• Title of article

    Types of student intertextuality and faculty attitudes

  • Author/Authors

    Diane Pecorari، نويسنده , , Philip Shaw، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
  • Pages
    16
  • From page
    149
  • To page
    164
  • Abstract
    Intertextuality is a prominent feature of academic writing, and the ability to use sources effectively and appropriately is an essential skill which novice writers must acquire. It is also a complex skill, and student performance is not always successful. It is presumably beneficial for students to receive consistent messages about what source use is and is not appropriate, but some evidence suggests that university teachers and other gatekeepers may fall short of this consistency. This paper reports the findings of semistructured text-based interviews aimed at understanding the basis of teacher attitudes and responses to intertextuality in academic writing. Teachers who were asked to evaluate the same examples from student texts differed in their judgments about whether the examples were appropriate, and provided different types of explanation for their judgments. These explanations enable us to develop a four-part typology of intertextuality which allows analytic discussion of differing judgments. The implications both of the teacher judgments and of the typology for second language writing instruction are discussed and an assessment of the relevance of our findings for the theme of this special issue is provided.
  • Keywords
    plagiarism , Intertextuality , Source use , Academic writing , English , Faculty attitudes , Sweden
  • Journal title
    JOURNAL OF SECOND LANGUAGE WRITING
  • Serial Year
    2012
  • Journal title
    JOURNAL OF SECOND LANGUAGE WRITING
  • Record number

    714051