ABSTRACT

This innovative guidebook is an accessible and concise introduction to discipline-specific academic language. Using authentic texts written by both novice and expert writers and ‘translating’ current, corpus-based research of academic language into a practical guide, the book gives students the tools to navigate the linguistic features of various disciplines, emphasizing the humanities and sciences, but also discussing example texts from the social sciences.

Organised as 11 self-contained questions that are critical to any discussion of academic language, this guide:

  • provides specific information and detail regarding the language ‘demands’ of each discipline
  • explains the principles underlying punctuation, the range of choices writers have and the effects of these choices on readers  
  • includes detailed linguistic guidance on how to construct effective paragraphs
  • discusses the multiple ways attitude is expressed in academic texts
  • includes information on citation practices

With exercises and additional online resources, this guidebook provides students with a range of tools they can choose from in order to create effective texts that meet discipline and reader expectations. Accessibly written, it is an essential guide for all students in humanities and sciences writing academic texts in English.

chapter Question 1|6 pages

Why and How Might You Want to Use this Handbook?

chapter Question 2|10 pages

The Evolving Handbook

What is the Purpose of a Handbook?

chapter Question 3|17 pages

What is Academic English?

chapter Question 4|9 pages

What Words are Typical in Academic Writing?

chapter Question 5|17 pages

How and Why Do We Create Longer Sentences?

chapter Question 6|22 pages

How Do We Achieve Economy?

What Makes Academic Language Particularly Hard?

chapter Question 8|35 pages

How and Why Do We Guide Readers with Punctuation?

chapter Question 9|34 pages

How and Why Do We Create Effective Paragraphs?

chapter Question 11|18 pages

Why and How Do We Document Our Research?