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Research analyzes academic abstracts written by students

Research Analyzes Academic Abstracts Written by Students

Although there are studies on scientific abstracts written by experts, few deal with student productions

by Pompeu Fabra University
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Abstracts are summaries that introduce scientific articles. Their purpose is to [provide an overview] of the [full] text so that, in a short time, potential readers can get a general idea of the contents and decide whether they are interested in reading the entire document. It is a basically informative summary that synthesizes the most important contributions of the article: the topic of study, the methodology applied, and, above all, the results obtained. Undergraduate final year projects (TFG) are academic texts written by students starting out as researchers and are also preceded by an abstract or summary.

Although there are studies on scientific abstracts written by experts, few deal with student productions. An article published recently in the Revista de lingüística teórica y aplicada by Maria Dolors Cañada and Carme Bach of the Gr@el research group at the Pompeu Fabra University (Universitat Pompeu Fabra—UPF) Department of Translation and Language Sciences, analyzes abstracts written by future graduates in appliedlLanguages for their TFG, "an academic genre for evaluation as it will be graded by teachers, which does not occur with scientific texts."

The abstracts studied were treated at two levels of analysis: macrotextual (rhetorical moves), and microtextual (metadiscourse markers used to indicate relationships, unions, and preview ideas and phrases in the discourse).

As the authors point out in their article, "the importance of studying these textual products is due to the fact that all curricula include an end of bachelor's or master's degree project. This leads to the emergence of a new genre with a significant presence in written academic practices, which deserves descriptive research like ours, because the implications for teaching academic writing are obvious."

The corpus of this study consists of 36 abstracts from TFG by an entire cohort of the bachelor's degree in applied languages at UPF, extending to 7,488 words. The students received general instructions on how to perform their TFG, but no special attention was paid to the drafting of the work in general or of the abstract in particular. Abstracts varied in length from a minimum of 83 to a maximum of 327 words.

Helping achieve discourse competence to disseminate research

"Being competent in discourse means having internalized the characteristics of a specific genre not just linguistically but also at the sociocultural and pragmatic levels, i.e., directly related to the context in which genre is produced and received," the authors assert. From the point of view of the teaching of writing, helping students become proficient in discourse involves making them aware of the characteristics of the genre.

In many cases, the presentation of the subject expresses the author's identity rather as a student than as a researcher, since they do not succinctly introduce the area of knowledge they are working in, but display their knowledge extensively, which they suppose will [lead to] positive assessment by the teacher. The study shows that the abstracts analyzed are hybrid texts, halfway between academic discourse, produced by students who will be evaluated, and specialist discourse, produced by and targeting expert readers.

- This press release was originally published on the Universitat Pompeu Fabra website. It has been edited for style