Formality in the Academic Writing of Thai EFL English-Major Students

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Bibliographic Details
Title: Formality in the Academic Writing of Thai EFL English-Major Students
Language: English
Authors: Pong-ampai Kongcharoen, Jiraporn Dhanarattigannon, Intira Bumrungsalee
Source: rEFLections. 2025 32(1):395-414.
Availability: King Mongkut's University of Technology Thonburi School of Liberal Arts. 126 Pracha Uthit Road, Bang Mod, Thung Khru, Bangkok, Thailand 10140. Tel: +66-2470-8756; Fax: +66-2428-3375; Web site: https://so05.tci-thaijo.org/index.php/reflections/index
Peer Reviewed: Y
Page Count: 20
Publication Date: 2025
Document Type: Journal Articles
Reports - Research
Education Level: Higher Education
Postsecondary Education
Descriptors: Academic Language, Essays, Majors (Students), English (Second Language), Second Language Learning, Second Language Instruction, Computational Linguistics, Writing Assignments, Grammar, Speech Acts, Foreign Countries, Computer Software, Undergraduate Students, Language Styles, Word Frequency, Scores, Writing (Composition), Teaching Methods, Writing Evaluation, Writing Instruction
Geographic Terms: Thailand
ISSN: 1513-5934
2651-1479
Abstract: In recent years, there has been a growing trend of using informal styles in academic writing, including research articles. To examine the degree of formality in students' writing, this corpus-based study aimed to analyze the formal linguistic features in the academic writing assignments of English-major students at a Thai university. The learner corpus consisted of 552 assignments, totaling 190,506 words, and was organized into five different writing patterns. TagAnt was used to identify the part of speech for each word, while the Google Colab program was utilized for frequency counting. To assess the level of formality of the corpus, the F-score method proposed by Heylighen and Dewaele (1999) was applied. The results revealed that nouns were the most frequently used formal linguistic feature in student's essays. Despite this, the formality score of the learner corpus ranged from 51 to 53 across five years, indicating a relatively low level of formality. This score suggests that the students' writing was only slightly more formal, signaling the need for further development in grammatical complexity to achieve higher formality in their work. The results highlight the ongoing need for EFL teachers to instruct learners on formal linguistic features in academic writing.
Abstractor: As Provided
Entry Date: 2025
Accession Number: EJ1470935
Database: ERIC
Description
Abstract:In recent years, there has been a growing trend of using informal styles in academic writing, including research articles. To examine the degree of formality in students' writing, this corpus-based study aimed to analyze the formal linguistic features in the academic writing assignments of English-major students at a Thai university. The learner corpus consisted of 552 assignments, totaling 190,506 words, and was organized into five different writing patterns. TagAnt was used to identify the part of speech for each word, while the Google Colab program was utilized for frequency counting. To assess the level of formality of the corpus, the F-score method proposed by Heylighen and Dewaele (1999) was applied. The results revealed that nouns were the most frequently used formal linguistic feature in student's essays. Despite this, the formality score of the learner corpus ranged from 51 to 53 across five years, indicating a relatively low level of formality. This score suggests that the students' writing was only slightly more formal, signaling the need for further development in grammatical complexity to achieve higher formality in their work. The results highlight the ongoing need for EFL teachers to instruct learners on formal linguistic features in academic writing.
ISSN:1513-5934
2651-1479