All Stories

  1. The Covid infodemic
  2. Text-organizing metadiscourse
  3. Peer review
  4. Academic lexical bundles
  5. Changing patterns of self-citation: cumulative inquiry or self-promotion?
  6. ‘We Believe That … ’: Changes in an Academic Stance Marker
  7. Change of Attitude? A Diachronic Study of Stance
  8. Genre, discipline and identity
  9. Interaction in two journalistic genres
  10. Re-imagining Literacy: English in Hong Kong’s New University Curriculum
  11. Introductory chapter
  12. Second language writing: The manufacture of a social fact
  13. Faculty feedback: Perceptions and practices in L2 disciplinary writing
  14. Student perceptions of hidden messages in teacher written feedback
  15. Individuality or conformity? Identity in personal and university academic homepages
  16. Teaching Language for Academic Purposes
  17. Genre and Discourse Analysis in Language for Specific Purposes
  18. ESP and Writing
  19. ‘She has received many honours’: Identity construction in article bio statements
  20. Bundles in Academic Discourse
  21. Stance and Voice in Written Academic Genres
  22. Chapter 3. ‘You could make this clearer’: Teachers’ advice on ESL academic writing
  23. Welcome to the Machine: Thoughts on Writing for Scholarly Publication
  24. The presentation of self in scholarly life: Identity and marginalization in academic homepages
  25. Writing in the university: education, knowledge and reputation
  26. Looking through corpora into writing practices
  27. Chapter 2. Learning to write
  28. Ken Hyland and Giuliana Diani (eds): Academic Evaluation: Review Genres in University Settings.
  29. Claiming a territory: Relative clauses in journal descriptions
  30. Constructing proximity: Relating to readers in popular and professional science
  31. Scientific writing
  32. Obituary: Pippa Stein
  33. Academic Evaluation
  34. Genre and academic writing in the disciplines
  35. ‘Robot Kung fu’: Gender and professional identity in biology and philosophy reviews
  36. Disciplinary voices
  37. Feedback in Second Language WritingEdited by HYLAND, KEN, & FIONA HYLAND
  38. Academic clusters: text patterning in published and postgraduate writing
  39. ‘Small bits of textual material’: A discourse analysis of Swales’ writing
  40. As can be seen: Lexical bundles and disciplinary variation
  41. Metadiscourse: Exploring Interaction in Writing by HYLAND, KEN
  42. Genre pedagogy: Language, literacy and L2 writing instruction
  43. English for Specific Purposes
  44. Teachers’ perceptions of error: The effects of first language and experience
  45. Crossing the boundaries of genre studies: Commentaries by experts
  46. A tribute to John Swales
  47. Feedback on second language students' writing
  48. ‘So what is the problem this book addresses?’: Interactions in academic book reviews
  49. Feedback in Second Language Writing
  50. Representing readers in writing: Student and expert practices
  51. Evaluative that constructions
  52. Perspectives on EAP: An interview with Ken Hyland
  53. Hooking the reader: a corpus study of evaluative that in abstracts
  54. Editorial for 4,1: Some further thoughts on EAP and JEAP
  55. "I would like to thank my supervisor". Acknowledgements in graduate dissertations
  56. Disciplinary interactions: metadiscourse in L2 postgraduate writing
  57. A convincing argument: Corpus analysis and academic persuasion
  58. Second Language Writing
  59. Texts and materials in the writing class
  60. Dissertation Acknowledgements
  61. Changing currents in second language writing research: A colloquium
  62. Genre-based pedagogies: A social response to process
  63. Genre in the classroom: multiple perspectives
  64. Self-citation and self-reference: Credibility and promotion in academic publication
  65. Authority and invisibility
  66. 6. GENRE: LANGUAGE, CONTEXT, AND LITERACY
  67. What do they mean? Questions in academic writing
  68. Specificity revisited: how far should we go now?
  69. Editorial
  70. EAP: issues and directions
  71. Sugaring the pill
  72. Humble servants of the discipline? Self-mention in research articles
  73. English across genres: language variation in the discourse of economics
  74. Hedges, Boosters and Lexical Invisibility: Noticing Modifiers in Academic Texts
  75. Developments in English for specific purposes: a multi-disciplinary approach; Tony Dudley-Evans and Maggie-Jo St John. Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1998, 301 pp.
  76. “It might be suggested that...”
  77. Hedging in Scientific Research Articles
  78. Talking to Students: Metadiscourse in IntroductoryCoursebooks
  79. Persuasion and context: The pragmatics of academic metadiscourse
  80. Hedging in Scientific Research Articles
  81. Boosting, hedging and the negotiation of academic knowledge
  82. Qualification and certainty in L1 and L2 students' writing
  83. Language Attitudes at the Handover
  84. Scientific claims and community values: Articulating an academic culture
  85. Nurturing hedges in the ESP curriculum
  86. ‘I don't quite follow’: Making sense of a modifier
  87. Hedging in academic writing and EAF textbooks
  88. ESL computer writers: What can we do to help?
  89. Go for gold: Integrating process and product in ESP
  90. Providing productive feedback
  91. Literacy for a new medium: Word processing skills in EST
  92. THE WORD PROCESSOR IN LANGUAGE LEARNING
  93. Specific Purpose Programs
  94. Undergraduate Understandings
  95. Introduction
  96. English for academic purposes and discourse analysis
  97. English for Academic Purposes
  98. Interpersonal aspects of response: Constructing and interpreting teacher written feedback
  99. Contexts and issues in feedback on L2 writing: An introduction