Abstract

Metadiscourse is a prevalent linguistic resource that helps writers to manage the flow of the propositional contents and to direct their stance towards their contents and readers. Its dominance in persuasive writings has motivated this study which is to examine the occurrences and forms of metadiscourse use in the writing of both the high (HEP) and low (LEP) English proficiency Malaysian undergraduate writers. Both the quantitative and qualitative findings of the metadiscourse use were obtained using a concordance software (MP2.2). The results indicated that between the two main domains of metadiscourse, both groups of writers exhibited a greater preference for the use of interactional metadiscourse than the interactive. Between the two groups of writers, it was the HEP writers who exhibited a higher frequency of use for both the interactive and interactional metadiscourse. In terms of the forms used, the HEP writers also used a greater variety of metadiscourse forms when compared to the LEP writers. Based on the results, it can be concluded that the HEP writers had a greater awareness of the academic writing conventions, while the LEP writers still lacked this awareness in their writing. Furthermore, variant forms of metadiscourse use were also noted. This finding implies that more instructional help may be needed to raise the LEP writers’ awareness on the importance of metadiscourse use in a persuasive discourse.

Highlights

  • Writing is a social act which carries a communicative intent of the writer

  • It can be concluded that the high English proficiency (HEP) writers had a greater awareness of the academic writing conventions, while the low English proficiency (LEP) writers still lacked this awareness in their writing

  • The HEP writers again registered a higher frequency of use with a total of 377.8occurrences per 10000 words

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Summary

Introduction

This notion that writing and in particular, academic writing, is a social act is very much grounded in the theory of social constructionism (Vygotsky, 1978) This theory purports that both the writer and the reader are actively involved in the ‘building, shaping, and elaborating meaning’ in a written text The art of persuasion involves the writer’s skill in sequencing his thoughts so that they are well received by his reader (Jones, 2011; Hyland, 2005) These persuasive skills are encapsulated in Aristotle’s famed rhetorical strategies which are lagos, ethos and pathos and the employment of the use of appropriate metadiscourse is one of the important strategies in this persuasive act

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