How to write papers efficiently when English isn't my first language? The Next CEO of Stack OverflowHow common is it to write out a script for a talk? What are the benefits?Resources on how to overcome writer's block, especially for non-native English speakers?My problem about writing a technical/research report/paperWhat are the pros and cons to writing the same paper in two languages?Isn't English the common academic language?How to treat papers or other work from dyslexic students?How one can learn to write successful cover letters and rebuttals to referees?How to avoid disrupting the narrative in a scientific paper when you have done too much workHow to train students to write high-quality research papers?How to write your research work in simple way

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How to write papers efficiently when English isn't my first language?



The Next CEO of Stack OverflowHow common is it to write out a script for a talk? What are the benefits?Resources on how to overcome writer's block, especially for non-native English speakers?My problem about writing a technical/research report/paperWhat are the pros and cons to writing the same paper in two languages?Isn't English the common academic language?How to treat papers or other work from dyslexic students?How one can learn to write successful cover letters and rebuttals to referees?How to avoid disrupting the narrative in a scientific paper when you have done too much workHow to train students to write high-quality research papers?How to write your research work in simple way










35















I am a PhD student from China. I can read papers relatively fast and get the main point. The problem is that I cannot write efficiently. I don't know how to express myself or I forget the appropriate phrases when writing. Can any other researcher help me solve this problem?










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  • You might also consider asking related questions at languagelearning.stackexchange.com

    – Tommi Brander
    yesterday






  • 2





    Hire a language editor until you master the language.

    – BPP
    yesterday











  • have you talked to your adviser? What is expected of you, to write whole paper alone or that your PI is an active co-author? When do you need to produce paper (and what size), is it 100 pages in 3 months or 5 pages in 1 year?

    – aaaaaa
    yesterday






  • 1





    A question isn't the same as a paper of course, but judging by how well-written this question is, your English writing might be better than you think.

    – John Coleman
    yesterday






  • 1





    @JohnColeman The original version wasn't terrible, but it wasn't great either.

    – henning
    13 hours ago
















35















I am a PhD student from China. I can read papers relatively fast and get the main point. The problem is that I cannot write efficiently. I don't know how to express myself or I forget the appropriate phrases when writing. Can any other researcher help me solve this problem?










share|improve this question









New contributor




sunnyme is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.




















  • You might also consider asking related questions at languagelearning.stackexchange.com

    – Tommi Brander
    yesterday






  • 2





    Hire a language editor until you master the language.

    – BPP
    yesterday











  • have you talked to your adviser? What is expected of you, to write whole paper alone or that your PI is an active co-author? When do you need to produce paper (and what size), is it 100 pages in 3 months or 5 pages in 1 year?

    – aaaaaa
    yesterday






  • 1





    A question isn't the same as a paper of course, but judging by how well-written this question is, your English writing might be better than you think.

    – John Coleman
    yesterday






  • 1





    @JohnColeman The original version wasn't terrible, but it wasn't great either.

    – henning
    13 hours ago














35












35








35


9






I am a PhD student from China. I can read papers relatively fast and get the main point. The problem is that I cannot write efficiently. I don't know how to express myself or I forget the appropriate phrases when writing. Can any other researcher help me solve this problem?










share|improve this question









New contributor




sunnyme is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












I am a PhD student from China. I can read papers relatively fast and get the main point. The problem is that I cannot write efficiently. I don't know how to express myself or I forget the appropriate phrases when writing. Can any other researcher help me solve this problem?







writing language






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share|improve this question









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share|improve this question








edited yesterday









Mick

2,074926




2,074926






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asked yesterday









sunnymesunnyme

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  • You might also consider asking related questions at languagelearning.stackexchange.com

    – Tommi Brander
    yesterday






  • 2





    Hire a language editor until you master the language.

    – BPP
    yesterday











  • have you talked to your adviser? What is expected of you, to write whole paper alone or that your PI is an active co-author? When do you need to produce paper (and what size), is it 100 pages in 3 months or 5 pages in 1 year?

    – aaaaaa
    yesterday






  • 1





    A question isn't the same as a paper of course, but judging by how well-written this question is, your English writing might be better than you think.

    – John Coleman
    yesterday






  • 1





    @JohnColeman The original version wasn't terrible, but it wasn't great either.

    – henning
    13 hours ago


















  • You might also consider asking related questions at languagelearning.stackexchange.com

    – Tommi Brander
    yesterday






  • 2





    Hire a language editor until you master the language.

    – BPP
    yesterday











  • have you talked to your adviser? What is expected of you, to write whole paper alone or that your PI is an active co-author? When do you need to produce paper (and what size), is it 100 pages in 3 months or 5 pages in 1 year?

    – aaaaaa
    yesterday






  • 1





    A question isn't the same as a paper of course, but judging by how well-written this question is, your English writing might be better than you think.

    – John Coleman
    yesterday






  • 1





    @JohnColeman The original version wasn't terrible, but it wasn't great either.

