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E-grāmata: How to Fix Your Academic Writing Trouble: A Practical Guide

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Are you confused by the feedback you get from your academic teachers and mentors?

This clear and accessible guide to decoding academic feedback will help you interpret what your lecturer or research supervisor is really trying to tell you about your writingand show you how to fix it. It will help you master a range of techniques and strategies to take your writing to the next level and along the way youll learn why academic text looks the way it does, and how to produce that authoritative scholarly voice that everyone talks about.

This book is an easy-to-use resource for postgraduate students and researchers in all disciplines, and even professional academics, to diagnose their writing issues and find ways to fix them. This book would also be a valuable text for academic writing courses and writing groups, such as those offered in doctoral and Master's by research degree programmes.









'Whether they have writing problems or not, every academic writer will want this handy compendium of effective strategies and sound explanations on their book shelfits a must-have.'

Pat Thomson, Professor of Education, University of Nottingham, UK
1. Introduction: You may have academic writing troubles, but you can fix
them!

2. Your writing doesnt sound very academic: How to convince your reader
you belong

3. 'Wheres your evidence for this?': Using what you know to make a case

4. Your writing doesnt flow: Making your text coherent and fluent

5. Waffle: Improving readability by managing your extra words

6. Uncritical!: Taking a stand in your writing

7. Wheres your discussion section?: Structuring your work as a whole

8. The end of this book, but not the end of your dissertation
Inger Mewburn is Director of Research Training at The Australian National University where she is responsible for co-ordinating, communicating and measuring all the centrally run research training activities and doing research on student experience to inform practice. Aside from editing and contributing to the Thesis Whisperer blog, she writes scholarly papers, books and book chapters about research student experiences, with a special interest in the digital practices of academics.

Katherine Firth is an academic at La Trobe University, currently establishing a new Learning Hub across all their campuses. She has taught graduate writing across arts and sciences faculties since 2008, in the UK and Australia. She has built innovative online platforms supporting graduate writers and won a university prize for the innovative Thesis Boot Camp at the University of Melbourne. She has maintained a doctoral research and writing blog since 2013 and publishes in the fields of literature and musicology.

Shaun Lehmann has been a teacher of English as a second language for a decade and is an interdisciplinary researcher with interests straddling human biology, anthropology and sociology. Shaun has also been involved with teaching academic skills and bridging courses for both domestic and international students for the Australian National University and has lectured in biological anthropology.