
The art scholar, by Martins De Barros
Amidst the readings I’m doing for my MA in Educational Technology and TESOL at the University of Manchester, this space is devoted to articles I come by for it, but also to recommend. If you’d like to get yourself involved in some scholarly reading, but don’t belong to a university library system, I highly recommend trying out Google Scholar if you haven’t already. You may still need to subscribe to access some articles, but sometimes you can luck out!
Year 1, Semester 1 – Assignment 1 (EDUC70020)
Other notable articles
Eldridge, J. (2008) No, There Isn’t an “Academic Vocabulary,” But: A Reader Responds to K. Hyland and P. Tse’s “Is There an ‘Academic Vocabulary’?”, TESOL Quarterly, 42/1: 109-113. Available here*
Gutierrez, G. (2006) Sociocultural theory and its application to CALL: A study of the computer and its relevance as a mediational tool in the process of collaborative activity. ReCALL 18(2), 230-251. Available here*
Hyland, K. and P. Tse, P. (2007) Is There an “Academic Vocabulary”?, TESOL Quarterly, 41/2: 235-253. Available here*
Hyland, K. (2008) The Author Replies, TESOL Quarterly, 42/1: 113-114. Available here*
Springer, S and Collins, L. (2008) Interacting inside and outside of the language classroom, Language Teaching Research, 12: 39-60. Available here*
*shortened for spatial purposes on this blog
4 Responses to Articles for MA
Toronto in May (uncovering the teacher plan, post 2)
May 7th, 2013Toronto in May (a teacher training exercise, post 1)
May 7th, 20137 reasons to be excited about TOSCON13
April 28th, 2013POSTS BY MONTH
POSTS BY CATEGORY


This is really valuable. Thanks for posting. I have started doing the same as we all don’t have time to search the journals but blogs I seem to access quicker. We can all help each other out in this way to make our teaching more informed.
This started as a way for me to keep track of what I’ve read, but I thought it might be useful to others interested in things that I’m interested in. ;)
Looking for this article without success! Is it one you’ve come across? Seems to be cited everywhere but I can’t find the article itself: Hayes, J. R. & Flowers, L. S. (1980) Identifying the Organization of Writing Processes. From Gregg, L W & Steinberg, E R, Cognitive Processes in Writing pp.3-30, New Jersey,: L. Erlbaum Associates
This looks like it might be what you’re looking for, even though that particular subheading doesn’t seem to appear… http://wp.me/a1MNsg-1jM