This edited volume explores mentorship in knowledge production and dissemination and examines its implications for academic lives and careers of novice scholarly writers, in such fields as English for specific purposes, applied linguistics, and TESOL.
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"This book is a fascinating read. It shows the importance of mentoring novice and early career scholars in the complex and multifaceted process of writing for publication. I highly recommend it!" - Brian Paltridge, Professor of TESOL, University of Sydney
"As a graduate student, are you stressed about how you'll ever get published? As a supervisor/mentor, have you wondered how your colleagues support their students as they learn to write for academic publication? In the chapters of Narratives and Practices of Mentorship in Scholarly Publication, you'll find diverse examples of complex, interwoven mentoring practices used by faculty with graduate students as they work together. This edited collection is filled with important and exciting ideas of how to mentor, and of practices graduate students should be demanding from their mentors as they travel the difficult journey from novice writers to authors of scholarly publications." - Merrill Swain, Professor Emerita, University of Toronto (OISE)
"As a graduate student, are you stressed about how you'll ever get published? As a supervisor/mentor, have you wondered how your colleagues support their students as they learn to write for academic publication? In the chapters of Narratives and Practices of Mentorship in Scholarly Publication, you'll find diverse examples of complex, interwoven mentoring practices used by faculty with graduate students as they work together. This edited collection is filled with important and exciting ideas of how to mentor, and of practices graduate students should be demanding from their mentors as they travel the difficult journey from novice writers to authors of scholarly publications." - Merrill Swain, Professor Emerita, University of Toronto (OISE)