
to express beliefs about the present or future.He is also the co-founder of, an editing agency for non-native English-speaking researchers. He has trained several thousand PhD students and researchers from around 50 countries to write research papers and give presentations. Giving an Academic Presentation in EnglishĪdrian Wallwork is the author of more than 40 ELT and EAP textbooks. The book is laid out simply, with short explanations, and lots of example sentences (plus typical mistakes). There are chapters on two key areas of communication in academia: writing emails to editors, drafting a CV/resume. There is a strong focus on those elements that make a paper more readable, and a presentation more accessible and memorable: clarity and empathy, sentence length, word order, and punctuation. Grammar coverage includes: articles (a/an, the), countable vs uncountable nouns, modal verbs (can, may, could, might), comparisons, present and past tenses, link words, prepositions, and verbs that cause grammatical difficulties. It is thus considerably more accessible than a traditional grammar or style guide. The book focuses only on those areas that are either the most commonly found in academic communication and/or cause the most problems.

It can thus be used alongside the companion volumes: Writing an Academic Paper in English and Giving an Academic Presentation in English.

It is designed both for self-study and also as a support for a course on academic communication. This book is for university students, with at least a mid-intermediate level of English.
