2002
DOI: 10.1177/1474022202001001003
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The Problem Problem and Other Oddities of Academic Discourse

Abstract: Habits of thinking and writing that are so familiar to academics that we hardly recognize them often seem counter-intuitive to high school and college students. These habits include the search for hidden meanings in texts and experience generally, the inclination to be contentious and to foment controversy, the tendency to make seemingly obvious assumptions explicit and the general obsession with searching for problems where often there do not seem to be any. The most productive way for teachers to help studen… Show more

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Cited by 19 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…Oliver seemed to be an example of such a student. Graff (2002) has also drawn attention to implicit expectations in academia. He argues that habits of thinking and writing in academia are so familiar to academics that they hardly recognise that they often seem counter-intuitive to students.…”
Section: Constraining Arrangementsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Oliver seemed to be an example of such a student. Graff (2002) has also drawn attention to implicit expectations in academia. He argues that habits of thinking and writing in academia are so familiar to academics that they hardly recognise that they often seem counter-intuitive to students.…”
Section: Constraining Arrangementsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Humanities‐based scholars, who are some of the first to acknowledge the need to make more explicit the often tacit ways of reading, writing, and reasoning with literary works when teaching (e.g., Graff, ), have also considered how to best scaffold students’ engagement in literary learning. The landscape of literary criticism is vast (see Eagleton, ) and can be daunting for novices seeking entry into the scholarly community.…”
Section: Theoretical and Empirical Perspectivesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…When analyzing frames, one can make a distinction between restricted and elaborated discourses (Bernstein, 1971;Coser, 1975). Graff (2002) indicates that this distiction is mostly related to the audience of the communication. In restricted discourse, one single and specific meaning is constructed and reproduced.…”
Section: The Dynamics Of Framesmentioning
confidence: 99%