s and are often categorized as "Periodicals" in university libraries. Here, the periodical collection of the Foster Business Library at the
University of WashingtonAcademic writing encompasses many different genres, indicating the many different kinds of authors, audiences and activities engaged in the academy and the variety of kinds of messages sent among various people engaged in the academy. The partial list below indicates the complexity of academic writing and the academic world it is part of. STEM papers often focus on showing methods and data, but some teachers now ask students to explain their ideas better which helps students write like scientists.
By researchers for other researchers • Scholarly
monograph, in many types and varieties •
Chapter in an
edited volume •
Book review •
Conference paper •
Essay; usually short, between 1,500 and 6,000 words in length •
Explication; usually a short factual note explaining some part of a particular work; e.g. its terminology, dialect, allusions or coded references •
Literature review or review essay; a summary and careful comparison of previous academic work published on a specific topic •
Research article •
Research proposal • Site description and plan (e.g. in
archeology) •
Technical report •
Translation •
Journal article (e.g.
History Today); usually presenting a digest of recent research
Technical or administrative forms •
Brief; short summary, often instructions for a
commissioned work •
Peer review report •
Proposal for research or for a book •
White paper; detailed technical specifications and/or performance report
Collating the work of others •
Anthology; collection, collation, ordering and editing of the work of others •
Catalogue raisonné; the definitive collection of the work of a single artist, in book form •
Collected works; often referred to as the 'critical edition'. The definitive collection of the work of a single writer or poet, in book form, carefully purged of publishers' errors and later forgeries, etc. •
Monograph or
exhibition catalog; usually containing exemplary works, and a scholarly essay. Sometime contains new work by a creative writer, responding to the work •
Transcribing, selecting and ordering oral
testimony (e.g.
oral history recordings)
Research and planning •
Empirical research •
Experimental plan •
Laboratory report • Raw
data collection plan •
Research proposal, including
research questions • Structured
notes Newer forms •
Collaborative writing, especially using the
internet •
Hypertext, often incorporating
new media and
multimedia forms within the text •
Performative writing (see also:
belles-lettres)
By graduate students for their advisors and committees • Doctoral
dissertation, completed over a number of years, often in excess of 20,000 words in length • Masters
thesis (in some regions referred to as masters dissertation), often completed within a year and between 6,000 and 20,000 words in length. •
Thesis or dissertation proposal By undergraduate students for their instructors •
Research paper; longer essay involving library research, 3000 to 6000 words in length •
Book report •
Exam essays
By instructors for students •
Exam questions • Instructional
pamphlet, or hand-out, or
reading list •
Presentations; usually short, often illustrated •
Syllabus Summaries of knowledge for researchers, students or general public •
Annotated bibliography •
Annotated catalogue, often of an individual or group's papers and/or library • Simplified graphical representation of knowledge; e.g. a
map, or refining a display generated from a
database. There will often be a 'key' or written work incorporated with the final work • Creating a timeline or
chronological plan. There will often be a 'key' or written work incorporated with the final work • Devising a
classification scheme; e.g. for
animals, or newly arisen
sub-cultures, or a radically new style of design •
Encyclopedia entry or
handbook chapter
Disseminating knowledge outside the academy •
Call for papers •
Documentary film script or
TV script or radio script •
Obituary •
Opinion; an academic may sometimes be asked to give an expert written opinion, for use in a
legal case before a
court of law •
Newspaper opinion article •
Public speech or
lecture •
Review of a book, film, exhibition, event, etc. •
Think-tank pamphlet, position paper, or briefing paper
Personal forms often for general public These are acceptable to some academic disciplines, e.g. Cultural studies, Fine art, Feminist studies, Queer theory, Literary studies •
Artist's book or
chapbook •
Autobiography •
Belles-lettres; stylish or aesthetic writing on serious subjects, often with reference to one's personal experience •
Commonplace book •
Diary or
weblog •
Memoire; usually a short work, giving one's own memories of a famous person or event •
Notebooks == Emotions in higher-education academic writing ==