    – henning
    13 hours ago

















You might also consider asking related questions at languagelearning.stackexchange.com

– Tommi Brander
yesterday





You might also consider asking related questions at languagelearning.stackexchange.com

– Tommi Brander
yesterday




2




2





Hire a language editor until you master the language.

– BPP
yesterday





Hire a language editor until you master the language.

– BPP
yesterday













have you talked to your adviser? What is expected of you, to write whole paper alone or that your PI is an active co-author? When do you need to produce paper (and what size), is it 100 pages in 3 months or 5 pages in 1 year?

– aaaaaa
yesterday





have you talked to your adviser? What is expected of you, to write whole paper alone or that your PI is an active co-author? When do you need to produce paper (and what size), is it 100 pages in 3 months or 5 pages in 1 year?

– aaaaaa
yesterday




1




1





A question isn't the same as a paper of course, but judging by how well-written this question is, your English writing might be better than you think.

– John Coleman
yesterday





A question isn't the same as a paper of course, but judging by how well-written this question is, your English writing might be better than you think.

– John Coleman
yesterday




1




1





@JohnColeman The original version wasn't terrible, but it wasn't great either.

– henning
13 hours ago






@JohnColeman The original version wasn't terrible, but it wasn't great either.

– henning
13 hours ago











7 Answers
7






active

oldest

votes


















37














The art of academic writing is essentially the practice of re-writing the same story many times, until the result is "good enough". It takes a lot of persistence and a lot of time to prepare a single paper for publication.



If English is not your first language and you struggle with the correct phrasing, consider using an academic phrasebank to help you. I can also recommend a brief summary of academic grammar. Finally, use English-English dictionaries as much as possible, e.g. the free dictionary, and refrain from using English-YourMotherTongue dictionaries if you can.






share|improve this answer




















  • 3





    As a professional who isn't in academia anymore, but does write for academia a fair bit, this is a marvellous resource for English speakers too.

    – stanri
    yesterday



















11














A concrete thing to do when writing is to first express yourself in any way you can, no matter how clumsy or awkward it feels, to get something on paper. After you have written a longer text, you can take the time to fix mistakes, find better phrases, reduce unnecessary passive voice and cut up overtly long sentences, or whatever are good and useful practices for you.



If you have collaborators, do this together with them, at least a page or so worth, and discuss the changes you make. This can help you identify things to work on. Even non-native collaborators are helpful, especially if they have a different native language than you do; they tend to notice and be blind to different issues.



A good habit is that when you are checking your writing and you feel uncertainty about an issue, find out how the grammar works or how the word is spelled. You might want to use the stack exchange sites https://ell.stackexchange.com/ and https://english.stackexchange.com/ , where appropriate.



For strategies and tools for improving your English, you might also ask at http://languagelearning.stackexchange.com/ .






share|improve this answer


















  • 2





    Interestingly, this is good advice for native speakers too. The only difference between a native and non-native speaker would be how much extra time it takes to move from first to final draft.

    – shadowtalker
    yesterday






  • 2





    In other words: first get the science right, and only then get the English right.

    – MSalters
    11 hours ago


















9














I would recommend to polish you English in general a little bit - language exchanges or language tandems with native speakers can help you a lot here. Maybe there are native speakers who would like to learn Chinese in your city? Check if you find platforms for such exchanges in social media or websites like meetup. I found this tremendously helpful for myself.



In a second step I would then go ahead an extract specific phrasing from existing research papers of your field. You will see that researchers use specific phrases in specific situations/sections of a paper. But in order to really do this and use the phrases appropriately I think it might be beneficial to work on your general English fluency a little bit.






share|improve this answer








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    It's very common for students to primarily hang out with others who speak their language. In the short run, it's more comfortable, but in the long run I think it's a mistake. Make friends and hang out with native speakers of your host country, nothing else is going to provide you with that all-important exposure to when phrasing sounds right (or wrong).

    – pjs
    6 hours ago











  • A good addition to this answer might be: the OP might want to dedicate some time to interact with researchers in his/her field discussing research ideas. This need not be the entire time he/she spends practicing English, but I imagine this would help (disclosure: I'm a native English speaker, so caveat lector, i.e. reader beware)

    – Weiwen Ng
    6 hours ago


















3














Writing is a complex topic that cannot be explained fully in a short StackExchange post. Just like it took you years to learn your own discipline, it takes years to learn how to write well. Academic writing is its own specialized skill as well.



We could recommend you some books and rules of thumb. But the more logical thing to do would be to go to your university's writing center and ask them for help. You could also ask your advisor or colleagues who are good at writing. They would recommend the same books we would, but you would get much more detailed advice.






share|improve this answer


















  • 2





    I can easily imagine a university (outside UK and EU) with no "writing center", whatever it means. I can also easily imagine an advisor (outside UK and EU) totally incapable of publishing and otherwise communicating in English.

    – Dmitry Savostyanov
    yesterday











  • Oh, I definitely meant "US and EU" not "UK and EU". Sorry!

