It has been argued that male and female undergraduates adopt different, gendered writing styles. This paper discusses findings from a project that examined this issues, and explores lecturers' perceptions of gender and undergraduate writing. It shows that, in the case of 'second-class' awarded essays, a majority of academics were unable to correctly identify the authors gender. Applying analysis of discourse to the explanations of academics concerning their attempts at gender identification, we found that narratives used by academics tended to support discourses of gender difference, particularly in terms of ability. These various narratives, and the resulting constructions of male and female students, are discussed. It is argued that the n...
AbstractThis study investigates gender differences in language use in argumentative essays written b...
This article examines how non traditional male undergraduate students from linguistic minorities per...
This study contributes to the growing body of research on gender and writing and extends previous re...
It has been argued that male and female undergraduates adopt different, gendered writing styles. Thi...
Academic assessment of their coursework is of great importance to undergraduate students. Yet little...
In their identification of gender in the writing of nine narratives, students in this study reproduc...
Gender distinction has been shown to characterise both undergraduate experiences and outcomes. Yet r...
AbstractResearch on linguistic variation across gender has focused mainly on oral language. However,...
This study examines the perceptions of 100 university lecturers in history and psychology regarding ...
The aim of this study was to investigate the influence of perceived student gender on the feedback g...
The relationship between gender and discourse has been a focus of theoretical and empirical attentio...
Recent scholarship in Basic Writing has focused on the tensions created when marginalized students e...
This study examines how the genders of both student writers and their peer tutors affect the dynamic...
This interview-intensive interpretive study explores the stories of seven first-year women enrolled ...
A number of recent studies have raised critical questions about the gendering of academic labour in ...
AbstractThis study investigates gender differences in language use in argumentative essays written b...
This article examines how non traditional male undergraduate students from linguistic minorities per...
This study contributes to the growing body of research on gender and writing and extends previous re...
It has been argued that male and female undergraduates adopt different, gendered writing styles. Thi...
Academic assessment of their coursework is of great importance to undergraduate students. Yet little...
In their identification of gender in the writing of nine narratives, students in this study reproduc...
Gender distinction has been shown to characterise both undergraduate experiences and outcomes. Yet r...
AbstractResearch on linguistic variation across gender has focused mainly on oral language. However,...
This study examines the perceptions of 100 university lecturers in history and psychology regarding ...
The aim of this study was to investigate the influence of perceived student gender on the feedback g...
The relationship between gender and discourse has been a focus of theoretical and empirical attentio...
Recent scholarship in Basic Writing has focused on the tensions created when marginalized students e...
This study examines how the genders of both student writers and their peer tutors affect the dynamic...
This interview-intensive interpretive study explores the stories of seven first-year women enrolled ...
A number of recent studies have raised critical questions about the gendering of academic labour in ...
AbstractThis study investigates gender differences in language use in argumentative essays written b...
This article examines how non traditional male undergraduate students from linguistic minorities per...
This study contributes to the growing body of research on gender and writing and extends previous re...