On Dr. Anderson's recommendation, I have chosen to focus on one of my indexical fields, syntax, versus tackling design too. I have started categories for design and really enjoyed coding some of that field. But as I said to Dr. Anderson, I do not want to bite off more than I should in this first foray into sociolinguistic study.
My goal is first to define how style encodes an epistemic stance in academic writing. Then, using this control set, I want to study whether academic writing done in the digital environment aligns or dis-aligns with this epistemic stance. My initial findings in my first coding indicate that digital academic writing has a predominately affective stance while still showing aspects of the academic epistemic stance.
What I have done to start with is create my categories and determine control set examples. The categories are on a continuum with Epistemic I and Affective I representing the extremes of each end of the spectrum.
Category
|
Definition
|
Example Sentences
All examples taken from the academic data set: “Guidelines
for Editors and Authors,” Computers and
Composition: An International Journal.
|
Epistemic
I:
Self-Authority
|
Sentences with “clear assertions of a viewpoint
that follow a linear argument and state facts without qualifiers”
(Francis et al 320).
|
·
“Guest editors of
special issues need the Guest Editor’s
Manual …, which provides general information necessary to create an issue.”
·
“Since manuscripts are
submitted for blind review, all identifying information must be removed from
the body of the paper.”
|
Epistemic
II:
Alternate
Authority
|
Sentences that “acknowledge alternatives and other
view points and possibility” (Francis et al 320).
|
·
“Only if you tell us
what you need to know can we make these manuals living, useful document.”
·
“Supplementary files
offer additional possibilities to publish supporting applications, movies,
animation sequences, high-resolution images, background datasets, sound
clips, and more.”
|
Affective
II:
Qualification
|
“Sentences that are qualified” (Francis et al 320).
|
·
“It welcomes articles,
reviews, and letters to the editor that may be of interest to the readers …”
(also Connection)
·
“Manuscripts are
accepted for review with the understanding that the same work has not been
and will not be published nor is presently submitted elsewhere, that all
persons listed as Authors have given their approval for the submission of the
paper, and that any person cited as a source of personal communication has
approved such citation.”
|
Affective
I:
Connection
|
Sentences that evoke personal connection, emotion,
and/or sharing.
|
·
“It welcomes articles,
reviews, and letters to the editor that may be of interest to the readers …”
(also Qualification)
·
“We welcome any suggestions
for changes and advice on how we can clarify or extend our commentary to
assist you in accomplishing your editing tasks.”
|
In my initial coding of the traditional print guidelines, I have the following breakdown.
Category
|
# of Occurrences
|
Epistemic
I:
Self-Authority
|
33
|
Epistemic
II:
Alternate
Authority
|
9
|
Affective
II:
Qualification
|
1
|
Affective
I:
Connection
|
2
|
For the digital guidelines, here is what I have coded so far:
Category
|
# of Occurrences
|
Epistemic
I:
Self-Authority
|
6
|
Epistemic
II:
Alternate
Authority
|
7
|
Affective
II:
Qualification
|
3
|
Affective
I:
Connection
|
5
|
Some things I need to bear in mind as I compare these are:
- the number of total occurrences is much greater for the print guidelines because they are twice as long. I need to calculate a comparable ratio of number of cocurrences versus number oif total occurrences.
- the print guidelines are not fully epistemic and the digital guidelines are not fully affective -- thinking about the qualities of each stance that each type of writing chooses to include is important to my final conclusions
Works Cited
Francis, Becky, et al. "An Analysis of Undergraduate Writing Styles in the Context of Gender and Achievement." Studies in Higher Education 26.3 (2001): 313-26. Web.
"Submission Guidelines." Computers and Compostion Online. Computers and Composition, n.d. Web. 24 Sept. 2012.
Witte, Alison. "Guidelines for Editors and Authors." Computers and Composition: An International Journal. Computers and Composition, n.d. Web. 19 Sept. 2012.
Your categories look good, and your examples do, too. An an important point about "framing". Avoid saying things along the lines of "proving" a particular theory. We can provide evidence to *support* a theory, but we don't even *prove* theories (in any of the sciences). One way to think about is that a theory tells a story for a data set. Some stories fit the data better than other stories. Hope this helps.
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