Accomplishing authentic writing tasks: Ventures into academic publication by Ecuadorian EFL teachers
Academic writing and subsequent publishing have become an important part of the career advancement and professional development of those engaged in English language teaching worldwide. The aim of this study was to explore a solution to the gap in the academic writing skills of Ecuadorian English tea...
Main Authors: | , , , |
---|---|
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Universitas Pendidikan Indonesia
2019-02-01
|
Series: | Indonesian Journal of Applied Linguistics |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | https://ejournal.upi.edu/index.php/IJAL/article/view/15278 |
_version_ | 1818384744328462336 |
---|---|
author | Agnes Orosz Marcela Carrasco Daniela Jaramillo Erzsébet Békés |
author_facet | Agnes Orosz Marcela Carrasco Daniela Jaramillo Erzsébet Békés |
author_sort | Agnes Orosz |
collection | DOAJ |
description | Academic writing and subsequent publishing have become an important part of the career advancement and professional development of those engaged in English language teaching worldwide. The aim of this study was to explore a solution to the gap in the academic writing skills of Ecuadorian English teachers in tertiary education. Our survey of 65 Ecuadorian English teachers showed that 92% of teachers had never published. Their reasons for not having done so included lack of self-confidence that they could produce publishable material, lack of English proficiency, lack of academic writing skills and lack of time. The intervention described in the research study involved engaging nine English teachers of an academic writing training course in authentic tasks that required writing academically for five carefully chosen ELT publications. An attainable goal was set: the participants of the training course held in November-December 2016 were invited to write book reviews and short articles on the intervention itself. Till the end of April 2018, altogether seven academic-level texts (four book reviews, one webinar review, one short article, and a concise book) were published. Two of the course participants decided early on that they did not want to participate in the optional academic writing and publishing activity, and a further four did not follow up on their initial steps; nonetheless, as a result of the intervention and its follow-up phase, five of the nine participants (including two that initially abstained) eventually published academic-level texts in recognized ELT publications. The results of the study suggest that tertiary level (non-native) English teachers can start writing academically and achieve success in the competitive world of publishing if realistic tasks are set, the trainees are mentored systematically, and the time frame (18 months) allows the submission, revision, and editing of academic articles to develop organically, leading to polished products. |
first_indexed | 2024-12-14T03:27:07Z |
format | Article |
id | doaj.art-8cf2481b584849fda79b6ea3ed9631e8 |
institution | Directory Open Access Journal |
issn | 2301-9468 2502-6747 |
language | English |
last_indexed | 2024-12-14T03:27:07Z |
publishDate | 2019-02-01 |
publisher | Universitas Pendidikan Indonesia |
record_format | Article |
series | Indonesian Journal of Applied Linguistics |
spelling | doaj.art-8cf2481b584849fda79b6ea3ed9631e82022-12-21T23:18:51ZengUniversitas Pendidikan IndonesiaIndonesian Journal of Applied Linguistics2301-94682502-67472019-02-018349650510.17509/ijal.v8i3.152788908Accomplishing authentic writing tasks: Ventures into academic publication by Ecuadorian EFL teachersAgnes Orosz0Marcela Carrasco1Daniela Jaramillo2Erzsébet Békés3Universidad Nacional de Educación, EcuadorUniversidad Católica de Cuenca, EcuadorUniversidad Católica de Cuenca, EcuadorCuenca, EcuadorAcademic writing and subsequent publishing have become an important part of the career advancement and professional development of those engaged in English language teaching worldwide. The aim of this study was to explore a solution to the gap in the academic writing skills of Ecuadorian English teachers in tertiary education. Our survey of 65 Ecuadorian English teachers showed that 92% of teachers had never published. Their reasons for not having done so included lack of self-confidence that they could produce publishable material, lack of English proficiency, lack of academic writing skills and lack of time. The intervention described in the research study involved engaging nine English teachers of an academic writing training course in authentic tasks that required writing academically for five carefully chosen ELT publications. An attainable goal was set: the participants of the training course held in November-December 2016 were invited to write book reviews and short articles on the intervention itself. Till the end of April 2018, altogether seven academic-level texts (four book reviews, one webinar review, one short article, and a concise book) were published. Two of the course participants decided early on that they did not want to participate in the optional academic writing and publishing activity, and a further four did not follow up on their initial steps; nonetheless, as a result of the intervention and its follow-up phase, five of the nine participants (including two that initially abstained) eventually published academic-level texts in recognized ELT publications. The results of the study suggest that tertiary level (non-native) English teachers can start writing academically and achieve success in the competitive world of publishing if realistic tasks are set, the trainees are mentored systematically, and the time frame (18 months) allows the submission, revision, and editing of academic articles to develop organically, leading to polished products.https://ejournal.upi.edu/index.php/IJAL/article/view/15278authentic writing taskeapenglish for academic purposesnovice authorscholarly publication |
spellingShingle | Agnes Orosz Marcela Carrasco Daniela Jaramillo Erzsébet Békés Accomplishing authentic writing tasks: Ventures into academic publication by Ecuadorian EFL teachers Indonesian Journal of Applied Linguistics authentic writing task eap english for academic purposes novice author scholarly publication |
title | Accomplishing authentic writing tasks: Ventures into academic publication by Ecuadorian EFL teachers |
title_full | Accomplishing authentic writing tasks: Ventures into academic publication by Ecuadorian EFL teachers |
title_fullStr | Accomplishing authentic writing tasks: Ventures into academic publication by Ecuadorian EFL teachers |
title_full_unstemmed | Accomplishing authentic writing tasks: Ventures into academic publication by Ecuadorian EFL teachers |
title_short | Accomplishing authentic writing tasks: Ventures into academic publication by Ecuadorian EFL teachers |
title_sort | accomplishing authentic writing tasks ventures into academic publication by ecuadorian efl teachers |
topic | authentic writing task eap english for academic purposes novice author scholarly publication |
url | https://ejournal.upi.edu/index.php/IJAL/article/view/15278 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT agnesorosz accomplishingauthenticwritingtasksventuresintoacademicpublicationbyecuadorianeflteachers AT marcelacarrasco accomplishingauthenticwritingtasksventuresintoacademicpublicationbyecuadorianeflteachers AT danielajaramillo accomplishingauthenticwritingtasksventuresintoacademicpublicationbyecuadorianeflteachers AT erzsebetbekes accomplishingauthenticwritingtasksventuresintoacademicpublicationbyecuadorianeflteachers |