Research Article Introductions as Hero Narratives: A Reading Strategy for Undergraduate Students

By Jonathan Vroom

This article describes a strategy for teaching undergraduate students to read research articles (RAs)—called the hero narrative reading strategy. This strategy modifies an existing approach to reading RAs (the Scientific Argumentation Model [SAM]),…

তালিকাভুক্ত Article | গোষ্ঠী দ্বারা প্রকাশনা Discourse and Writing/Rédactologie

Preview publication

সংস্করণ 1.0 - প্রকাশিত উপরে 10 Jul 2025 doi: 10.31468/dwr.917 - cite this

লাইসেন্সকৃত Creative Commons BY-SA 4.0

বর্ণনা

This article describes a strategy for teaching undergraduate students to read research articles (RAs)—called the hero narrative reading strategy. This strategy modifies an existing approach to reading RAs (the Scientific Argumentation Model [SAM]), which teaches students to identify an article’s rhetorical moves. The hero narrative reading strategy relabels the rhetorical moves that the SAM identifies in RA introductions (Motive and Objective), and it frames RA introductions as hero narratives; students are taught to see RA writers as making hero claims—claims that they are stepping up to address a critical problem that previous research has not adequately addressed. This strategy can help students to understand the rhetorical structure of RAs.

এই কাজটি উদ্ধৃত করুন

গবেষকদের এই কাজটি উদ্ধৃত করতে নিম্নলিখিতভাবে উল্লেখ করতে হবে:

ট্যাগ

নোটস

Original publication: Vroom, Jonathan. "Research Article Introductions as Hero Narratives: A Reading Strategy for Undergraduate Students." Discourse and Writing/Rédactologie, vol. 32, 2022, pp. 48-58. DOI: 10.31468/dwr.917. This material has been re-published in an unmodified form on the Canadian HSS Commons with the permission of Discourse and Writing/Rédactologie. Copyright © the author(s). Work published in DW/R is licensed under the Creative Commons CC BY-SA license

প্রকাশনা প্রাকদর্শন