Title of article :
Loyalty to Traditional Prescriptions or Facing the Challenge of Realities: An Investigation into the Status of Metadiscourse Awareness in Academic Writing Coursebooks
Author/Authors :
Kuhi, Davud Department of the English Language - Maragheh Branch Islamic Azad University, Maragheh, Iran
Abstract :
he well-established affiliation of metadiscourse research tradition to the
philosophy of ESP raises some inevitable expectations on how much and how well
the concept has been geared to meet the practical necessities of academic writing
pedagogy. In light of such an expectation, a corpus of 35 academic writing
coursebooks published during the last three decades was evaluated in terms of the
possible realizations of key resources of interaction in pedagogical tasks. Due to its
theoretical rigor and analytically operationalized nature, Hyland’s model of
metadiscourse (2005a) was taken as the guiding framework for the current
evaluation. The quantitative findings emerging from the analysis of the corpus did
not sound sufficiently promising, suggesting that those theoretical developments
have not yet been ideally translated into pedagogical designs; however, the rich
range of resources identified in the tasks (i.e., the 55 categories emerging from the
evaluation of the corpus) suggest that the rigorous tradition of research in
metadiscourse has contributed to the effective operationalization of the concept for
pedagogical objectives. It has been argued that through the effective introduction of
the concept of metadiscourse into pedagogical designs and its appropriate
operationalization, novice participants of academic/scientific discourse
communities would be enabled to redefine the nature of academic communication
and get rid of a large number of misconceptions which have become fossilized
through long years of the dominance of positivistic thinking.
Keywords :
academic writing , academic writing coursebook , metadiscourse , metadiscourse awareness
Journal title :
The Journal of English Language Pedagogy and Paractice