Exploring first-year Students’ Voice and Subjectivity in Academic Writing at a University in South Africa
Magister Educationis - MEd === Literacy development in South African higher education is increasingly challenged by several issues in dialogue and language of tuition. Despite the widening of access to South African universities, research shows that a large majority of entry-level university student...
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University of the Western Cape
2020
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Online Access: | http://hdl.handle.net/11394/7300 |
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ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uwc-oai-etd.uwc.ac.za-11394-73002020-08-14T05:11:45Z Exploring first-year Students’ Voice and Subjectivity in Academic Writing at a University in South Africa Ambe, Martina Bi Sivasubramaniam, Sivakumar Academic Literacies Academic Socialisation Approach Bakhtin Dialogism English Additional Language (EAL) Heteroglossia Literacy as a Social practice Skilled-based Approaches Subjectivity Voice Magister Educationis - MEd Literacy development in South African higher education is increasingly challenged by several issues in dialogue and language of tuition. Despite the widening of access to South African universities, research shows that a large majority of entry-level university students are still failing in their chosen programme of studies. Almost all universities in the democratic South Africa incorporate academic development programs in first-year modules as an awareness raising attempt to scaffold novice students into the vocabulary of their various disciplines. However, these development programs sometimes fail to address the language needs of some of the students who have had more than seven years of schooling in their first languages (IsiXhosa and Afrikaans). My study seeks to explore how additional language IsiXhosa and Afrikaans students understand and construct written knowledge in one literacy development course using English medium of instruction. I further explore lecturers’ and tutors’ perspectives of the demand of sounding a scholarly voice in academic writing by entry-level students in their new roles as scholars in the University of the Western Cape (UWC).Literature indicated gaps when it comes to students’ and lectures’ perceptions on the construction of voice in academic writing in a language that the students are not comfortable in. 2020-08-12T10:18:52Z 2020-08-12T10:18:52Z 2019 http://hdl.handle.net/11394/7300 en University of the Western Cape University of the Western Cape |
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en |
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Academic Literacies Academic Socialisation Approach Bakhtin Dialogism English Additional Language (EAL) Heteroglossia Literacy as a Social practice Skilled-based Approaches Subjectivity Voice |
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Academic Literacies Academic Socialisation Approach Bakhtin Dialogism English Additional Language (EAL) Heteroglossia Literacy as a Social practice Skilled-based Approaches Subjectivity Voice Ambe, Martina Bi Exploring first-year Students’ Voice and Subjectivity in Academic Writing at a University in South Africa |
description |
Magister Educationis - MEd === Literacy development in South African higher education is increasingly challenged by several issues in dialogue and language of tuition. Despite the widening of access to South African universities, research shows that a large majority of entry-level university students are still failing in their chosen programme of studies. Almost all universities in the democratic South Africa incorporate academic development programs in first-year modules as an awareness raising attempt to scaffold novice students into the vocabulary of their various disciplines. However, these development programs sometimes fail to address the language needs of some of the students who have had more than seven years of schooling in their first languages (IsiXhosa and Afrikaans). My study seeks to explore how additional language IsiXhosa and Afrikaans students understand and construct written knowledge in one literacy development course using English medium of instruction. I further explore lecturers’ and tutors’ perspectives of the demand of sounding a scholarly voice in academic writing by entry-level students in their new roles as scholars in the University of the Western Cape (UWC).Literature indicated gaps when it comes to students’ and lectures’ perceptions on the construction of voice in academic writing in a language that the students are not comfortable in. |
author2 |
Sivasubramaniam, Sivakumar |
author_facet |
Sivasubramaniam, Sivakumar Ambe, Martina Bi |
author |
Ambe, Martina Bi |
author_sort |
Ambe, Martina Bi |
title |
Exploring first-year Students’ Voice and Subjectivity in Academic Writing at a University in South Africa |
title_short |
Exploring first-year Students’ Voice and Subjectivity in Academic Writing at a University in South Africa |
title_full |
Exploring first-year Students’ Voice and Subjectivity in Academic Writing at a University in South Africa |
title_fullStr |
Exploring first-year Students’ Voice and Subjectivity in Academic Writing at a University in South Africa |
title_full_unstemmed |
Exploring first-year Students’ Voice and Subjectivity in Academic Writing at a University in South Africa |
title_sort |
exploring first-year students’ voice and subjectivity in academic writing at a university in south africa |
publisher |
University of the Western Cape |
publishDate |
2020 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/11394/7300 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT ambemartinabi exploringfirstyearstudentsvoiceandsubjectivityinacademicwritingatauniversityinsouthafrica |
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1719337972214530048 |