Making Connections—Connectives
Writing Readable Research - A Guide for Students of Social Science - Beverly Lewin
Beverly Lewin [+ ]
Tel Aviv University
Beverly A. Lewin has extensive experience in teaching scientific writing to Ph.D. students from non - English speaking backgrounds, in various social sciences, as well as in fields ranging from astronomy to zoology. Her research focuses on scientific discourse, especially genre analysis and managing interpersonal relations in texts (hedging and criticism). Publications include Expository Discourse: A Genre-Based Approach to Social Science Texts (co-authored with Jonathan Fine and Lynne Young, Continuum, 2001) and The Sword and the Word: Criticism in the Academy (co-edited with Françoise Salager-Meyer, Peter Lang, forthcoming).
Description
This chapter considers connectives. Connectives are the words or phrases that bind together parts of a text and helps you to understand the point the author is trying to make. Topics Covered: What is the Role of Connectives; What Connectives Do We Use in Scientific Writing?