    – Dmitry Savostyanov
    17 hours ago











  • @DmitrySavostyanov thinking ahead...

    – henning
    13 hours ago


















0














Every one of the answers here has good ideas that may work for you. Here is another.



My wife used to coach academic writers. She suggested that one of her clients write his first few drafts in his native language (Japanese), That way he could make sure his ideas were well organized without having to worry about finding just the right foreign words, When he felt well enough organized he would translate his own work into English and polish it with the help of friends and fellow professionals, including those at the writing center at his university.






share|improve this answer






























    0














    Native English speaker here. I used to work in research with researchers whose English was not a first language.



    I would suggest focusing on the structure of your writing like Ethan mentioned (I have found Barbara Minto's book The Pyramid Principle quite useful) and if possible get a native speaker to review your English (e.g. you can pay for technical editors or work with English-speaking collaborators).



    As someone who has reviewed many writers I have found well structured work much easier to edit than poorly structured writing. This is irrespective if the writer is a native speaker or not (assuming a passable level of English, which I'd say you have).



    You may also be suffering writers block, I think processing ideas and expressing ideas (and translating ideas into another language) are seperate exercises best tackled at different stages. When I get writer's block I don't think about how to best express an idea, I simply write "I will write about X now, which proves..." You may write key words in your native language or any ugly, dirty writing trick that helps you stay in the flow of getting your ideas on the page. Then once your ideas are on paper, you can focus on expressing things in readable English.



    Please be aware that English is just a pain in the butt, I have worked with many clever people who always get stuck on "an/a" and "he/she/they" and stuff like this. I would in the final stage of writing review these kinds of words.






    share|improve this answer








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      0














      Writing an academic paper is a complex task. You are dealing with multiple distinct cognitive demands. If you are struggling, you may benefit from breaking down the process into its component parts:



      1) Research and learn the information



      2) Convey the information in a sequence of words



      3) Ensure that the words are clear to the reader



      Many second language learners benefit from doing the first two tasks in their native language. As they perform research, they take notes in their native language or some combination of their native language and English. Then they write out at least the outline, but often the whole paper, in their native language. At that point many find it none too difficult to translate their work into English. Afterwards, of course, they will proofread it and fix any problematic expressions using the resources they have in-person or online.






      share|improve this answer























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        7 Answers
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        active

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        7 Answers
        7






        active

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        active

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        active

        oldest

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        37














        The art of academic writing is essentially the practice of re-writing the same story many times, until the result is "good enough". It takes a lot of persistence and a lot of time to prepare a single paper for publication.



        If English is not your first language and you struggle with the correct phrasing, consider using an academic phrasebank to help you. I can also recommend a brief summary of academic grammar. Finally, use English-English dictionaries as much as possible, e.g. the free dictionary, and refrain from using English-YourMotherTongue dictionaries if you can.






        share|improve this answer




















        • 3





          As a professional who isn't in academia anymore, but does write for academia a fair bit, this is a marvellous resource for English speakers too.

          – stanri
          yesterday
















        37














        The art of academic writing is essentially the practice of re-writing the same story many times, until the result is "good enough". It takes a lot of persistence and a lot of time to prepare a single paper for publication.



        If English is not your first language and you struggle with the correct phrasing, consider using an academic phrasebank to help you. I can also recommend a brief summary of academic grammar. Finally, use English-English dictionaries as much as possible, e.g. the free dictionary, and refrain from using English-YourMotherTongue dictionaries if you can.






        share|improve this answer




















        • 3





          As a professional who isn't in academia anymore, but does write for academia a fair bit, this is a marvellous resource for English speakers too.

          – stanri
          yesterday














        37












        37








        37







        The art of academic writing is essentially the practice of re-writing the same story many times, until the result is "good enough". It takes a lot of persistence and a lot of time to prepare a single paper for publication.



        If English is not your first language and you struggle with the correct phrasing, consider using an academic phrasebank to help you. I can also recommend a brief summary of academic grammar. Finally, use English-English dictionaries as much as possible, e.g. the free dictionary, and refrain from using English-YourMotherTongue dictionaries if you can.






        share|improve this answer















        The art of academic writing is essentially the practice of re-writing the same story many times, until the result is "good enough". It takes a lot of persistence and a lot of time to prepare a single paper for publication.



        If English is not your first language and you struggle with the correct phrasing, consider using an academic phrasebank to help you. I can also recommend a brief summary of academic grammar. Finally, use English-English dictionaries as much as possible, e.g. the free dictionary, and refrain from using English-YourMotherTongue dictionaries if you can.







        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer








        edited yesterday









        henning

        19k46696




        19k46696










        answered yesterday









        Dmitry SavostyanovDmitry Savostyanov

        26.9k1056111




        26.9k1056111







        • 3





          As a professional who isn't in academia anymore, but does write for academia a fair bit, this is a marvellous resource for English speakers too.

          – stanri
          yesterday













        • 3





          As a professional who isn't in academia anymore, but does write for academia a fair bit, this is a marvellous resource for English speakers too.

