The Contribution of Professional Authors in Developing Academic Writers: Navigating Identity in The Third Space in Higher Education

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18552/joaw.v14i1.907

Keywords:

Identity, Academic Writing, Professional Writers, Evaluating Writing Interventions, Postgraduate, Early Career Researchers

Abstract

Professional writers are among several kinds of practitioner offering writing development to postgraduates and research staff in universities. As ‘third space’ professionals they bring expertise from the commercial world of writing into their academic writing interventions with students and staff. Yet, the difference professional writers’ experience can make for participants’ writing, in comparison to other writing developers, has hardly been examined. This paper begins to explore the contributions Royal Literary Fund Consultant Fellows (RLF CFs), a community of UK-based fiction and non-fiction authors, can make through their writing interventions. It explores these writers’ perceptions of their dual identities – as writers and writing developers – and their perceived benefits of having professional writers work with students and staff. The data reveal the central role writing plays for RLF CFs’ professional identity, which allows them to model a holistic approach to writing together with strategies for managing its affective dimension. Exploring their contribution to Higher Education (HE) writing development, the paper also prepares the ground for future studies into the impact of RLF CF interventions from the participants’ perspective.

Author Biographies

Ursula Canton, Glasgow Caledonian University, Scotland

Ursula Canton is a Senior Lecturer in Academic Writing at Glasgow Caledonian University (School of Engineering, Computing and Built Environment), works for the Effective Learning Service at the Royal Conservatoire or Scotland and as an Associate Tutor for the School of Education at the University of Glasgow. Her research interestes include the evaluation of writing interventions, the writing process and academic and professional literacies.

Trevor Day, Royal Literary Fund, UK

Dr Trevor Day, originally a marine scientist and science writer, became a social scientist, writing developer and an academic author and nature writer. His latest books are Success in Academic Writing (Palgrave Macmillan, 2nd ed) and Sardine (Reaktion Books), a multidisciplinary appraisal of this modest but important fish. Trevor has worked with more than 20 UK and overseas universities helping others, especially doctoral students and early- to mid-career researchers, unleash the power and precision of their writing. In 2013, Trevor established and then became Director of the UK’s Royal Literary Fund (RLF) Consultant Fellows’ programme, before retiring from this role in 2021. RLF Consultant Fellows have worked with students and staff in some 60 UK universities.

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Published

2024-09-04

How to Cite

Canton, U., & Day, T. (2024). The Contribution of Professional Authors in Developing Academic Writers: Navigating Identity in The Third Space in Higher Education. Journal of Academic Writing, 14(1), 1–23. https://doi.org/10.18552/joaw.v14i1.907