A clear, concise, focussed, and structured kind of written discourse, normally backed up by evidence. Academic writing usually follows discipline-specific conventions.
Published in Chapter:
Plagiarism and Information Literacy Workshops for International Students
Guoying Liu (University of Windsor, Canada), Zuochen Zhang (University of Windsor, Canada), Clayton Smith (University of Windsor, Canada), Shijing Xu (University of Windsor, Canada), Karen Pillon (University of Windsor, Canada), and Haojun Guo (University of Windsor, Canada)
Copyright: © 2021
|Pages: 25
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-7998-5030-4.ch013
Abstract
The population of international students has increased significantly at the University of Windsor in recent years, and the university takes a variety of actions to address several key issues of interest to international students, including academic integrity, English language development, and writing support. This chapter reports findings from a multi-year collaborative project that was designed to enhance international students' library and academic literacy, with a focus on the understanding of plagiarism and measures to prevent it. A number of workshops that involved students at different levels were delivered to students from the English language improvement, undergraduate, and graduate programs. Research data collected from these workshops indicate that students benefited from the workshops, although at different degrees because of various factors, such as academic discipline, English language proficiency, previous educational experience. Further research can be conducted to explore ways to optimize such programs to meet the needs of students, particularly international students.