Critical Perspectives on Academic Writing
Ayanna Prevatt-Goldstein (Editor), David Mallows (Editor)
Critical Perspectives on Academic Writing offers a timely, theoretically grounded examination of the often marginalised yet foundational role of academic writing in UK higher education. Based on the UCL Institute of Education’s Academic Writing Seminar Series, the edited volume brings together leading researchers and practitioners to interrogate the contested politics, practices, and pedagogies of academic writing development. Against the backdrop of internationalisation, widening participation, neoliberalisation, and the rapid rise of generative AI in higher education, the contributors consider how we value academic writing and how we support student writing development.
The first part of the volume frames the choices we make when working with writing or with developing writers as inherently political rather than neutral; the second part focuses on the implications of generative artificial intelligence for student academic writing; and the third part of the volume contextualises academic writing and literacies research in the practices of learning and teaching. By examining the roles of writing specialists, subject lecturers, and institutional policy, the book highlights both challenges and possibilities for change. The book combines critical insights with practical approaches to writing pedagogy, offering an essential resource for educators, researchers and policymakers seeking to rethink the place of writing in the modern university.
List of figures and tables
List of contributors
Acknowledgements
1 Introduction
Ayanna Prevatt-Goldstein and David Mallows
Part I: Framing the politics and practices of academic writing
2 Academic writing as political
Julia Molinari
3 The turn to difference: doing academic writing and writing development differently
Amanda French
4 Multimodal and embodied approaches to writing for access and inclusion
Arlene Archer
Part II: Generative AI and academic writing
5 Progressive academic writing literacies: the constructive use of machine translation and generative AI as graduate competences
Mike Groves and Klaus Mundt
6 Student writing as ‘passing’ in a time of synthetic text
Helen Beetham
7 Generative AI, academic writing and learning differences: can ChatGPT scaffold writing development?
Adrian Wallbank
Part III: The practices of academic writing
8 Exploring writing pedagogy with subject lecturers
Gillian Lazar
9 Investigating feedback on students’ written work to understand subject lecturer expectations and support student writing
Lena Grannell
10 Creating time and space to write through social writing
Rowena Murray
Afterword
Lisa Ganobcsik-Williams
Index
DOI: 10.14324/111.9781806550746
Number of illustrations: 1
Publication date: 01 May 2026
EPUB ISBN: 9781806550753
Ayanna Prevatt-Goldstein (Editor) 
Ayanna Prevatt-Goldstein is an Associate Professor at UCL and Head of the UCL Academic Communication Centre. Her research interests include authorship, academic integrity and generative AI in higher education, on which she contributes to UCL guidance and policy. She is co-founder and co-convenor of the public IOE Academic Writing Seminar Series on which this edited volume is based.
David Mallows (Editor) 
David Mallows is Director of the UCL Institute of Education Academic Writing Centre. He has over 35 years’ experience in adult education. He has directed national and transnational research projects in adult literacy, language and numeracy and has published widely on issues related to adult education, adult literacy, and migrant language education.
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Critical Perspectives on Academic Writing
Critical Perspectives on Academic Writing offers a timely, theoretically grounded examination of the often marginalised yet foundational role of academic writing in UK higher education. Based on the UCL Institute of Education’s Academic Writing Seminar Series, the edited volume brings together leading researchers and practitioners to interrogate the contested politics, practices, and pedagogies of academic writing development. Against the backdrop of internationalisation, widening participation, neoliberalisation, and the rapid rise of generative AI in higher education, the contributors consider how we value academic writing and how we support student writing development.
The first part of the volume frames the choices we make when working with writing or with developing writers as inherently political rather than neutral; the second part focuses on the implications of generative artificial intelligence for student academic writing; and the third part of the volume contextualises academic writing and literacies research in the practices of learning and teaching. By examining the roles of writing specialists, subject lecturers, and institutional policy, the book highlights both challenges and possibilities for change. The book combines critical insights with practical approaches to writing pedagogy, offering an essential resource for educators, researchers and policymakers seeking to rethink the place of writing in the modern university.