Unlearning, uncovering and becoming: experiencing academic writing as part of undergraduate research

Date

2022

Authors

Howitt, Susan
Wilson, Anna N.
Higgins, Denise

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Taylor & Francis Group

Abstract

Increased specialisation of disciplinary cultures creates barriers for students who may not understand the genre, style and conventions of disciplinary writing. Academic literacies research recognises that literacy is a social practice where writing is inextricably linked to knowledge construction. Learning to write, therefore, requires meaning-making by students as they engage with the nature of questions asked and arguments constructed within a discipline. We have examined the proposition that immersive and dialogic environments promote learning of disciplinary writing by analysing students’ lived experience during a science undergraduate research project. We adopted an academic literacy framework for a qualitative analysis of students’ reflective journals as they wrote a critical review. We show that (i) students initially struggled with assessment requirements, terminology and writing conventions; (ii) constructing the critical review was coupled to epistemological changes as they understood scientific argument; and (iii) they gained confidence in themselves as participants in the scientific community.

Description

Keywords

Academic literacies, undergraduate researchexperience, communication, assessment, reflection

Citation

Source

Teaching in Higher Education

Type

Journal article

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

License Rights

Restricted until

2099-12-31