This paper explores importance marking in the academic lectures of different disciplines from a functional perspective. Drawing on a corpus-driven and discourse analytic approach, we extracted the importance markers of… Click to show full abstract
This paper explores importance marking in the academic lectures of different disciplines from a functional perspective. Drawing on a corpus-driven and discourse analytic approach, we extracted the importance markers of this study from the 160 English academic lectures of the BASE corpus, which are equally distributed in the four main academic disciplinary groups of arts and humanities, social studies, physical sciences, and life and medical sciences. First, it was observed that in highlighting importance, the discipline the speaker lectures in does not make a difference. Second, we observed that, irrespective of discipline, marking importance involves (1) pointing up the lecture, (2) expressing attitudinal evaluation according to a hierarchy of importance, (3) stating which topics need extensive coverage, (4) revealing what is likely to appear in the assessment, and (5) establishing interaction with the audience. Finally, ‘life and medical sciences’ lecturers were found to involve the students in the lecture more frequently than the lecturers of other disciplinary groups.
               
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