FOMS Week 2 Academic Writing
FOMS Week 2 Academic Writing
FOMS Week 2 Academic Writing
Week 2, Chapter 2
Introduction
Writers should be clear why they are writing. The most common reasons
for writing include:
However, students should make clarity a priority, and avoid writing very
complex sentences until they feel confident in their ability.
Complex sentences contain conjunctions, relative pronouns or
punctuation, which link the clauses:
Examples:
In 2005 the company produced over 135,000 vehicles but between
2005 and 2006 production increased by 20 per cent.
Over 164,000 vehicles were produced in 2007; by 2009 this had fallen
to 123,000.
Formality
• Introductory verbs – seem, tend, look like, appear to be, think, believe,
doubt, be sure, indicate, suggest
Do not use contractions (e.g don’t, it’s, he’ll, it’d) always use the full form
(do not, it is, he will, it would/had).
Do not use colloquial language or the slang the language used in texting ( e.g
kid, a lot/lots of, cool).
Always write as concisely as you can, with no irrelevant material or ‘waffle’.
Avoid “phrasal verbs” ( e.g get off, get away, put off )
Avoid vague words and phrases such as get, nice, good, thing.
Avoid overuse of brackets; don’t use exclamation marks or dashes; don’t use
“etc”.
Things to be Avoided in Academic Writing
Avoid sexist language: don’t refer to a doctor as ‘he’; instead, make the subject
plural and refer to them as they.
Resources
https://www.massasoit.edu/Assets/documents/academic-resource-cente
r/writing-center/Signal-Words.pdf
https://library.leeds.ac.uk/info/14011/writing/106/academic_writing/6
http://www.uefap.com/writing/feature/featfram.htm
Thank you