ACADEMIC WRITING AND PLAGIARISM
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Africa/Johannesburg
JOHANNES BRILL ROOM 19
Description
Strategies for effective academic writing, and avoiding plagiarism
It is envisaged that after the workshop postgraduate students will have a clear understanding of
- The essence, expectations and challenges of research writing
- Research as a process vs the product of writing
- The purpose of research writing as communication – demystifying the academic conversation
- Two levels of research: incorporating practical problems (empirical data) and research problems
- Reading and note-taking as a process of conceptualising your research
- The generic structure of a thesis/dissertation
- The interdiscursive and functional aspects of source use and citation
- The three levels of structuring a text: macro-, meso- and micro-levels
- Cohesion, coherence, integration and synthesis in aligning your academic text
- Style and flow in constructing and editing the academic text
- Owning your academic voice and positioning your argument in the academic conversation
- Positioning your voice in finding your writing identity by means of your personalised voice and socialised voice
- Voiceless writing – a word or two on plagiarism and practical exercises
- The challenge of paraphrasing without plagiarising – practical application.
Registration
Participants
The agenda of this meeting is empty