An analysis of rhetorical moves in abstracts for conference proceedings

An abstract plays a pivotal role because it represents the summary of the entire article. Therefore, it is the first thing that readers evaluate to determine if they should read the entire article. Hence, it is imperative for academics to provide an abstract that includes all essential rhetorical mo...

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Main Author: Mohd Muzhafar Idrus
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: OCERINT International 2016
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Online Access:http://ddms.usim.edu.my:80/jspui/handle/123456789/12836
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Institution: Universiti Sains Islam Malaysia
Language: English
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spelling my.usim-128362017-06-15T04:19:26Z An analysis of rhetorical moves in abstracts for conference proceedings Mohd Muzhafar Idrus Abstracting Conference proceedings An abstract plays a pivotal role because it represents the summary of the entire article. Therefore, it is the first thing that readers evaluate to determine if they should read the entire article. Hence, it is imperative for academics to provide an abstract that includes all essential rhetorical moves when writing an academic article. In lieu of this, the current study attempted to examine whether the abstracts provided in conference proceedings include the essential rhetorical moves and whether the moves are presented in the sequence according to the selected classification. The data for this study were collected using purposive sampling from 23 abstracts of empirical-based studies in nature from the selected conference. The abstracts were written in the English language and authored by academics in the field of language and education from higher institutions in various countries. Hyland’s (2000) five-moves classification of rhetorical moves was used as the coding in identifying the moves structure of the selected abstracts in this study. Other moves that emerged from the selected abstracts were added to Hyland’s (2000) classification. The moves structure data were analyzed using manifest content analysis while the sequence of moves data were analyzed using latent content analysis. The findings show that the majority of the abstract only partially contains the rhetorical moves as suggested by Hyland (2000) with a variety of moves sequence. Apart from Hyland’s (2000) five- moves, some authors included the theoretical aspect of their study in their abstracts. The implications of the findings were discussed within the context of professional development among higher institutions academics, particularly in academic abstract writing. 2016-11-24T02:43:21Z 2016-11-24T02:43:21Z 2016-04 Article IJASOS- International E-Journal of Advances in Social Sciences, 2016, Vol.II, Issue 4, 24-31 2411-183X http://ddms.usim.edu.my:80/jspui/handle/123456789/12836 en OCERINT International
institution Universiti Sains Islam Malaysia
building USIM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universit Sains Islam i Malaysia
content_source USIM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://ddms.usim.edu.my/
language English
topic Abstracting
Conference proceedings
spellingShingle Abstracting
Conference proceedings
Mohd Muzhafar Idrus
An analysis of rhetorical moves in abstracts for conference proceedings
description An abstract plays a pivotal role because it represents the summary of the entire article. Therefore, it is the first thing that readers evaluate to determine if they should read the entire article. Hence, it is imperative for academics to provide an abstract that includes all essential rhetorical moves when writing an academic article. In lieu of this, the current study attempted to examine whether the abstracts provided in conference proceedings include the essential rhetorical moves and whether the moves are presented in the sequence according to the selected classification. The data for this study were collected using purposive sampling from 23 abstracts of empirical-based studies in nature from the selected conference. The abstracts were written in the English language and authored by academics in the field of language and education from higher institutions in various countries. Hyland’s (2000) five-moves classification of rhetorical moves was used as the coding in identifying the moves structure of the selected abstracts in this study. Other moves that emerged from the selected abstracts were added to Hyland’s (2000) classification. The moves structure data were analyzed using manifest content analysis while the sequence of moves data were analyzed using latent content analysis. The findings show that the majority of the abstract only partially contains the rhetorical moves as suggested by Hyland (2000) with a variety of moves sequence. Apart from Hyland’s (2000) five- moves, some authors included the theoretical aspect of their study in their abstracts. The implications of the findings were discussed within the context of professional development among higher institutions academics, particularly in academic abstract writing.
format Article
author Mohd Muzhafar Idrus
author_facet Mohd Muzhafar Idrus
author_sort Mohd Muzhafar Idrus
title An analysis of rhetorical moves in abstracts for conference proceedings
title_short An analysis of rhetorical moves in abstracts for conference proceedings
title_full An analysis of rhetorical moves in abstracts for conference proceedings
title_fullStr An analysis of rhetorical moves in abstracts for conference proceedings
title_full_unstemmed An analysis of rhetorical moves in abstracts for conference proceedings
title_sort analysis of rhetorical moves in abstracts for conference proceedings
publisher OCERINT International
publishDate 2016
url http://ddms.usim.edu.my:80/jspui/handle/123456789/12836
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