Tese
“Porque não é o escrever em si, é ver como é que está escrito”: discursos sobre letramentos acadêmicos em inglês em uma comunidade de prática de química
Fecha
2019-08-22Autor
Lee, Amy Graham
Institución
Resumen
Although there is a long history of research in the area of Academic Literacies in Brazil, Ferreira e Stella
(2018, p. 17) affirm that studies on learning and teaching writing for academic purposes in Brazilian
universities is still a neglected action. Considering the increased exigence to publish internationally and
the need to ground pedagogical practices for writing in results from research in each of the different
disciplinary contexts (MOTTA-ROTH, 2013, p. 12), this study aims to explore academic literacy practices
in English and their development in a highly-ranked graduate program that presents high productivity in
international publications in English, the Graduate Program in Chemistry at UFSM. Toward that end, we
propose the following research questions: 1) which academic literacy practices are most valued by the
professors, both in terms of their own practices and those of their students, and why? 2) how did the
professors develop their own academic literacies and which aspects present the greatest level of difficulty
for them? 3) what dynamics of coauthorship and/or pedagogic approaches do the professors adopt and
which aspects of writing present the greatest level of difficulty for their students? The interdisciplinary
theoretical framework combines Genre Studies (BAZERMAN, 2007; BAWARSHI; REIFF, 2013),
Academic Literacies (LEA; STREET 1998, IVANIC 1998) and Critical Discourse Analysis (FAIRCLOUGH,
2003), as well as the concepts of Communities of Practice and Legitimate Peripheral Participation (LPP)
(LAVE; WENGER, 1991; WENGER, 1998). Using data generated from a semistructured questionnaire
and qualitative interviews, we analyzed the discourses of the professors, exploring whether the
development of skills, competencies and discursive conditions involved in academic literacies in English
is mediated by LPP in a community structured to provide increasing access to new members and
capacitate them to participate fully in the community. We argue that the community studied demonstrates
variable degrees of student LPP. Professors who report a greater degree of LPP along with a network for
collaborating on writing and revising among the students also report less difficulty in the development of
the students’ academic literacies. On the other hand, even when a greater degree of LPP is observed, we
detect the need for pedagogical approaches that could supplement the existing LPP. The professors’
discourse reveals a dialectical tension, where, on the one hand, scientific writing is portrayed as easy
and, on the other hand, writing articles is characterized as difficult and the professors report that students
encounter great difficulty. We argue that this tension is related, in most of the accounts, to a pedagogical
approach in line with the notion of academic literacies as cognitive skills acquired through tacit
knowledge, rather than through explicit teaching within a perspective of academic literacies as social
practices. In this sense, we recommend the creation of collaborative networks in the community and the
introduction of a collaborative and transformative pedagogical approach that will allow students to identify
as authors within the community, viewing academic literacies as social actions and developing a critical
eye toward the texts and genre systems that constitute them.