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Introduction to Academic Writing


Introduction to Academic Writing


Description
At the university level, academic expectations change considerably in comparison to what you have experienced while in secondary education. You will soon notice that the quantity of work you are expected to engage with has increased. Moreover, oftentimes the lecturers expect you to read a large amount of material and work independently over several hours. Thus, managing this sort of workload can become quite challenging.

In addition, the quality of the work has to do differs from what you were used to during secondary education. It is no longer enough just to understand course material and summarise it for your exams. It is also be expected that you develop a solid engagement with new ideas by critically reflecting and analysing them, establishing consistent and coherent connections, reaching conclusions, or finding new ways of thinking about a given subject. All in all, this process means that from an educational point of view, you are reaching a higher level of intellectual maturity.

Having said that, this course has been carefully tailored to introduce students to the practice of writing for academic purposes. It will prepare students for work in university-level courses taught in English in which research writing is a requirement (i.e., undergraduate, postgraduate, master and PhD).

It provides an introduction to and application of key principles of effective and efficient academic writing. Moreover, this course also displays key techniques, guidelines and suggestions to improve your academic written commu
nication. It will give hands-on experience in drafting, organising and revising your academic texts.
Among the several topics addressed include: essay structure, coherence, flow, signposting, main characteristics of academic writing, citation styles, and additional sources of information.
Who this course is for:
  • The target audience of this course comprises students in tertiary education (i.e., undergraduate, postgraduate, masters and PhD) who are not native English speakers, although native speakers might also benefit from it.

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