TASK is a flexible learning resource that has been carefully designed to develop the key transferable skills that promote students' success in university and college study. Whether you are a student or a teacher, the TASK series provides a tried and tested teaching and learning tool suitable for a broad range of academic disciplines. Module 2 is dedicated to academic culture according to British academic standards.
Esp Ideas: Recipes for Teaching Professional and Academic English (Pilgrims Longman Resource Books)
This text provides teachers with ideas and activities for practising the skills required by ESP and EAP students. The activities which require specialist knowledge are accompanied by background notes which give the teacher all the information needed to work with the material. The book also contains a comprehensive index, cross-referencing, sample materials and photopiable worksheets.
Academic Writing and Plagiarism: A Linguistic Analysis
Plagiarism has long been regarded with concern by the university community as a serious act of wrongdoing threatening core academic values. There has been a perceived increase in plagiarism over recent years, due in part to issues raised by the new media, a diverse student population and the rise in English as a lingua franca. This book examines plagiarism, the inappropriate relationship between a text and its sources, from a linguistic perspective. Diane Pecorari brings recent linguistic research to bear on plagiarism, including processes of first and second language writers; interplay between reading and writing; writer's identity and voice; and the expectations of the academic community.
Academic Skills Problems, Fourth Edition: Direct Assessment and Intervention
This popular practitioner guide and text presents an effective, problem-solving-based approach to evaluating and remediating academic skills problems. Leading authority Edward S. Shapiro provides practical strategies for working with students across all grade levels (K–12) who are struggling with reading, spelling, written language, or math. Step-by-step guidelines are detailed for assessing students' learning and their instructional environment, using the data to design instructional modifications, and monitoring student progress. The research base for the approach is accessibly summarized. The companion workbook, available separately, contains practice exercises and reproducible forms.