Dear Mary Ellen and All,
To add to John's post below:
All EATAW listserv discussion threads are available from the EATAW
homepage (http://www.eataw.eu/listserv/). All threads/conversations held
between September 2000 and December 2009 are archived via direct links
from this page. These threads are from the old EATAW listserv (as the
webpage explains: 'Note that we used to run two listservs, one for
members' discussions and the other for conference [and other]
announcements, but the new JISC listserv combines both').
Archived threads/conversations from the new EATAW listserv, hosted by
JISC, are accessible via this page: http://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/EATAW.
This information about archiving appears on the EATAW webpage, but
perhaps it should be made clearer--the EATAW Web Secretary and I will
update this.
I hope this information answers your question and allows you and others
to cite EATAW discussion threads with confidence.
Best wishes,
Lisa
Dr. Lisa Ganobcsik-Williams
Head of the Centre for Academic Writing
Coventry University
Priory Street, Coventry
England CV1 5FB
Tel. +44 (0)24 7688 7904
Chair: European Association for the Teaching of Academic Writing (EATAW)
Executive Board member: European Writing Centers Association (EWCA)
-----Original Message-----
From: European Association for the Teaching of Academic Writing -
discussions [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of John Harbord
Sent: 17 May 2010 08:28
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: Posting of EATAW discussion threads
Dear Mary and All,
The old list used to have a full archive of all posts that was citeable,
and I believe this one does as well. Florence Dujardin, our web
secretary, might be able to help here with details.
Best,
John
>>> "M. Ellen Kerans" <[log in to unmask]> 15/5/10 14:56 >>>
John, thank you for posting these threads.
Since they're not permanently posted, however, it's difficult to cite
them.
I think it's been mentioned before that it might be useful to have some
long
threads permanently posted on the EATAW website, where they could be
cited.
Another association I belong to posts "lightly edited" threads and
they're
cited fairly often. See the website of the World Association of Medical
Editors to see how they handle this-they also give citing instructions.
And
to see examples of topics, like plagiarism, that have interested medical
journal editors:
http://www.wame.org/resources/wame-listserve-discussion/.
Mary Ellen Kerans
Translation & Editing - Writing & Education
Barcelona, Spain
Tel/Fax: 34 934 080997
<mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask] or
<mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask]
_____
From: European Association for the Teaching of Academic Writing -
discussions [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of John G. Taylor
Sent: Thursday, May 13, 2010 1:44 PM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: PLAGARISM, & SPECIAL CHARACTERS
Hallo!
The debates on Plagiarism and Special Characters have been particularly
interesting and judging by the volume of mails, of considerable
importance
to many members. For my own benefit I have accumulated these mails into
two
files. These emails are, of course, public domain as these are the
postings
to all members. The files may be accessed (and downloaded) on my
personal
site www.jgtaylor.com until the end of the month.
Please note that my site is essentially for Norwegian clients, and this
should not been seen as 'advertising' my services. Nevertheless, if you
do
have any comments....
John Taylor
Freelance Copy editor, Translator, Court interpreter
Oslo, Norway.
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