Linguistic Deviations in the Written Academic Register of Danish University Students

Danish university students are often criticised for a general lack of proficiency in orthography, punctuation and grammar in the academic register. However, there has been limited empirical substantiation to support the claim. In this paper, we present the results of a study of linguistic deviations...

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Main Authors: Jonas Nygaard Blom, Marianne Rathje, Bjarne le Fevre Jakobsen, Alexandra Holsting, Kenneth Reinecke Hansen, Jesper Tinggaard Svendsen, Thit Wedel Vildhøj, Anna Vibeke Lindø
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Oslo 2017-12-01
Series:Oslo Studies in Language
Online Access:https://journals.uio.no/osla/article/view/5855
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spelling doaj-17952604e65f4da38204fe8b12d126d22020-11-25T03:41:08ZengUniversity of OsloOslo Studies in Language1890-96392017-12-019310.5617/osla.5855Linguistic Deviations in the Written Academic Register of Danish University StudentsJonas Nygaard Blom0Marianne RathjeBjarne le Fevre JakobsenAlexandra HolstingKenneth Reinecke HansenJesper Tinggaard SvendsenThit Wedel VildhøjAnna Vibeke LindøILOS, University of OsloDanish university students are often criticised for a general lack of proficiency in orthography, punctuation and grammar in the academic register. However, there has been limited empirical substantiation to support the claim. In this paper, we present the results of a study of linguistic deviations in university assignments written by first-year Journalism and Danish students at the University of Southern Denmark (N = 100 students). The results show that the majority of both groups struggles with Danish orthography and punctuation when writing academically, which seems to confirm some of the assertions made by the critics. However, it is argued that the inherent conflict of orthographic and punctuation principles in Danish as well as the specific characteristics and challenges of academic writing are more probable causes than the claimed general decline in the writing proficiency of students.https://journals.uio.no/osla/article/view/5855
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jonas Nygaard Blom
Marianne Rathje
Bjarne le Fevre Jakobsen
Alexandra Holsting
Kenneth Reinecke Hansen
Jesper Tinggaard Svendsen
Thit Wedel Vildhøj
Anna Vibeke Lindø
spellingShingle Jonas Nygaard Blom
Marianne Rathje
Bjarne le Fevre Jakobsen
Alexandra Holsting
Kenneth Reinecke Hansen
Jesper Tinggaard Svendsen
Thit Wedel Vildhøj
Anna Vibeke Lindø
Linguistic Deviations in the Written Academic Register of Danish University Students
Oslo Studies in Language
author_facet Jonas Nygaard Blom
Marianne Rathje
Bjarne le Fevre Jakobsen
Alexandra Holsting
Kenneth Reinecke Hansen
Jesper Tinggaard Svendsen
Thit Wedel Vildhøj
Anna Vibeke Lindø
author_sort Jonas Nygaard Blom
title Linguistic Deviations in the Written Academic Register of Danish University Students
title_short Linguistic Deviations in the Written Academic Register of Danish University Students
title_full Linguistic Deviations in the Written Academic Register of Danish University Students
title_fullStr Linguistic Deviations in the Written Academic Register of Danish University Students
title_full_unstemmed Linguistic Deviations in the Written Academic Register of Danish University Students
title_sort linguistic deviations in the written academic register of danish university students
publisher University of Oslo
series Oslo Studies in Language
issn 1890-9639
publishDate 2017-12-01
description Danish university students are often criticised for a general lack of proficiency in orthography, punctuation and grammar in the academic register. However, there has been limited empirical substantiation to support the claim. In this paper, we present the results of a study of linguistic deviations in university assignments written by first-year Journalism and Danish students at the University of Southern Denmark (N = 100 students). The results show that the majority of both groups struggles with Danish orthography and punctuation when writing academically, which seems to confirm some of the assertions made by the critics. However, it is argued that the inherent conflict of orthographic and punctuation principles in Danish as well as the specific characteristics and challenges of academic writing are more probable causes than the claimed general decline in the writing proficiency of students.
url https://journals.uio.no/osla/article/view/5855
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