          – stanri
          yesterday








        3




        3





        As a professional who isn't in academia anymore, but does write for academia a fair bit, this is a marvellous resource for English speakers too.

        – stanri
        yesterday






        As a professional who isn't in academia anymore, but does write for academia a fair bit, this is a marvellous resource for English speakers too.

        – stanri
        yesterday












        11














        A concrete thing to do when writing is to first express yourself in any way you can, no matter how clumsy or awkward it feels, to get something on paper. After you have written a longer text, you can take the time to fix mistakes, find better phrases, reduce unnecessary passive voice and cut up overtly long sentences, or whatever are good and useful practices for you.



        If you have collaborators, do this together with them, at least a page or so worth, and discuss the changes you make. This can help you identify things to work on. Even non-native collaborators are helpful, especially if they have a different native language than you do; they tend to notice and be blind to different issues.



        A good habit is that when you are checking your writing and you feel uncertainty about an issue, find out how the grammar works or how the word is spelled. You might want to use the stack exchange sites https://ell.stackexchange.com/ and https://english.stackexchange.com/ , where appropriate.



        For strategies and tools for improving your English, you might also ask at http://languagelearning.stackexchange.com/ .






        share|improve this answer


















        • 2





          Interestingly, this is good advice for native speakers too. The only difference between a native and non-native speaker would be how much extra time it takes to move from first to final draft.

          – shadowtalker
          yesterday






        • 2





          In other words: first get the science right, and only then get the English right.

          – MSalters
          11 hours ago















        11














        A concrete thing to do when writing is to first express yourself in any way you can, no matter how clumsy or awkward it feels, to get something on paper. After you have written a longer text, you can take the time to fix mistakes, find better phrases, reduce unnecessary passive voice and cut up overtly long sentences, or whatever are good and useful practices for you.



        If you have collaborators, do this together with them, at least a page or so worth, and discuss the changes you make. This can help you identify things to work on. Even non-native collaborators are helpful, especially if they have a different native language than you do; they tend to notice and be blind to different issues.



        A good habit is that when you are checking your writing and you feel uncertainty about an issue, find out how the grammar works or how the word is spelled. You might want to use the stack exchange sites https://ell.stackexchange.com/ and https://english.stackexchange.com/ , where appropriate.



        For strategies and tools for improving your English, you might also ask at http://languagelearning.stackexchange.com/ .






        share|improve this answer


















        • 2





          Interestingly, this is good advice for native speakers too. The only difference between a native and non-native speaker would be how much extra time it takes to move from first to final draft.

          – shadowtalker
          yesterday






        • 2





          In other words: first get the science right, and only then get the English right.

          – MSalters
          11 hours ago













        11












        11








        11







        A concrete thing to do when writing is to first express yourself in any way you can, no matter how clumsy or awkward it feels, to get something on paper. After you have written a longer text, you can take the time to fix mistakes, find better phrases, reduce unnecessary passive voice and cut up overtly long sentences, or whatever are good and useful practices for you.



        If you have collaborators, do this together with them, at least a page or so worth, and discuss the changes you make. This can help you identify things to work on. Even non-native collaborators are helpful, especially if they have a different native language than you do; they tend to notice and be blind to different issues.



        A good habit is that when you are checking your writing and you feel uncertainty about an issue, find out how the grammar works or how the word is spelled. You might want to use the stack exchange sites https://ell.stackexchange.com/ and https://english.stackexchange.com/ , where appropriate.



        For strategies and tools for improving your English, you might also ask at http://languagelearning.stackexchange.com/ .






        share|improve this answer













        A concrete thing to do when writing is to first express yourself in any way you can, no matter how clumsy or awkward it feels, to get something on paper. After you have written a longer text, you can take the time to fix mistakes, find better phrases, reduce unnecessary passive voice and cut up overtly long sentences, or whatever are good and useful practices for you.



        If you have collaborators, do this together with them, at least a page or so worth, and discuss the changes you make. This can help you identify things to work on. Even non-native collaborators are helpful, especially if they have a different native language than you do; they tend to notice and be blind to different issues.



        A good habit is that when you are checking your writing and you feel uncertainty about an issue, find out how the grammar works or how the word is spelled. You might want to use the stack exchange sites https://ell.stackexchange.com/ and https://english.stackexchange.com/ , where appropriate.



        For strategies and tools for improving your English, you might also ask at http://languagelearning.stackexchange.com/ .







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered yesterday









        Tommi BranderTommi Brander

        5,12621635




        5,12621635







        • 2





          Interestingly, this is good advice for native speakers too. The only difference between a native and non-native speaker would be how much extra time it takes to move from first to final draft.

          – shadowtalker
          yesterday






        • 2





          In other words: first get the science right, and only then get the English right.

          – MSalters
          11 hours ago












        • 2





          Interestingly, this is good advice for native speakers too. The only difference between a native and non-native speaker would be how much extra time it takes to move from first to final draft.

