealed significant areas of
similarity and difference in terms of certain discursive elements leading to discernible degrees of
persuasion. The findings imply that in order to develop a scientifically literate society, scientists should
appeal to diverse discourse resources to provide the public with their findings in an informative and
entertaining way. The results of the study carry some pedagogical implications for EAP courses held in
EFL settings since being able to both comprehend and produce scientific texts of different professional
levels at international scale seems to be a requirement for the future scientists.
Keywords :
Academic research articles , Popular science articles , Science popularization Appraisal Theory , Evaluative writing , Persuasion
Journal title :
Iranian Journal of Applied Linguistics (IJAL)