Journal of English for Academic Purposes | 2019

L2 doctoral students’ experiences in thesis writing in an English-medium university in New Zealand

 
 
 

Abstract


Abstract Drawing upon Bakhtin s (1981) theory of dialogism, this study explores how two Chinese international doctoral students reflect upon their experiences of voice evolvement in thesis writing under the influences of their epistemological development in New Zealand. Through Reinharz s (1997) framework of self, we scrutinise each participant s data from their first PhD thesis draft, a retrospective written report, and two rounds of semi-structured interviews. Results reveal that, by interacting with others (e.g., supervisors, theorists) in the context where the thesis is produced, the participants epistemology has developed. This epistemological development itself is the process in which students forge their own philosophical views in relation to knowledge and knowing as individual researchers and members of an academic community with shared disciplinary attributes. The philosophical views further inform their writers voice as the representation of their individual and social selves that are embodied in thesis writing. Results also indicate that Chinese international doctoral students bring valuable cultural assets for potential intercultural communication between Chinese and Anglophone disciplinary scholarships. For these students who write their theses in English as a second or additional language (L2), such interchanges create a space for them to (re)examine the different ideologies that promote their learning.

Volume 41
Pages 100779
DOI 10.1016/J.JEAP.2019.100779
Language English
Journal Journal of English for Academic Purposes

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