          – shadowtalker
          yesterday






        • 2





          In other words: first get the science right, and only then get the English right.

          – MSalters
          11 hours ago







        2




        2





        Interestingly, this is good advice for native speakers too. The only difference between a native and non-native speaker would be how much extra time it takes to move from first to final draft.

        – shadowtalker
        yesterday





        Interestingly, this is good advice for native speakers too. The only difference between a native and non-native speaker would be how much extra time it takes to move from first to final draft.

        – shadowtalker
        yesterday




        2




        2





        In other words: first get the science right, and only then get the English right.

        – MSalters
        11 hours ago





        In other words: first get the science right, and only then get the English right.

        – MSalters
        11 hours ago











        9














        I would recommend to polish you English in general a little bit - language exchanges or language tandems with native speakers can help you a lot here. Maybe there are native speakers who would like to learn Chinese in your city? Check if you find platforms for such exchanges in social media or websites like meetup. I found this tremendously helpful for myself.



        In a second step I would then go ahead an extract specific phrasing from existing research papers of your field. You will see that researchers use specific phrases in specific situations/sections of a paper. But in order to really do this and use the phrases appropriately I think it might be beneficial to work on your general English fluency a little bit.






        share|improve this answer








        New contributor




        lordy is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.















        • 1





          It's very common for students to primarily hang out with others who speak their language. In the short run, it's more comfortable, but in the long run I think it's a mistake. Make friends and hang out with native speakers of your host country, nothing else is going to provide you with that all-important exposure to when phrasing sounds right (or wrong).

          – pjs
          6 hours ago











        • A good addition to this answer might be: the OP might want to dedicate some time to interact with researchers in his/her field discussing research ideas. This need not be the entire time he/she spends practicing English, but I imagine this would help (disclosure: I'm a native English speaker, so caveat lector, i.e. reader beware)

          – Weiwen Ng
          6 hours ago















        9














        I would recommend to polish you English in general a little bit - language exchanges or language tandems with native speakers can help you a lot here. Maybe there are native speakers who would like to learn Chinese in your city? Check if you find platforms for such exchanges in social media or websites like meetup. I found this tremendously helpful for myself.



        In a second step I would then go ahead an extract specific phrasing from existing research papers of your field. You will see that researchers use specific phrases in specific situations/sections of a paper. But in order to really do this and use the phrases appropriately I think it might be beneficial to work on your general English fluency a little bit.






        share|improve this answer








        New contributor




        lordy is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.















        • 1





          It's very common for students to primarily hang out with others who speak their language. In the short run, it's more comfortable, but in the long run I think it's a mistake. Make friends and hang out with native speakers of your host country, nothing else is going to provide you with that all-important exposure to when phrasing sounds right (or wrong).

          – pjs
          6 hours ago











        • A good addition to this answer might be: the OP might want to dedicate some time to interact with researchers in his/her field discussing research ideas. This need not be the entire time he/she spends practicing English, but I imagine this would help (disclosure: I'm a native English speaker, so caveat lector, i.e. reader beware)

          – Weiwen Ng
          6 hours ago













        9












        9








        9







        I would recommend to polish you English in general a little bit - language exchanges or language tandems with native speakers can help you a lot here. Maybe there are native speakers who would like to learn Chinese in your city? Check if you find platforms for such exchanges in social media or websites like meetup. I found this tremendously helpful for myself.



        In a second step I would then go ahead an extract specific phrasing from existing research papers of your field. You will see that researchers use specific phrases in specific situations/sections of a paper. But in order to really do this and use the phrases appropriately I think it might be beneficial to work on your general English fluency a little bit.






        share|improve this answer








        New contributor




        lordy is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.










        I would recommend to polish you English in general a little bit - language exchanges or language tandems with native speakers can help you a lot here. Maybe there are native speakers who would like to learn Chinese in your city? Check if you find platforms for such exchanges in social media or websites like meetup. I found this tremendously helpful for myself.



        In a second step I would then go ahead an extract specific phrasing from existing research papers of your field. You will see that researchers use specific phrases in specific situations/sections of a paper. But in order to really do this and use the phrases appropriately I think it might be beneficial to work on your general English fluency a little bit.







        share|improve this answer








        New contributor




        lordy is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.









        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer






        New contributor




        lordy is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.









        answered yesterday









        lordylordy

        3151




        3151




        New contributor




        lordy is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.





        New contributor





        lordy is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.






        lordy is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.







        • 1





          It's very common for students to primarily hang out with others who speak their language. In the short run, it's more comfortable, but in the long run I think it's a mistake. Make friends and hang out with native speakers of your host country, nothing else is going to provide you with that all-important exposure to when phrasing sounds right (or wrong).

