
One-on-One Consultation/Tutoring
Workshops
Classes
Editing & Proofreading
Books
Websites on Graduate-Level Writing
Citation Practices
Online Dictionaries
Grammar Websites and Grammar Checkers
Websites for Native-like Word Choice
One-on-One Consultation/Tutoring
Graduate students who speak English as an additional language are welcome to meet with writing consultants to work on any current writing project. For graduate students who wish to improve their English writing skills, we recommend purchasing Academic Writing for Graduate Students and browsing its contents (linked here). After identifying particular skills and topics in need of improvement, make an appointment to meet with a graduate writing consultant and come to the appointment prepared to go over exercises. When making an appointment through our online appointment system, please indicate the topics and pages you would like to cover during the appointment. (Click here to make an appointment.)
The GWC offers a number of workshops for graduate students who speak English as an additional language—from writing in “academic English” to writing formal emails. Click here to see our ESL workshop schedule.
ESL/EFL graduate students are encouraged to take courses offered through the Department of Applied Linguistics and TESL. For a list of current courses, see the Department’s website.
The Graduate Writing Center is frequently asked how to find editing and proofreading services. Our writing consultants do not provide this type of service. If you need to hire someone to do proofreading or copyediting, write up a job description and contact the English or Applied Linguistics departments. If you email a job description to the departmental student affairs officer, s/he will forward it to graduate students who can then respond to your advertisement. For more information about copyediting issues, see Wendy Belcher's website.
Academic writing skills and strategies:
A comprehensive book with grammar explanations and exercises:
A helpful guide for effectively using resources and avoiding plagiarism:
Websites on Graduate-Level Writing
English Solutions to Engineering Research Writing —This free ebook, by Adam Turner at Hanyang University in Korea, is jam-packed with writing tips for not just engineers but grad students in all disciplines. Turner has chapters on formal email, how Google and Adobe Acrobat Reader can help you locate discipline-specific grammar and word choice, sentence structure basics, paragraph structure, and the structure and grammar of an (engineering) research article.
Writing Up Research: The Guide Book —Written for graduate students at the Asian Institute of Technology, this website has information on writing an abstract, introduction, literature review, methodology, results, discussion, and conclusion, along with discussions of language issues such as verb tense and voice in theses and dissertations.
Writing Up Research Online Course —Also written for graduate students at the Asian Institute of Technology, this site has brief information about the research process, working with sources, the introduction, and the literature review.
Literature Review —Part of a larger website for University of Hong Kong undergraduates in the Arts and Social Sciences, this section has interesting material on writing literature reviews, citation practices (and sentence structures for citing), and examples of model literature reviews with commentaries on the language. Note that this site has not been updated since 2001.
Citation Practices
Citation Practices for International Students —This GWC page suggests resources on strategies for avoiding plagiarism, exercises for identifying it, and the language of citing.
Online Dictionaries
Learner Dictionaries
The following online dictionaries are designed for English learners:
Visual Dictionaries
If you can’t think of the word you want, these visual dictionaries may help:
Dictionaries with Extra Features
These websites have dictionaries and extra features that are useful for building your vocabulary:
Dictionaries of Idioms and Phrasal Verbs
For idioms (“kick the bucket”) and phrasal verbs (e.g., “to look after” someone), use the following free resources:
Other Dictionaries and Thesauri
Click here for GWC resources on general dictionaries and thesauri (which provide synonyms and antonyms).
Grammar Websites and Grammar Checkers
English Grammar Review—Written by Ann Salzmann of the University of Illinois’ Intensive English Institute, this site contains information on verb tenses, passive voice, modals, articles, adjectives, adverbs, conditionals, nouns, and gerunds and infinitives.
Index to Grammar Materials—From the University of Victoria’s English Language Center, this site contains information on such topics as nouns, verb tenses, conditionals, pronouns, adjectives, and adverbs.
Ask about English—Hosted by the BBC’s Learning English site, this feature provides detailed answers to questions about such topics as adjectives and adverbs, confusing words and expressions, conjunctions and clauses, idioms and phrasal verbs, modals and conditionals, reported speech, and punctuation.
Grammar and Mechanics—Developed by the Online Writing Lab at Purdue, this page has links to information on topics such as relative pronouns, subject/verb agreement, and articles.
We’ve found a few online programs that can identify grammar errors. None of them catch everything, and they are no replacement for feedback from an ESL teacher, so use them at your own risk!
Websites for Native-like Word Choice
Would you say “to a large extent” or “to a big extent”? “Large” and “big” are synonyms, but native speakers of English would say “large extent,” never “big extent.” In all languages, words like “large” and “extent” stick together, or “collocate” with one another. You have probably used Google to answer questions like these—for example, you could Google “large extent” and “big extent” and see which phrase gets more hits. But there are websites much more powerful than Google that can help you select the more common combination in English. We’ll focus on the best of these sites:
Just the Word
Word Neighbors
Check My Words Toolbar
Corpus of Contemporary American English
Compleat Lexical Tutor’s Corpus Grammar Exercises
Just the Word lets you search a database of British English. Make sure to read the short Getting Started page before you start.
Example: Let’s say you are unsure about whether English speakers use “to a large extent,” “to a big extent,” or another kind of “extent.”
If you go back to the home page, you can also type “large extent” or “big extent” and click “Suggest Alternatives” to see if this combination is indeed a common one. If this sounds confusing, read the More Help page.
Word Neighbors resembles Just the Word in some ways, but make sure to view the short tutorial first.
Example: Let’s say you are unsure about whether English speakers use “to a large extent,” “to a big extent,” or another kind of “extent.”
Another way to find common adjectives that precede “extent”:
The Check My Words Toolbar can be installed for free on PCs with Microsoft Word. Running the Grammar Checker will highlight potential common errors made by Chinese speakers of English, and the toolbar links to Just the Word, Word Neighbors, a Cambridge Dictionary, and other resources.
The Corpus of Contemporary American English
The Corpus of Contemporary American English is a huge database of different genres of contemporary American English. Because it’s designed for linguists, the “Brief tour (for non-linguists),” located in the “More Information” drop-down menu, is an essential place to start.
Example: Let’s say you are unsure about whether English speakers use “to a large extent,” “to a big extent,” or another kind of “extent”:
If you want to compare “big extent” and “large extent” to see which is the most common, you can just type in “big extent,” see how many hits you get (0) and do the same for “large extent” (647).
A neat way of finding this information is to search for synonyms of “big” or “large.” In the “Word(s)” field, type [=big] extent or type [=large] extent. The former retrieves “large extent,” “great extent,” “considerable extent,” “significant extent,” and “vast extent.” The latter retrieves many of those plus “greater extent” and “larger extent.” As a result, searching for the most common combination of words that means “big extent” will show you that “big extent” is not actually used!
Compleat Lexical Tutor’s Corpus Grammar Exercises
Compleat Lexical Tutor’s Corpus Grammar Exercises—Developed by Tom Cobb, this page will show you how consulting a corpus can help you find and correct errors in collocations and lexical and grammatical structures. Read an error sentence—e.g., ‘He’s going to home”—and click on the “CONC” link to look up “home” in a corpus. See for yourself whether “go to home” is a common structure in English.
This page was created by Andrea Olinger. To suggest a resource or report a broken link, email the GWC at gwc@gsa.asucla.ucla.edu.