TY - JOUR
T1 - EFL doctoral students' conceptions of authorial stance in academic knowledge claims and the tie to epistemic beliefs
AU - Chang, Peichin
AU - Tsai, Chin Chung
N1 - Funding Information:
This research work was supported by the National Science Council (NSC), Taiwan [grant numbers NSC 100-2410-H-003-165, NSC 100-2511-S-011-004-MY3, and NSC 101-2511-S-011-003-MY3]. Our gratitude also goes to the Academic Paper Editing Clinic, National Taiwan Normal University, Taiwan.
PY - 2014/7
Y1 - 2014/7
N2 - Taking an effective authorial stance in research argumentation has been designated as both vitally important and challenging. The study investigated English as a foreign language (EFL) doctoral students' conceptions of authorial stance, the role of domains in affecting their conceptions, and the ties of the conceptions to the participants' epistemic beliefs, given that both assume a continuum of parallel values (from absolutist perspectives/assertive claims to evaluatist perspectives/tentative claims). Twenty EFL doctoral students were recruited from two disciplines, social science and pure science, for interviews and the judgment of texts. The results revealed that, while more often the participants discussed stance relevantly from a linguistic angle, their conceptions were rather superficial and polarized. Their conceptions were also affected by their disciplinary assumptions. Their epistemic beliefs, however, were quite mature, incompatible with their imprecise conceptions of stance, which may be used to novice research writers' advantage to inform and guide their learning of authorial stance.
AB - Taking an effective authorial stance in research argumentation has been designated as both vitally important and challenging. The study investigated English as a foreign language (EFL) doctoral students' conceptions of authorial stance, the role of domains in affecting their conceptions, and the ties of the conceptions to the participants' epistemic beliefs, given that both assume a continuum of parallel values (from absolutist perspectives/assertive claims to evaluatist perspectives/tentative claims). Twenty EFL doctoral students were recruited from two disciplines, social science and pure science, for interviews and the judgment of texts. The results revealed that, while more often the participants discussed stance relevantly from a linguistic angle, their conceptions were rather superficial and polarized. Their conceptions were also affected by their disciplinary assumptions. Their epistemic beliefs, however, were quite mature, incompatible with their imprecise conceptions of stance, which may be used to novice research writers' advantage to inform and guide their learning of authorial stance.
KW - academic writing
KW - authorial stance
KW - conceptions
KW - epistemic views
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U2 - 10.1080/13562517.2014.880682
DO - 10.1080/13562517.2014.880682
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84896494834
SN - 1356-2517
VL - 19
SP - 525
EP - 542
JO - Teaching in Higher Education
JF - Teaching in Higher Education
IS - 5
ER -