          – pjs
          6 hours ago











        • A good addition to this answer might be: the OP might want to dedicate some time to interact with researchers in his/her field discussing research ideas. This need not be the entire time he/she spends practicing English, but I imagine this would help (disclosure: I'm a native English speaker, so caveat lector, i.e. reader beware)

          – Weiwen Ng
          6 hours ago












        • 1





          It's very common for students to primarily hang out with others who speak their language. In the short run, it's more comfortable, but in the long run I think it's a mistake. Make friends and hang out with native speakers of your host country, nothing else is going to provide you with that all-important exposure to when phrasing sounds right (or wrong).

          – pjs
          6 hours ago











        • A good addition to this answer might be: the OP might want to dedicate some time to interact with researchers in his/her field discussing research ideas. This need not be the entire time he/she spends practicing English, but I imagine this would help (disclosure: I'm a native English speaker, so caveat lector, i.e. reader beware)

          – Weiwen Ng
          6 hours ago







        1




        1





        It's very common for students to primarily hang out with others who speak their language. In the short run, it's more comfortable, but in the long run I think it's a mistake. Make friends and hang out with native speakers of your host country, nothing else is going to provide you with that all-important exposure to when phrasing sounds right (or wrong).

        – pjs
        6 hours ago





        It's very common for students to primarily hang out with others who speak their language. In the short run, it's more comfortable, but in the long run I think it's a mistake. Make friends and hang out with native speakers of your host country, nothing else is going to provide you with that all-important exposure to when phrasing sounds right (or wrong).

        – pjs
        6 hours ago













        A good addition to this answer might be: the OP might want to dedicate some time to interact with researchers in his/her field discussing research ideas. This need not be the entire time he/she spends practicing English, but I imagine this would help (disclosure: I'm a native English speaker, so caveat lector, i.e. reader beware)

        – Weiwen Ng
        6 hours ago





        A good addition to this answer might be: the OP might want to dedicate some time to interact with researchers in his/her field discussing research ideas. This need not be the entire time he/she spends practicing English, but I imagine this would help (disclosure: I'm a native English speaker, so caveat lector, i.e. reader beware)

        – Weiwen Ng
        6 hours ago











        3














        Writing is a complex topic that cannot be explained fully in a short StackExchange post. Just like it took you years to learn your own discipline, it takes years to learn how to write well. Academic writing is its own specialized skill as well.



        We could recommend you some books and rules of thumb. But the more logical thing to do would be to go to your university's writing center and ask them for help. You could also ask your advisor or colleagues who are good at writing. They would recommend the same books we would, but you would get much more detailed advice.






        share|improve this answer


















        • 2





          I can easily imagine a university (outside UK and EU) with no "writing center", whatever it means. I can also easily imagine an advisor (outside UK and EU) totally incapable of publishing and otherwise communicating in English.

          – Dmitry Savostyanov
          yesterday











        • Oh, I definitely meant "US and EU" not "UK and EU". Sorry!

          – Dmitry Savostyanov
          17 hours ago











        • @DmitrySavostyanov thinking ahead...

          – henning
          13 hours ago















        3














        Writing is a complex topic that cannot be explained fully in a short StackExchange post. Just like it took you years to learn your own discipline, it takes years to learn how to write well. Academic writing is its own specialized skill as well.



        We could recommend you some books and rules of thumb. But the more logical thing to do would be to go to your university's writing center and ask them for help. You could also ask your advisor or colleagues who are good at writing. They would recommend the same books we would, but you would get much more detailed advice.






        share|improve this answer


















        • 2





          I can easily imagine a university (outside UK and EU) with no "writing center", whatever it means. I can also easily imagine an advisor (outside UK and EU) totally incapable of publishing and otherwise communicating in English.

          – Dmitry Savostyanov
          yesterday











        • Oh, I definitely meant "US and EU" not "UK and EU". Sorry!

          – Dmitry Savostyanov
          17 hours ago











        • @DmitrySavostyanov thinking ahead...

          – henning
          13 hours ago













        3












        3








        3







        Writing is a complex topic that cannot be explained fully in a short StackExchange post. Just like it took you years to learn your own discipline, it takes years to learn how to write well. Academic writing is its own specialized skill as well.



        We could recommend you some books and rules of thumb. But the more logical thing to do would be to go to your university's writing center and ask them for help. You could also ask your advisor or colleagues who are good at writing. They would recommend the same books we would, but you would get much more detailed advice.






        share|improve this answer













        Writing is a complex topic that cannot be explained fully in a short StackExchange post. Just like it took you years to learn your own discipline, it takes years to learn how to write well. Academic writing is its own specialized skill as well.



        We could recommend you some books and rules of thumb. But the more logical thing to do would be to go to your university's writing center and ask them for help. You could also ask your advisor or colleagues who are good at writing. They would recommend the same books we would, but you would get much more detailed advice.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered yesterday









        TruslyTrusly

        93418




        93418







        • 2





          I can easily imagine a university (outside UK and EU) with no "writing center", whatever it means. I can also easily imagine an advisor (outside UK and EU) totally incapable of publishing and otherwise communicating in English.

          – Dmitry Savostyanov
          yesterday











        • Oh, I definitely meant "US and EU" not "UK and EU". Sorry!

