Teachers: are conspiracy theories a problem in school? Do you hear your students discussing them? If so does it concern you? Do they come up in class? Have you had any training or resources to discuss conspiracies with students? Whatever your experiences I’d love to hear from you
‘Researching Stylistics’, written by members of the Aston Stylistics Research Group is now available for pre-order with a publication date of September 2025! https://t.co/Xg2YfWyWX4
school discipline policies can be core tools to perpetuate linguistic injustice. for some children, especially those from marginalised backgrounds, their alleged inability to 'speak properly' gets framed as symptomatic of their alleged inability to 'behave properly'.
across 563 school behaviour policies, i found that ‘misbehaviour’ is routinely associated with linguistic features such as non-standard grammar, informal language, slang, incomplete sentences, non-academic language, and other allegedly deficient ways of speaking.
Thrilled our 'Reading for Pleasure' book is out!!😃 It focuses on understanding readers, texts, pedagogies and contexts supportive of RfP 😊Huge thanks to our brilliant contributors! 👇 @TeresaCremin@OpenUni_RfP@The_UKLA@MorayHouse
Last chance to book your A-level English students in for our Lang/Lit conference on 1st April here in Nottingham. This is the venue
https://t.co/ZMNxc5wEaa
Fully funded PhD opportunity at @EnglishAston starting in October 2025! Please contact @lovermob if you have any questions or for more information https://t.co/4jd5F50RMJ
deficit ideologies about working-class children and their families lie at the very foundation of how 'oracy' was first theorised. those deficit framings persist in many contemporary oracy initiatives. the new oracy movement must be explicitly anti-deficit. https://t.co/CAkJDn5Zz6
Very happy that my article with @PolinaGavin on self and other alignment when reading Covid poetry has just been accepted for publication in @MedHums_BMJ. Our first publication from the 'Writing and Reading the Pandemic' project! #stylistics#medicalhumanities
Initial symposium to book submission: 10 months. One reviewer said the timescale was ‘wild’ and they were not wrong! Thanks to our brilliant contributors. Out with @EdinburghUP later in the year
Working on the final stages of our ASRG book for @RoutledgeLing today w/chapters on: parameters of stylistics; research design/ethics; narratological stylistics; cognitive stylistics; media stylistics; corpus stylistics; and educational stylistics. #stylistics#appliedlinguistics
Teachers of English: if you can get to Birmingham in half term, this is a great opportunity to hear Carol talk about her wonderful book ‘Reading Lessons’ and how and why the books we teach matter. And it’s free! @Team_English1@NATEfeed@EnglishAssoc@EngMediaCentre@LitdriveUK
Looking forward to revisiting my research on the language of Margaret Atwood at Nottingham Trent in 2 weeks' time!
I'll be talking about the COLD, and about revenge, so you might want to bring a coat🥶
Roses are red,
Violets are blue,
Poetry often deviates from schematic templates. In this paper, I will discuss...
P. s. You have until 14th Feb to submit an abstract for #PALA2025, hosted by @EnglishAston 💜
https://t.co/Q5w0mSrlNe
We are looking forward to our next ASRG research seminar with @LaDoche this afternoon 4-5pm (online). I’ve read the chapter Amélie’s talk is based on and it’s one of the best things I’ve read in stylistics recently! All welcome and still time to register https://t.co/xBisfCg6sl
The Department for Education has recently issued a press release stating that Thousands of pupils are set to benefit from a £2 million investment in reading and writing, breaking down the barriers to opportunity. Read it here: https://t.co/OBY5UrrIz1