Writing retreats as writing pedagogy

Authors

  • Brian Paltridge University of Sydney Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/wap.v8i1.27634

Keywords:

Writing retreats, writing groups, writing pedagogy, writing for publication

Abstract

Writing retreats are an invaluable way of providing research students and early career researchers with opportunities for extended periods of time for their writing (MacLeod et al., 2012; Murray, 2013, 2014, 2015; Murray and Newtown, 2009; Murray et al., 2012; Petrova and Coughlin, 2012). This is important both for students who are under pressure for timely completion of their degrees and academic staff in the early stages of their careers who, once they have obtained an academic appointment, need to establish themselves in their fields as well as meet tenure track requirements that have been set by their employing institutions. This is as true for native speaking writers as it is for non-native speaking writers (Habibie, 2015), all of whom have to be able to write academically in English, the international language of research, and often face challenges in doing this. This paper discusses both the nature and benefits of writing retreats. It then provides an example of a writing retreat that focuses on writing for publication that has been on offer for the past four years at the University of Sydney, Australia. It describes how the retreat has evolved, how it is organized in its present form, and how participants have responded to the retreat. The paper concludes by arguing that writing retreats are a valuable opportunity for writing pedagogy, showing how both pedagogy and opportunities for extended writing can be brought together within the context of these retreats.

Author Biography

  • Brian Paltridge, University of Sydney

    Brian Paltridge is Professor TESOL at the University of Sydney. His most recent publications are Research Methods in Applied Linguistics, edited with Aek Phakiti (Bloomsbury, 2015) and Ethnographic Perspectives on Academic Writing (with Sue Starfield and Christine Tardy, Oxford University Press, 2016). He has recently completed, with Sue Starfield, a book on getting published in academic journals to be published by the University of Michigan Press. He also, with Sue Starfield, edits the Routledge Introductions to English for Specific Purposes and the Routledge Research in English for Specific Purposes series. He is a co-editor of TESOL Quarterly and an editor emeritus for English for Specific Purposes.

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Published

2016-05-23

Issue

Section

Reflections on Practice

How to Cite

Paltridge, B. (2016). Writing retreats as writing pedagogy. Writing and Pedagogy, 8(1), 199-213. https://doi.org/10.1558/wap.v8i1.27634

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