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Academic Text is the process of breaking down ideas and using deductive reasoning, formal

voice and third-person point-of-view. It's what your thinking and what evidence has contributed
to that thinking.
For more details about the definition of Academic Text please see the link:
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Here is some Sample of Academic Text:


Research Paper
Conference Paper
Feasibility Study
Thesis
Book Review
Research Paper
Essay
Academic Journals
Reports

Types of Academic Text

Textbook - These are specifically designed to help the learner. For example, they might have
summaries or review quizzes. 
Essays - Student essays vary in length and formality, but they usually contain three sections:
Introduction, Main Body, Conclusion. They usually need to include citation of sources. Essays
help teachers to see what students have learned and how deeply. 
Theses - You will probably have to write longer texts at postgraduate level. Longer texts include
dissertations (typically 10,000 to 20,000 words) at the Master's level and theses (typically 60,000
to 80,000 words) at Doctor's level (Ph.D.). The structure and style vary across disciplines but is
likely to include the following:
Introduction
Background
Literature Review
Research Design/Methodology
Results/Findings
Discussion/Interpretation
Recommendations
Conclusion
Research Articles - Research articles are written mainly for a specialist audience – researchers,
academics and postgraduate students. They usually contain the following:
Introduction to the research
Literature review
Background to the research and method
Results or main findings
Discussion, including authors' interpretation of the results
Recommendations: ideas for future research
Conclusion
Bibliography
Appendix (optional) to give information such as tables of raw data from the research
Case studies - may be found in any discipline, though they are most common in disciplines such
as business, sociology, and law. They are primarily descriptive. A typical structure is as follows:
Context (what is the focus, where, when?)
Description of the setting (person, company or place)
how does the account change over the period of time under investigation
Headings help the audience work through the text
Reports - The purpose of reports is to describe what happened and discuss and evaluate its
importance. Reports are found in different disciplines, such as science, law, and medicine. These
include some or all of the following:
Context/Overview (Title, Contents, etc.)
Introduction
Methodology/Description of the event (e.g. a piece of research)
Findings/Main points
Discussion/Evaluation
Conclusion
For more details about the text types of Academic Text please see the link:
brainly.ph/question/1996552
The difference between Academic and Non-Academic Text
Both texts may be written with the goal to persuade, to entertain, or to inform. They differ in
their approach to these goals, though, with academic texts relying far more on research and
factual, verifiable material for their content. Nonacademic texts may also include research or
verifiable material, but are less likely to include references to any source material, and may be
published in a rather informal setting.
Academic and nonacademic texts are both written for a particular audience. While nonacademic
texts are intended more for mass, public consumption than scholarly or academic texts, they may
be targeted towards special interests or occupations in society. 
When it comes to formatting, both texts may be found in print, periodical, and digital forms. 
For more details about the  difference between Academic and Non-Academic Text please see the
link: brainly.ph/question/619545

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