The previous issue of the AILA Review examined applications of applied linguistics research in the areas of language planning and policy (Darquennes 2013), the law (Engberg 2013), multilingual and intercultural communication (Li & Zhu 2013), the media (Perrin 2013) and communication disorders (Ravid, BarOn & Dattner 2013); that is, it examined the what of applied linguistics research. This current issue has taken a methodological perspective, providing reviews of the how of applied linguistics research in the areas of second language research, language and culture, sociolinguistics and bi-and multilingual studies. What we hear much less of, however, is the why of applied linguistics research; that is, why applied linguistics researchers do what that they do, or put another way, what it is that motivates the research that applied linguists carry out. In many cases, it may be that this research has a very personal origin, or motivation, for the researcher. I know in my case my interest in academic writing research stems from the difficulties I had in learning to do academic writing at both high school and in my first years at university. Once I had worked this out, however, I wondered why someone hadn't told me this or, put simply, in the words of Angelova and Riazantseva (1999: 491) 'If you don't tell me, how can I know?' The matter of what it is that writers need to know to order to achieve success in the academy, thus, has become something that has driven my teaching and research interests, ever since (see e.g.