Volume 9 (2018) Issue 1
pp. 67-82
Chances
and Challenges:
Teaching
Academic Writing to University Students
in
Hong Kong
Anna
Wing-bo Tso (Hong Kong) & Winnie Siu-yee Ho (Hong Kong)
Abstract
The
mastery of academic writing has long been viewed as “the hallmark
of success for any student at university” (Jones 1999: 37).
However, research indicates that university writing courses offered
by language centres or English departments often fall short of the
writing demands expected in various academic disciplines (Grabe
2001). Recent studies on academic English writing and learners’
literacies, including Flowerdew & Miller (2008), Grabe (2001),
Hyland (2003) and Prior (2006), have criticized generic writing
courses for turning a blind eye to socio-cultural contexts and
individual learners’ needs and motivation. The development of
academic literacy, now an increasingly popular area of study, comes
under the spotlight. In this paper, we will examine the main
difficulties Hong Kong university students face when taking a
freshman English academic writing course for first-year
students. We will also discuss the key challenges English teachers
encounter in the academic writing class.
Key
words: Academic writing, new literacy studies, English as a second
language
1 The
Hardship of ESL Academic Writing Training
The
notion of academic
studies
emphasizes
the needs of effective presentation and interpretation of ideas. It
is commonly believed that students’ better performance on academic
writing can contribute to the overall success in higher education.
From this perspective, offering a series of English academic writing
training is mandatory across all universities in Hong Kong.
However,
the academic literacies approach, which is closely related to the New
Literacy Studies, sees literacies as a social practice in
institutional settings, especially schools. The fact is that language
instructors and students can have different interpretations on the
requirement on “epistemology, authority and contestation over
knowledge” (Lea & Street 1998: 160). Performing well in English
language examinations does not guarantee an A
grade
in academic writing modules. Academic writing skills are not exactly
the same as academic literacies.
On
this, there is a need to mention Bhatia’s (2004) three levels of
discursive competence:
Textual
competence
refers to the ability for professionals to both master language
(i.e. sounds, words, grammar, word meanings, discourse) and to
use textual, contextual and pragmatic knowledge to construct and
interpret texts.
Generic
competence
is the ability for professionals to respond to recurrent and new
communicative situations by producing, interpreting and using generic
conventions in the disciplines to achieve professional goals.
The
last competence,
social
competence
[…]
refers to the ability for professionals to use language more widely
to participate effectively in a wide variety of social and
institutional contexts to give expression to their social identity
(Cheng 2010: 67).
At
the tertiary level, it is expected that most students will already
have reached a certain level of textual competence. In a writing
course especially tailor-made for university students, the learning
outcomes are supposed to be geared mostly towards training up
students’ generic competence. Academic skills rather than
linguistic accuracy are the main focus, including but not limited to:
- Using hedging
- Avoiding emotive language
- Avoiding contradictions
- Eliminating wordiness
- Employing a consistent point of view
- Writing clearly and objectively
- Improving text organization
- Ensuring linearity with no digressions and/or inconsistency
(Tso,
Ho & Chung 2016: 3-7)
It
is noteworthy that English language proficiency alone is not
sufficient for professional academic writing. Without
discipline-specific academic writing training, it is highly unlikely
that students can master the genres typical to the study field. For
example,
an
effective English academic writing course for law school students
should be a legal context-based course that empowers students with
knowledge of the language game in the legal field, assisting them in
legal reasoning and the understanding of domain-specific literature,
such as legal doctrines, court decisions (cases),
legislation and regulations.
This
can be best exemplified by Sword’s (2012: 21) comparison table of
the widely different academic expectations in various disciplines,
which shows the average number of authors, page numbers, and
citations or footnotes in articles from ten academic disciplines (n =
500; 50 articles per discipline):
Table
1: Sword’s (2012: 21) comparison table of academic expectations
in
various disciplines
2 New
Literacy Studies
The
New Literacy Studies (NLS) mark
the transition of viewing literacies from a skill-based
decontextualized approach to a highly contextual one (Street 1984,
Gee 1990). It is generally believed that literacy no longer refers to
one’s ability to read and write texts (Ivanič et al. 2009).
