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Critical Reading and Writing for Postgraduates 2nd Revised edition [Mīkstie vāki]

4.01/5 (164 ratings by Goodreads)
  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 264 pages, height x width: 242x170 mm, weight: 450 g
  • Sērija : Sage Study Skills Series
  • Izdošanas datums: 13-Jan-2011
  • Izdevniecība: Sage Publications Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 1849205620
  • ISBN-13: 9781849205627
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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 264 pages, height x width: 242x170 mm, weight: 450 g
  • Sērija : Sage Study Skills Series
  • Izdošanas datums: 13-Jan-2011
  • Izdevniecība: Sage Publications Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 1849205620
  • ISBN-13: 9781849205627
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
`This book confirms that the answers that you get depend on the questions that you ask... Wallace and Wray demonstrate that critical engagement with one's sources pays dividends in terms of a deep understanding of what those sources tell us. Developing the skills of the critical reader helps to make budding researchers into better writers, through the realisation of what works better and what works less well when communicating ideas and information. The book is written in a clear and straightforward fashion that is guaranteed to make you think, as well as encouraging constructive and engaging modes of writing that will improve your connection to your audience.'Professor Graham Crow, University of Southampton

`A very clear, accessible introduction that will be invaluable to postgraduate students trying to engage with reading and writing in a critical way.' R.M. Lee, Professor of Social Research Methods, Royal Holloway University of London

In this book the authors show students how to read critically and how to write using critical techniques. The book is a `must-have' resource for postgraduate students and early-career academics.

This book is for postgraduate students, methods course tutors and researchers.

In Critical Reading and Writing for Postgraduates Second Edition, the authors show students how to read critically and how to write using critical techniques. This book is a 'must-have' resource for postgraduate students and early-career academics. It has been expanded and updated to include:

  • A range of examples encompassing disciplinary areas including linguistics, education, business and management
  • Commentaries on using e-resources and features of e-research
  • New and additional material available online including access to journal articles

This book is for postgraduate students, methods course tutors and researchers.

Recenzijas

Mike Wallace and Alison Wrays book confirms that the answers that you get depend on the questions that you ask. One of the most important skills for researchers to acquire is that of asking the right questions, and they show that this process begins with identifying the questions that need to be asked about the existing literature on a chosen subject. Wallace and Wray demonstrate that critical engagement with ones sources pays dividends in terms of depth of understanding what those sources tell us. In addition, developing the skills of the critical reader also helps to make budding researchers into better writers, through the realisation of what works better and what works less well when communicating ideas and information. The book is written in a clear and straightforward fashion that is guaranteed to make you think, as well as encouraging constructive and engaging modes of writing that will improve your connection to your audience. Professor Graham Crow, University of Southampton





Praise for first edition:









A very clear, accessible introduction that will be invaluable to postgraduate students trying to engage with reading and writing in a critical way - R.M. Lee, Professor of Social Research Methods, Royal Holloway University of London

List of Figures and Tables
vii
How to Use this Book viii
Author Biographies xi
Acknowledgements xii
Part One Becoming a Critical Reader and Self-Critical Writer
1(66)
1 What it Means to be Critical
3(11)
2 Making a Critical Choice
14(15)
3 Getting Started on Critical Reading
29(15)
4 Getting Started on Self-Critical Writing
44(10)
5 Creating a Comparative Critical Summary
54(13)
Part Two Developing an In-Depth Analysis
67(80)
6 The Key to a Mental Map for Exploring the Literature
69(11)
7 The Argument Component of your Mental Map
80(10)
8 More Components: Knowledge, Literature, Intellectual Projects
90(17)
9 Developing a Critical Analysis of a Text
107(10)
10 A Worked Example of a Critical Analysis
117(18)
11 Developing your Argument in Writing a Critical Review of a Text
135(12)
Part Three Putting your Critical Reviews to Work
147(62)
12 Focusing and Building up your Critical Literature Review
149(18)
13 Integrating Critical Literature Reviews into your Dissertation
167(19)
14 Tools for Structuring a Dissertation
186(11)
15 Using the Literature in Research Papers and Oral Presentations
197(12)
Appendices
209(42)
1 Abridged article: `One word or two?' (Wray and Staczek)
211(11)
2 Abridged article: `Sharing leadership of schools through teamwork' (Wallace)
222(15)
3 Blank form for the Critical Analysis of a text
237(10)
4 Logic checksheet: Developing a logical overall argument in a dissertation
247(4)
Index 251
Mike Wallace is a Professor of Public Management at Cardiff Business School, Cardiff University, where he teaches postgraduate courses on research methods. He was formerly an Associate Director of the Advanced Institute of Management Research (AIM), responsible for research capacity building in the management field, and also the Economic and Social Research Councils Strategic Adviser for Researcher Development. His research on managing change in the public services is reported in many books and academic journals. Most recently, he is lead author of a major monograph Developing Public Service Leaders: Elite Orchestration, Change Agency, Leaderism and Neoliberalization (Oxford University Press 2023). He is co-author of Critical Reading and Writing for Postgraduates (4th edition 2021). Alison Wray is a Research Professor of Language and Communication at Cardiff University. Her research concerns the modelling of lexical storage and processing, particularly in relation to formulaic phrases, and it has been applied to language learning, evolution of language and language disability. Her two monographs Formulaic Language and the Lexicon (Cambridge University Press, 2002) and Formulaic Language: Pushing the Boundaries (Oxford University Press, 2008) are internationally acclaimed. Her current research focusses on dementia communication. Her 2020 book The Dynamics of Dementia Communication won the 2021 book prize of the British Association for Applied Linguistics and came second in the biennial book award of the American Association for Applied Linguistics. She has also published Why Dementia Makes Communication Difficult: A Guide to Better Outcomes (2021), aimed at people with dementia, their families and carers. She has a longstanding commitment to researcher training, including the developing of academic expertise. She is lead author of the popular undergraduate research methods textbook Projects in Linguistics (Hodder, 2012) and co-author of Critical Reading and Writing for Postgraduates (4th edition 2021).