MICUSP Research Goals
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With data ranging from 4th year undergraduates to third year graduate students, we will be able to analyze graduate student writing development, asking questions like: What changes, for example in lexical-grammar and discourse patterns, do we find in texts as students become more advanced?
Our database will provide a snapshot of assessed genres used at a major US research university, allowing us to explore questions like: What are the characteristics of the various genres that have developed? How similar is graduate student writing to published scholarly writing?
As a complement to the MICASE corpus, MICUSP will make it possible to analyze the similarities and differences between student speech and student writing. We can investigate questions like: What linguistic effects do the different conditions of speech and writing give rise to?
With data from a range of departments at the U of M, we will be able to map disciplinary variation in academic writing across the university, asking questions like: How do writing styles, conventions and technique vary across departments and disciplines?
With samples of writing by both native and non-native speaker students, we will have an opportunity to ask questions like: What are the differences between native-speaker versus non-native-speaker writing patterns, for example in the use of metadiscourse?
With comparable databases of proficient student writing in other languages or language varieties, we will be able to make cross-linguistic and cross-dialectal comparisons. As an example, a similar corpus of British English student writing, the BAWE corpus, has been compiled in the UK.
These tutorials show you how to use MICUSP Simple and how to browse for and search in MICUSP papers.
A short history of this project.
Read about what types of academic student papers are included in MICUSP and how we labeled them.
These small MICUSP-based research projects provide interesting facts about some key features of advanced student academic writing. They tell you, for example, how students who all received an A for their papers connect sentences or how they use so-called “scare quotes”.
What should you know about academic writing? Read some interesting studies here.