As
Gee (2010) elaborates:
The
NLS opposed a traditional psychological approach to literacy. Such an
approach viewed literacy as a “cognitive phenomenon” and defined
it in terms of mental states and mental processing. The “ability to
read” and “the ability to write” were treated as things people
did inside their heads. The NLS instead saw literacy as something
people did inside society. It argued that literacy was not primarily
a mental phenomenon, but rather a sociocultural one. Literacy was a
social and cultural achievement - it was about ways of participating
in social and cultural groups - not just a mental achievement. Thus,
literacy needed to be understood and studied in its full range of
contexts - not just cognitive but social, cultural, historical, and
institutional, as well. (Gee 2010: 10)
In
other words, authentic experiences of being a member of the social
and cultural group are of utmost significance.
The
social practice paradigm is also welcomed by scholars like Lankshear
(1999). In terms of the institutional nature, schools or universities
are bound by customs, rules, traditions and regulations of various
disciplines. Simply offering generic skill-based freshman English
courses is not sufficient.
3
Literacy Practices
Literacy
practices can be in various formats, namely schooled literacies, i.e.
reading and writing in schools (Street 1995), local literacies, i.e,
reading and writing in the community (Barton & Hamilton 2012),
prison literacies, i.e. maintaining a personal identity in prison
(Wilson 2001), bureaucratic literacies that may be reflected in tax
forms (Fawns & Ivanic 2001), workplace literacies that could be
reading and writing in the taxi industry (Breier & Sait 1996),
advertising literacies that are shown on signs in townships (Papen
2002), visual literacies, i.e. a combination of a physical or
performative act and a digital information text (Bowen 2010), and
economic literacies, i.e. reading and writing in markets (Maddox
2001).
Literacy
seen as a social practice (Street 1995, Barton 2001), the notion of
academic
literacies
means that students
use literacy in schools or other learning contexts to achieve
academic purposes. Nonobservable
literacy practices
in the academic setting consist of observable literacy events related
to texts, which are recurrent and regular (Ivanič et al. 2009). For
example, doing in-text citation exercises for academic writing
modules. Literacy
practices
involve the socially situated beliefs, values and purposes that shape
one’s (i.e. students, in this research setting) behaviours related
to reading and writing (Barton 2001, 2012).
As
such, what is at issue for ESL academic writing training is the
following question:
What should be done in an academic writing course, so that learning and teaching can go beyond reading and writing, textual and generic competence, attaining effective academic literacy development?
4
Purpose of the Study
With
the aim of helping local Hong Kong English-as-a-second-language (ESL)
learners improve their academic writing, this paper uses a freshman
English academic writing course from a university in Hong Kong as an
example and looks into how English academic writing courses are
conducted in the
university setting. Through
a university
students’ questionnaire survey, written assignments, and external
examiner’s comments, the study will shed light on students’
perceptions, actual experiences and difficulties in learning academic
writing. We will then discuss the multiple constraints encountered by
the teachers
of the academic writing course.
As
a five-credit, one-term course for all full-time face-to-face
students coming from various degree programmes (including Chinese,
Language and Translation, Social Studies, Psychology,
Advertising and Media Design, Creative Writing and Film
Arts),
the freshman English academic writing
course (ENGLA101F) aims to provide
learners with a practical approach to mastering English academic
writing effectively. Within the duration of 13 weeks, the instructor
has to teach the following areas to over 250 students:
- Topics
- Course introduction
- Academic writing style & conventions
- Analyze and interpret assigned essay topics
- Patterns of essay development
- Introduction to essay development
- Argument
- Citing sources in academic writing
- Quoting
- Paraphrasing and summarizing
- Reading comprehension skills
- Recognizing definitions, examples, headings, subheadings, emphasis words and other signal words
- Recognizing main ideas in paragraphs
- Making inferences
- Getting and selecting information for academic writing
- Research paper structure
- Critical reading & data analysis
- Understanding graphs and tables
- Introductions in academic writing
- Types of academic texts
- Narrowing down essay topics
- Writing introductions
- Body paragraphs in academic writing
- Writing body paragraphs with topic sentences
- Analyzing reasons (causes)
- Comparing and contrasting
- Concluding paragraphs in academic writing
- Writing concluding statements
- Writing conclusions
- Evaluating and revising an essay
- Proofreading guidelines
- Detecting and correcting errors in grammar
- Chinese-influenced expression vs. English native speaker expression
Table
2: Topics included in the academic writing course of a university in
Hong Kong
Due
to limited
resources and manpower, the university is not able to offer
discipline-specific academic and professional writing courses for
students of different majors. Instead of incorporating
discipline-specific genre-based pedagogies, the freshman English
course has to remain general and suitable for all.