          – Dmitry Savostyanov
          17 hours ago











        • @DmitrySavostyanov thinking ahead...

          – henning
          13 hours ago












        • 2





          I can easily imagine a university (outside UK and EU) with no "writing center", whatever it means. I can also easily imagine an advisor (outside UK and EU) totally incapable of publishing and otherwise communicating in English.

          – Dmitry Savostyanov
          yesterday











        • Oh, I definitely meant "US and EU" not "UK and EU". Sorry!

          – Dmitry Savostyanov
          17 hours ago











        • @DmitrySavostyanov thinking ahead...

          – henning
          13 hours ago







        2




        2





        I can easily imagine a university (outside UK and EU) with no "writing center", whatever it means. I can also easily imagine an advisor (outside UK and EU) totally incapable of publishing and otherwise communicating in English.

        – Dmitry Savostyanov
        yesterday





        I can easily imagine a university (outside UK and EU) with no "writing center", whatever it means. I can also easily imagine an advisor (outside UK and EU) totally incapable of publishing and otherwise communicating in English.

        – Dmitry Savostyanov
        yesterday













        Oh, I definitely meant "US and EU" not "UK and EU". Sorry!

        – Dmitry Savostyanov
        17 hours ago





        Oh, I definitely meant "US and EU" not "UK and EU". Sorry!

        – Dmitry Savostyanov
        17 hours ago













        @DmitrySavostyanov thinking ahead...

        – henning
        13 hours ago





        @DmitrySavostyanov thinking ahead...

        – henning
        13 hours ago











        0














        Every one of the answers here has good ideas that may work for you. Here is another.



        My wife used to coach academic writers. She suggested that one of her clients write his first few drafts in his native language (Japanese), That way he could make sure his ideas were well organized without having to worry about finding just the right foreign words, When he felt well enough organized he would translate his own work into English and polish it with the help of friends and fellow professionals, including those at the writing center at his university.






        share|improve this answer



























          0














          Every one of the answers here has good ideas that may work for you. Here is another.



          My wife used to coach academic writers. She suggested that one of her clients write his first few drafts in his native language (Japanese), That way he could make sure his ideas were well organized without having to worry about finding just the right foreign words, When he felt well enough organized he would translate his own work into English and polish it with the help of friends and fellow professionals, including those at the writing center at his university.






          share|improve this answer

























            0












            0








            0







            Every one of the answers here has good ideas that may work for you. Here is another.



            My wife used to coach academic writers. She suggested that one of her clients write his first few drafts in his native language (Japanese), That way he could make sure his ideas were well organized without having to worry about finding just the right foreign words, When he felt well enough organized he would translate his own work into English and polish it with the help of friends and fellow professionals, including those at the writing center at his university.






            share|improve this answer













            Every one of the answers here has good ideas that may work for you. Here is another.



            My wife used to coach academic writers. She suggested that one of her clients write his first few drafts in his native language (Japanese), That way he could make sure his ideas were well organized without having to worry about finding just the right foreign words, When he felt well enough organized he would translate his own work into English and polish it with the help of friends and fellow professionals, including those at the writing center at his university.







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered 13 hours ago









            Ethan BolkerEthan Bolker

            4,0221120




            4,0221120





















                0














                Native English speaker here. I used to work in research with researchers whose English was not a first language.



                I would suggest focusing on the structure of your writing like Ethan mentioned (I have found Barbara Minto's book The Pyramid Principle quite useful) and if possible get a native speaker to review your English (e.g. you can pay for technical editors or work with English-speaking collaborators).



                As someone who has reviewed many writers I have found well structured work much easier to edit than poorly structured writing. This is irrespective if the writer is a native speaker or not (assuming a passable level of English, which I'd say you have).



                You may also be suffering writers block, I think processing ideas and expressing ideas (and translating ideas into another language) are seperate exercises best tackled at different stages. When I get writer's block I don't think about how to best express an idea, I simply write "I will write about X now, which proves..." You may write key words in your native language or any ugly, dirty writing trick that helps you stay in the flow of getting your ideas on the page. Then once your ideas are on paper, you can focus on expressing things in readable English.



                Please be aware that English is just a pain in the butt, I have worked with many clever people who always get stuck on "an/a" and "he/she/they" and stuff like this. I would in the final stage of writing review these kinds of words.






                share|improve this answer








                New contributor




                i_love_chocolate is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                Check out our Code of Conduct.
























                  0














                  Native English speaker here. I used to work in research with researchers whose English was not a first language.



                  I would suggest focusing on the structure of your writing like Ethan mentioned (I have found Barbara Minto's book The Pyramid Principle quite useful) and if possible get a native speaker to review your English (e.g. you can pay for technical editors or work with English-speaking collaborators).



                  As someone who has reviewed many writers I have found well structured work much easier to edit than poorly structured writing. This is irrespective if the writer is a native speaker or not (assuming a passable level of English, which I'd say you have).



