The research paper Daniel Gerrard daniel.gerrard@cjv.muni.cz Typical structure (Swales and Feak 2012) (Glasman-Deal 2010) Linguistic features (Swales and Feak 2012) Rare linguistic features ̶ ‘Progressive or continuous forms are extremely rare […] Second person pronoun forms are absent (in contrast to textbooks), except for the occasional imperative verb in comments on non-verbal data or in footnotes.’ (Swales 1990) Useful phrases for writing Academic Phrasebank Wallwork (2016) Recommended reading ̶ Feak, C.B. and Swales, J.M. (2011) Creating Contexts: Writing Introductions Across Genres. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press. ̶ Glasman-Deal, H. (2010) Science research writing. London: Imperial College Press. ̶ Swales, J.M. (1990) Genre analysis. Cambridge: CUP. ̶ *Swales, J.M. and Feak, C.B. (2012) Academic writing for graduate students. 3rd edn. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press. ̶ *Wallwork, A. (2016) English for writing research papers. 2nd edn. New York: Springer. Online resources ̶ Using English for Academic Purposes (UEFAP): Reports http://www.uefap.net/writing/writing-genre/writing-genre-report ̶ University of Southern California: Organising your Social Sciences Research Paper https://libguides.usc.edu/writingguide ̶ Aalto University: Report Structure http://sana.aalto.fi/awe/style/reporting/index.html