4.2
Students’ Perceptions and Experiences: Data Analysis
In
December 2015, a mass student survey was conducted at the end of the
writing class to check students’ perceptions and experiences of
learning academic writing in the freshman English academic
writing course, using a questionnaire with 27 close-ended questions
and one open-ended question ("Any comment?"). From the 216
questionnaires (response rate: 88.0%) gathered from the class, up to
77.6% of the students reported that they found the writing class
content relevant and useful. Interestingly, as can be seen in the
student feedback, some students seemed to be happy with the
linguistic accuracy training in the course. On
the other hand, 5 out of 66 written feedback questionnaires collected
from 216 students
reflected
that the grammatical drilling was boring and redundant. In Table 3
below, student opinions in the above-mentioned open-ended question,
are displayed:
Feedback
|
Opinions
Given
|
1
|
“I
like the grammar review.”
|
2
|
“We
have learnt grammar in secondary school already.”
|
3
|
“Many
things in the course we have learnt before. Can the course have
some new things to teach?”
|
4
|
“The
university English writing skill must not only focus on the
grammar and general essay issues.”
|
Table
3: Diverse Student Feedback on Grammar in the English Academic
Writing Course
While
the writing course was criticized for including grammar accuracy
drilling, which was not considered equivalent to good academic
writing skills, it was
found that not many students managed to attain a high level of
English proficiency. Multiple grammatical mistakes such as fragments
and fused
sentences can often be
spotted in students’ written assignments.
Below
are some typical ones1:
(1)
However this situation is not unseen on neither personal level nor
social level. Such
as
the differences between the characteristics of Chinese culture and
modern society but
also
Hong Kong should define as either international city or Chinese city.
→
Major
problem: sentence fragment (added detail:
starting
a
clause with such
as turns
the clause into a fragment) + run-on (fused sentence,
using but
also
to join another idea ungrammatically to the sentence)
(2)
Beauvoir thinks that
woman does not born natural
and
it is a process which
is the sum up of education and
conditioning and
is affected by culture, subculture, social norms and religion when
a female grows up.
→ Major
problem: run-on (fused sentence: joining multiple processes/reasons
with and,
which
and when)
(3)
And the result of the social process change young females to girls,
and to woman,
the
early feminist
will apply the term gender to describe it.
→ Major
problem: run-on (comma splices – the early feminist…This is
another idea, so a new sentence should be used)
(4)
In conclusion, the text shares the idea of collective identities at
personal, social,
cultural
level,
also
the view of education.
→ Major
problem: run-on (comma splices – also
they view…,
also
not being used as a conjunction,
and the idea is joined ungrammatically)
(5)
For example, social workers help many people every day,
most of them are not
particularly
handsome,
even
though they may look fat,
their hearts are full of love, so
they
are the most beautiful people in the world.
→
Major
problem: run-on (comma splices – multiple ideas joined wrongly by
commas)
(6)
While
conflicts of identities will therefore occurred in different level of
understanding
because
of the opposite opinions and different points of view toward the
identities.
→ Major
problem: sentence fragment (while
dependent
clause)
(7)
It becomes a common useful word after develop rapidly though 20
years. Although,
there
is nobody care about this word at first.
→ Major
problem: sentence fragment (although
is
the beginning of a dependent clause. The comma should be deleted and
an independent clause should be placed after although.)
(8)
According to Luise, after the book “On ne naît pas femme, on le
devient” appeared in
1949
which the author is Simone de Beauvoir and then translated to be “One
is not
born,
but rather becomes a woman” in 1953 by E.M. Parshley.
→ Major
problem: sentence fragment (after
has
turned the clause into a dependent clause. The dependent clause needs
to be followed by a comma and an independent clause that starts with
a subject.)
(9)
To become a real woman. The developing environment and the reply of
expectation
in
the society of turns a girl into woman.
→ Major
problem: sentence fragment (A
-to
infinitive cannot
be a sentence on its own.)
(10)
Almost everyone has more than one identities. For example, family
member or even
nationality.
