Main Ingredients for Success in L2 Academic Writing: Outlining, Drafting and Proofreading.

Spanish undergraduates of English Studies are required to submit their essays in academic English, a genre which most of them are not acquainted with. This paper aims to explore the extralinguistic side of second language (L2) academic writing, more specifically, the combination of metalinguistic it...

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Main Author: Rosa Munoz-Luna
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2015-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4457904?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-e5be692f5fcf433a8ac0806034b8cdaa2020-11-25T01:58:59ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032015-01-01106e012830910.1371/journal.pone.0128309Main Ingredients for Success in L2 Academic Writing: Outlining, Drafting and Proofreading.Rosa Munoz-LunaSpanish undergraduates of English Studies are required to submit their essays in academic English, a genre which most of them are not acquainted with. This paper aims to explore the extralinguistic side of second language (L2) academic writing, more specifically, the combination of metalinguistic items (e.g. transition and frame markers, among others) with students' writing strategies when composing an academic text in L2 English. The research sample conveys a group of 200 Spanish undergraduates of English Studies; they are in their fourth year, so they are expected to be proficient in English academic writing but their written production quality varies considerably. Results are analysed following a mixed methodology by which metalinguistic items are statistically measured, and then contrasted with semi-structured interview results; SPSS and NVivo provide quantitative and qualitative outcomes, respectively. The analyses reveal that undergraduate students who produce complex sentences and more coherent texts employ a wider range of writing strategies both prior and while writing, being able to (un)consciously structure and design their texts more successfully. These high-scoring students make more proficient use of complex transition markers for coherence and frame markers for textual cohesion; their commonly used (pre-)writing strategies are drafting, outlining, and proofreading.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4457904?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rosa Munoz-Luna
spellingShingle Rosa Munoz-Luna
Main Ingredients for Success in L2 Academic Writing: Outlining, Drafting and Proofreading.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Rosa Munoz-Luna
author_sort Rosa Munoz-Luna
title Main Ingredients for Success in L2 Academic Writing: Outlining, Drafting and Proofreading.
title_short Main Ingredients for Success in L2 Academic Writing: Outlining, Drafting and Proofreading.
title_full Main Ingredients for Success in L2 Academic Writing: Outlining, Drafting and Proofreading.
title_fullStr Main Ingredients for Success in L2 Academic Writing: Outlining, Drafting and Proofreading.
title_full_unstemmed Main Ingredients for Success in L2 Academic Writing: Outlining, Drafting and Proofreading.
title_sort main ingredients for success in l2 academic writing: outlining, drafting and proofreading.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2015-01-01
description Spanish undergraduates of English Studies are required to submit their essays in academic English, a genre which most of them are not acquainted with. This paper aims to explore the extralinguistic side of second language (L2) academic writing, more specifically, the combination of metalinguistic items (e.g. transition and frame markers, among others) with students' writing strategies when composing an academic text in L2 English. The research sample conveys a group of 200 Spanish undergraduates of English Studies; they are in their fourth year, so they are expected to be proficient in English academic writing but their written production quality varies considerably. Results are analysed following a mixed methodology by which metalinguistic items are statistically measured, and then contrasted with semi-structured interview results; SPSS and NVivo provide quantitative and qualitative outcomes, respectively. The analyses reveal that undergraduate students who produce complex sentences and more coherent texts employ a wider range of writing strategies both prior and while writing, being able to (un)consciously structure and design their texts more successfully. These high-scoring students make more proficient use of complex transition markers for coherence and frame markers for textual cohesion; their commonly used (pre-)writing strategies are drafting, outlining, and proofreading.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4457904?pdf=render
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