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Featured researches published by Diane Pecorari.


Language Teaching | 2014

Plagiarism in Second-Language Writing

Diane Pecorari; Bojana Petric

Plagiarism is a broad and multidisciplinary field of study, and within second-language (L2) writing, research on the topic goes back to the mid-1980s. In this review article we first discuss the received view of plagiarism as a transgressive act and alternative understandings which have been presented in the L1 and L2 writing literature. We then survey and identify salient themes in the growing body of work relating to plagiarism, primarily from an L2 writing/applied linguistic perspective. These themes include terminological distinctions; views of the role of textual plagiarism in language learning and a writers development; a concern with students’ and teachers’ sometimes differing understanding of plagiarism; and disciplinary differences in perceptions of plagiarism. We review research into the role of the electronic media in changing orientations toward plagiarism, the potential role of culture as a cause of plagiarism in the work of L2 writers, and pedagogical approaches to guiding students away from plagiarism. Methodological issues in researching plagiarism are surveyed, and the article concludes by suggesting directions for future research.


Quality in Higher Education | 2012

Reading in tertiary education: undergraduate student practices and attitudes

Diane Pecorari; Philip Shaw; Aileen Irvine; Hans Malmström; Špela Mežek

This paper reports the findings of a study of undergraduate student use of, and attitudes toward, textbooks and other assigned reading. More than 1200 students of various subjects at three Swedish universities were surveyed. Most students said reading played an important role in learning generally and attributed positive characteristics to their textbooks. However, students’ self-reported reading behaviour was at odds with these attitudes, with many students reporting some degree of non-compliance with reading assignments and a small group of students expressing active resistance to completing reading assignments. Although textbooks were perceived as valuable, students reported a preference for learning course content from other resources, such as lectures and lecture notes. Textbooks were perceived as alternatives, rather than complements, to attending class. Differences were found across academic disciplines. Implications of these findings for educational administration and classroom practice are discussed.


Archive | 2016

Introducing English for Academic Purposes

Maggie Charles; Diane Pecorari

Acknowledgements Introduction Section I The Field of EAP Chapter 1 The Scope of English for Academic Purposes Chapter 2 The Global Context of EAP Chapter 3 The Institutional Contexts of EAP Section II Planning for EAP Chapter 4 EAP Approaches and Methods Chapter 5 Planning EAP Provision Chapter 6 EAP Materials Section III Teaching and Assessing EAP Chapter 7 Academic Discourse Chapter 8 Academic Vocabulary Chapter 9 Written Expert Genres Chapter 10 Written Learner Genres Chapter 11 Spoken Genres Chapter 12 Assessment and Feedback in EAP Index


Classroom Discourse | 2017

Engaging with terminology in the multilingual classroom: teachers’ practices for bridging the gap between L1 lectures and English reading

Hans Malmström; Špela Mežek; Diane Pecorari; Philip Shaw; Aileen Irvine

Abstract In some academic settings where English is not the first language it is nonetheless common for reading to be assigned in English, and the expectation is often that students will acquire subject terminology incidentally in the first language as well as in English as a result of listening and reading. It is then a prerequisite that students notice and engage with terminology in both languages. To this end, teachers’ classroom practices for making students attend to and engage with terms are crucial for furthering students’ vocabulary competence in two languages. Using transcribed video recordings of eight undergraduate lectures from two universities in such a setting, this paper provides a comprehensive picture of what teachers ‘do’ with terminology during a lecture, i.e. how terms are allowed to feature in the classroom discourse. It is established, for example, that teachers nearly always employ some sort of emphatic practice when using a term in a lecture. However, the repertoire of such practices is limited. Further, teachers rarely adapt their repertoires to cater to the special needs arguably required in these settings, or to exploit the affordances of multilingual environments.


Archive | 2015

Plagiarism, International Students and the Second-Language Writer

Diane Pecorari

Plagiarism is a particularly complex issue because it straddles the boundary between academic integrityand academic literacy. Academic texts are widely understood to involve complex and precise exp ...


Journal of Second Language Writing | 2003

Good and original: Plagiarism and patchwriting in academic second-language writing

Diane Pecorari


Archive | 2008

Academic writing and plagiarism : a linguistic analysis

Diane Pecorari


English for Specific Purposes | 2006

VISIBLE AND OCCLUDED CITATION FEATURES IN POSTGRADUATE SECOND-LANGUAGE WRITING

Diane Pecorari


Journal of Second Language Writing | 2012

Types of Student Intertextuality and Faculty Attitudes.

Diane Pecorari; Philip Shaw


Archive | 2001

Plagiarism and international students : How the English-speaking university responds

Diane Pecorari

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Hans Malmström

Chalmers University of Technology

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Magnus Gustafsson

Chalmers University of Technology

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Andreas Eriksson

Chalmers University of Technology

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