→
Major
problem: sentence fragment (added detail)
Such
grammatical mistakes reveal that most ENGLA101F students have weak
English foundations. They need more linguistic accuracy training,
because they have not even attained textual competence, not to
mention generic and social competence, which come later in the
academic literacy development. This problem is reflected in an
external examiner’s report as well:
Figure
1: An external examiner’s comment on Students’ grammar
in
the end-of-course report
Besides
students’ weak English grammar, the external examiner notices that
students may not know how to convey their viewpoints nor develop
their own arguments in full. Rather, they paraphrase and summarize
ideas put forward by others:
Figure
2: An external examiner’s comment on students’ inability
to
put essay plans into practice in the end-of-course report
It
is also found that while those at the top of the scale have clear
understanding of the assignment goals, students, whether at the lower
end or the higher end of the scale, are not particularly good at
writing in a consistent tone:
Figure
3: An external examiner’s comment on students’ understanding
of
the assignment goals
Figure
4: An external examiner’s comment on inconsistencies in the writing
tone
More
significantly, regarding students’ academic writing skills, another
external examiner (a professor working for the Department of English
at another university in Hong Kong) made the following comments in
the end-of-course report:
Figure
5: Another external examiner’s comment on students’ referencing
skills
in
the end-of-course report
In
his professional advice, the external examiner further affirms that
students in the English academic writing course were not totally
aware of the academic writing principles, styles and conventions.
More
time and effort may need to be spent on teaching university writing
skills and referencing skills, namely topics 1 and 3 of the course
outline as shown in Table 2 of the article.
Student
evaluation
results are revealing, too. 10
out of 66 written feedback gathered from the open-ended question of
the
questionnaires
collected from 216 students revealed that students were aware of the
lack of manpower. They preferred to have a smaller class size.
In
Table 4 below, student opinions in the above-mentioned open-ended
question, are displayed:
Feedback
|
Opinions
Given
|
1
|
“Small
class is better.”
|
2
|
“Lack
of manpower. e.g. only one teacher teaching 200 people.”
|
3
|
“I
think this course is lack of manpower.”
|
4
|
“Small
class is more preferable.”
|
Table
4: Student feedback on their preference for small-class learning
Students also
wanted more interaction between the teacher and the class, though the
unmovable seats in the lecture theatre
and
the huge class size would not allow much room for in-class
interaction. This
students’ request was reflected in 5 out of 66 written feedback in
the questionnaire’s open-ended question mentioned above:
Feedback
|
Opinions
Given
|
1
|
“More
interactive between students.”
|
2
|
“Need
to be more interactive.”
|
3
|
“It
can change to a more interesting learning way.”
|
4
|
“More
interact sessions.”
|
Table
5: Student feedback on their preference for in-class interaction
Contrary
to what teachers expected, students actually wanted to have more
writing tests and assignments in the course. This view was revealed
through 5 out of 66 written feedback towards the open-ended question
‘Any comments’ set in the questionnaire:
Feedback
|
Opinions
Given
|
1
|
“More
tests.”
|
2
|
“Provide
more exercise for us to practise.”
|
3
|
“To
increase assignments in this course.”
|
4
|
“The
tutorial class should have more exercises.”
|
Table
6: Student feedback on their request for more writing tasks
Last
but not least, in the end-of-course
student feedback questionnaire, 12 out of 66 students who wrote
feedback in the open-ended question of the questionnaire pointed out
that the writing course is not discipline-specific enough:
Feedback
|
Opinions
Given
|
1
|
“The
course is too general. Every different
major requires a different
writing style.”
|
2
|
“More
related to my major.”
|
3
|
“The
course content needs to be more specific.”
|
4
|
“Can
be more [sic!] fit into the specific subject.”
|
Table
7: Student feedback on insufficiency in the English academic writing
course
It
is a good sign that many students noticed the downsides and
insufficiency
of the English academic writing course. This may imply that students
were aware that a good academic writing course should provide
sufficient opportunities to develop their socio-cultural sensitivity,
as well as reading and writing strategies for various written genres
in their own field of study.
5
Constraints for the ESL Academic Writing Course
It
is, however, no easy task to train up students’ textual competence,
generic competence and social competence within a short course that
lasts only for one term. Below are several major challenges for
teachers when conducting academic writing training
courses.
