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How much of an accent? Toward a model of contrastive rhetoric for writing centre tutors

Faculty Advisor

Date

2015

Keywords

acculturation, contrastive rhetoric, ESL, language acquisition, writing centers

Abstract (summary)

This essay builds on research within Contrastive Rhetoric (CR) and other areas to delineate the main attributes and broad features of a model to help writing center tutors decide the kind of role they should play with second language (L2) acquisition of their clients. The main attributes of such a model would be as follows. The clients’ discourse-level CR patterns as manifested through first language (L1) and original culture are the dependent variable. There are three intervening variables: 1) the role of the tutor; 2) client agency; and, 3) contextual factors (client’s language skills, audience and requirements of the discipline). The independent variable is the level of accent in L2 output. This is just the preliminary research outlining the main characteristics of the model based on work experience and the literature. The full development and testing of the model will have to come at a later point.

Publication Information

Siddiqui, Asif. “How Much of an Accent? Toward a Model of Contrastive Rhetoric for Writing Centre Tutors.” Asian Journal of Canadian Studies 21, no. 1 (2015): 37-55. Retrieved from http://www.kacs.kr/pdf/vol-21-2_02.pdf.

DOI

Notes

Item Type

Article

Language

English

Rights

All Rights Reserved