Evaluative language in examiners’ reports on Mphil theses In University of Cape Coast
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University of Cape Coast
Abstract
Academic writing is not impersonal and objective; it is interactive and
evaluative. The present study examined the evaluative language in examiners’
reports on 100 MPhil theses purposively selected from four departments,
namely English, History, Hospitality and Tourism Management, and
Population and Health, by, specifically, investigating the types of evaluative
comments, evaluated entities, and examiner roles. The present study focused
on the Theory of Systemic Functional Linguistics (SFL) and key concepts like
‘Evaluation’ and ‘Feedback’ together with adopted analytical framework by
Holbrook et al. (2004a) and Starfield et al. (2017). Applying qualitative
content analysis to the data set in University of Cape Coast, the study revealed
three major findings. First, examiners employed more negative evaluative
comments than positive evaluative comments. The negative comments,
however, were mitigated, using such strategies as praise and criticism pairs,
hedging devices, and personal pronouns. Second, the thesis and the candidate
were the major entities evaluated in the data and these were realized largely in
Material and Relational processes. Finally, aside their core mandates as
examiners and evaluators of what the candidate had done, examiners assumed
six other different roles. The study adds to the usefulness of SFL and
analytical framework in interpreting evaluative language in thesis examiners’
reports. The study, also, provides insights into the need for supervisors and
students to situate their coaching and writing skills respectively to meet
institutional and genre requirements.
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