5.1
Class Size
As
mentioned above, since the teacher-student ratio is 1 : 250+
in the lecture, apparently, frequent interactions, close monitoring,
and active involvement of students in the classroom are hardly
possible, though
a well-prepared instructor may be able to generate an effective buzz
discussion from time
to time. More importantly, detailed marking of students’ written
essays and assessments is made almost impossible. Due to the time
limit, tutors can only use impression marking. For
example, in the autumn term of 2017 - 2018, 282 students
took ENGLA101F, the freshman English academic writing course. Within
the short duration of 13 weeks in the term, the four teachers in
charge of ENGLA101F had to mark and standardize three two-hour
written tests, twelve written assignments given after the tutorial
sessions, not to mention the three-hour written examination:
- Papers to be MarkedWorkloadTest 1x 282 studentsTest 2x 282 studentsTest 3x 282 students12 post-tutorial written assignmentsx 282 studentsFinal examx 282 studentsTotal number of written papers to be marked4,512Total number of written papers to be marked by each teacher:4,512 / 4 = 1,128
Simply
put, since each ENGLA101F teacher had to mark 1,128 written papers
within thirteen weeks,
the grammatical and vocabulary mistakes may not be corrected in
detail and explained fully.
5.2
Physical Setting of the Class
Since
there are not sufficient manpower and resources, the university
in question
can
only afford to arrange two lectures and eight tutorial classes for
over 250 students each academic year. That means for each lecture,
there are over 125 students in the theatre.
In-depth discussion with each student about their writing is out of
the question. Likewise, for each tutorial session, over 35 learners
will have to sit in rows and columns in a relatively small room.
Student-centred learning and close interactions are also made close
to impossible in tutorial classes.
5.3
Redundant Content for a Diverse Audience
As
students from various disciplines under creative arts, humanities,
social sciences, and science and technology are put into one class,
discipline-specific genre-based pedagogies are out of the question.
Only generic topics such as grammatical mechanics, punctuations,
academic reading and writing skills can be included. Yet,
paraphrasing, summarizing and referencing skills
are
by no means unique skills that only writing class teachers can teach.
In other undergraduate courses such as modern drama, writing skills -
including essay structure developments, paraphrasing and summarizing
- are also taught as teachers explain the essay assignment
requirements. The overlapping nature of the curriculum is
undesirable.
5.4
Duration
of
the Course
The
short duration of the course is a key matter of concern. Firstly,
academic writing is not something that can be strengthened all of a
sudden. The current university setting does not seem to have planned
any follow-up academic literacy rapport beyond the first term.
Secondly, in order to
make sure that the course can end within 13 weeks, learners have to
attend two hours of lectures
and two hours of tutorials, which can be too intensive for both
teachers and students. Some students suggested that there be fewer
hours of lectures and tutorials for the English academic writing
course.
To these students, 13 lectures of two
hours each plus 24 hours of tutorials teaching generic skills may be
pointless. After
all, what students truly need is discipline-specific course content
and guidance. For instance, social sciences students need to learn
how to write scientific essays and data analysis reports, creative
arts students need to learn how to write visual art analysis papers,
whereas humanities students are expected to know how to write
critical essays properly.
6
Conclusion
Due
to limited resources at the university and the unfortunate
misunderstanding between the three non-interchangeable concepts –
English language proficiency, academic writing skills, and academic
literacies –, up to the present day, academic writing courses have
been
designed and delivered in the traditional but outdated
one-size-fits-all deficit mode in many tertiary institutions in Hong
Kong, and the English academic writing course
in
this case study is just one among many. Through the student survey
statistics, end-of-course student feedback, examiners’ evaluation
reports, and academic written assignments collected from the case
study at The University of Hong Kong, we can put forward that it is
high time for universities to change their mindset, build a more
advanced literacy setting, and most of all, develop a range of
small-sized and more discipline-specific academic writing courses for
ESL students of different majors.
Developing
teaching contents for discipline-specific, genre-based academic
writing courses is not an easy task (Tso & Chung 2016: 58), but
one good way of redesigning the course curriculum is to use
authentic, contextualized content-based teaching materials, in
particular the use of corpus-based teaching toolkits, which can be
easily created to improve students’ vocabulary and raise their
awareness towards text types, concordance, collocation, and English
vocabulary frequency in specific fields (Tso & Ho 2017).
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Authors:
Anna Wing-bo Tso
Associate Professor of English
Director of the Research Institute for
Digital Culture and Humanities
School of Arts and Social Sciences
The Open University of Hong Kong
Email: atso@ouhk.edu.hk
Winnie Siu-yee Ho
Visiting Lecturer
Department of English
The Polytechnic University of Hong
Kong
Email: winniesiuyeeho@gmail.com
1The
mistakes occurring in students’ writing in (1) to (10) are quoted
directly from the original form. They have not been corrected by the
authors.