Requisites of discourse communities.
With the view to describing a discourse community,
Swales (1990) establishes a list of requirements that a discourse community
should meet. Those are: Common goals, participatory mechanisms, information
exchange, community-specific genres, highly specialized terminology and high
general level of expertise. This aim of this paper is to provide evidence in a
bid to support Swales idea(1990) .
Kelly-Kleese (2001)
identifies the common goals a
discourse community may have; she claims that a discourse community involves
shared knowledge, common purposes and common relationships, among others.
Hoffman-Kipp, Artiles, Lopez-Torres (2003) state that technical and political
content should be included in the vision
of critical reflection.
Participatory mechanisms
and exchange of information are vital for a discourse community. This idea is
reinforced by Wenzlaff and Wieseman (2004) when they state that “a
discourse community cannot exist in the absence of a collaborative culture and
an environment that supports risk-taking (McLaughlin & Talbert, 1993) and
reflection” (p. 9). Kellly-Kleese (2004) also asserts that “by redefining community college scholarship to include
the knowledge gained and shared in the classroom, community college
professionals will be better able to assert their knowledge and power within
higher education” (p. 1). This statement also shows the importance of the
interchange of ideas when carrying an investigation.
The use of specific genres in a discourse community
can be seen when Kelly-Kleese (2001) asserts that “The community college can be
seen as adopting language that has been given particular meaning within the
larger higher education community, meaning that is less applicable to its own
community but is nonetheless consistently used” (p.2).
In conclusion, taking into account the papers
published by the four authors cited, it can be claimed that the set of
characteristics that has been provided by Swales (1990) characterizes a certain
discourse community.
Reference
Hoffman-Kipp, P., Artiles, A. J., & Lopez Torres,
L. (2003). Beyond reflection: Teacher learning as praxis. Theory into
Practice. Retrieved October 2007, from
Kelly-Kleese, C. (2001). Editor’s choice: An open memo
to community college faculty and administrators. Community College Review.
Retrieved October 2007, from http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0HCZ/is_1_29/ai_77481463
Swales, J. M. (1990). Genre analysis: English in
academic and research settings. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
Wenzlaff, T. L., & Wieseman, K. C. (2004).
Teachers need teachers to grow. Teacher Education Quarterly. Retrieved
October 2007, from
http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qa3960/is_200404/ai_n934940