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Interactional metadiscourse in expert and student disciplinary writing: Exploring intrageneric and functional variation.
- Source :
-
English for Specific Purposes . Jan2024, Vol. 73, p124-140. 17p. - Publication Year :
- 2024
-
Abstract
- Recent critical inquiries in metadiscourse research call into question the functional inadequacy of a word-based lexical approach. To account more fully the functional affordances of metadiscoursal features in academic writing, this paper examines the Interactional Metadiscourse, namely hedges, boosters, attitude markers and self-mentions based on a 2.64-million-word corpus of L1-English expert and L1-Chinese student writing in Agricultural Science. Through an intra-generic lens, we found a significant effect of part-genre on the use of all four target categories for both writer groups; and L1-English experts employed significantly more hedges than L2 students while L2 students used significantly more boosters and attitude markers. Functionally, both groups shared a largely similar deployment of functional subtypes across part-genres with L1-English experts outperforming L2 students only in one function: 'stating a goal or purpose' in self-mentions. Subsequent qualitative discourse-functional analyses at part-genre level between two writer groups explained some student-produced discipline-inappropriate metadiscoursal choices. This paper concludes with resources for a rigorous coding development, and implications for teaching metadiscourse to disciplinary writers with an emphasis on using available discipline-specific corpora to understand how functional taxonomizations of IM interface with socio-rhetorical contexts in disciplinary writing. • An intrageneric and functional perspective on interactional metadiscourse (IM). • A rigorous coding protocol for reliable analysis of potential IM items. • Conclusion is profuse with IM features; Methods is the least interactional. • Strong interaction between part-genre and expertise in boosters and attitude markers. • Students use some rhetorically and disciplinarily inappropriate IM features. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Subjects :
- *AGRICULTURAL laboratories
*ACADEMIC discourse
*ENGLISH language
*STUDENTS
*AUTHORS
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 08894906
- Volume :
- 73
- Database :
- Academic Search Index
- Journal :
- English for Specific Purposes
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 173855382
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1016/j.esp.2023.10.007