                  You may also be suffering writers block, I think processing ideas and expressing ideas (and translating ideas into another language) are seperate exercises best tackled at different stages. When I get writer's block I don't think about how to best express an idea, I simply write "I will write about X now, which proves..." You may write key words in your native language or any ugly, dirty writing trick that helps you stay in the flow of getting your ideas on the page. Then once your ideas are on paper, you can focus on expressing things in readable English.



                  Please be aware that English is just a pain in the butt, I have worked with many clever people who always get stuck on "an/a" and "he/she/they" and stuff like this. I would in the final stage of writing review these kinds of words.






                  share|improve this answer








                  New contributor




                  i_love_chocolate is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                  Check out our Code of Conduct.






















                    0












                    0








                    0







                    Native English speaker here. I used to work in research with researchers whose English was not a first language.



                    I would suggest focusing on the structure of your writing like Ethan mentioned (I have found Barbara Minto's book The Pyramid Principle quite useful) and if possible get a native speaker to review your English (e.g. you can pay for technical editors or work with English-speaking collaborators).



                    As someone who has reviewed many writers I have found well structured work much easier to edit than poorly structured writing. This is irrespective if the writer is a native speaker or not (assuming a passable level of English, which I'd say you have).



                    You may also be suffering writers block, I think processing ideas and expressing ideas (and translating ideas into another language) are seperate exercises best tackled at different stages. When I get writer's block I don't think about how to best express an idea, I simply write "I will write about X now, which proves..." You may write key words in your native language or any ugly, dirty writing trick that helps you stay in the flow of getting your ideas on the page. Then once your ideas are on paper, you can focus on expressing things in readable English.



                    Please be aware that English is just a pain in the butt, I have worked with many clever people who always get stuck on "an/a" and "he/she/they" and stuff like this. I would in the final stage of writing review these kinds of words.






                    share|improve this answer








                    New contributor




                    i_love_chocolate is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                    Check out our Code of Conduct.










                    Native English speaker here. I used to work in research with researchers whose English was not a first language.



                    I would suggest focusing on the structure of your writing like Ethan mentioned (I have found Barbara Minto's book The Pyramid Principle quite useful) and if possible get a native speaker to review your English (e.g. you can pay for technical editors or work with English-speaking collaborators).



                    As someone who has reviewed many writers I have found well structured work much easier to edit than poorly structured writing. This is irrespective if the writer is a native speaker or not (assuming a passable level of English, which I'd say you have).



                    You may also be suffering writers block, I think processing ideas and expressing ideas (and translating ideas into another language) are seperate exercises best tackled at different stages. When I get writer's block I don't think about how to best express an idea, I simply write "I will write about X now, which proves..." You may write key words in your native language or any ugly, dirty writing trick that helps you stay in the flow of getting your ideas on the page. Then once your ideas are on paper, you can focus on expressing things in readable English.



                    Please be aware that English is just a pain in the butt, I have worked with many clever people who always get stuck on "an/a" and "he/she/they" and stuff like this. I would in the final stage of writing review these kinds of words.







                    share|improve this answer








                    New contributor




                    i_love_chocolate is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                    Check out our Code of Conduct.









                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer






                    New contributor




                    i_love_chocolate is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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                    answered 2 hours ago









                    i_love_chocolatei_love_chocolate

                    11




                    11




                    New contributor




                    i_love_chocolate is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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                    New contributor





                    i_love_chocolate is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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                    i_love_chocolate is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                    Check out our Code of Conduct.





















                        0














                        Writing an academic paper is a complex task. You are dealing with multiple distinct cognitive demands. If you are struggling, you may benefit from breaking down the process into its component parts:



                        1) Research and learn the information



                        2) Convey the information in a sequence of words



                        3) Ensure that the words are clear to the reader



                        Many second language learners benefit from doing the first two tasks in their native language. As they perform research, they take notes in their native language or some combination of their native language and English. Then they write out at least the outline, but often the whole paper, in their native language. At that point many find it none too difficult to translate their work into English. Afterwards, of course, they will proofread it and fix any problematic expressions using the resources they have in-person or online.






                        share|improve this answer



























                          0














                          Writing an academic paper is a complex task. You are dealing with multiple distinct cognitive demands. If you are struggling, you may benefit from breaking down the process into its component parts:



                          1) Research and learn the information



                          2) Convey the information in a sequence of words



                          3) Ensure that the words are clear to the reader



                          Many second language learners benefit from doing the first two tasks in their native language. As they perform research, they take notes in their native language or some combination of their native language and English. Then they write out at least the outline, but often the whole paper, in their native language. At that point many find it none too difficult to translate their work into English. Afterwards, of course, they will proofread it and fix any problematic expressions using the resources they have in-person or online.






                          share|improve this answer

























                            0












                            0








                            0







                            Writing an academic paper is a complex task. You are dealing with multiple distinct cognitive demands. If you are struggling, you may benefit from breaking down the process into its component parts:



                            1) Research and learn the information



                            2) Convey the information in a sequence of words



                            3) Ensure that the words are clear to the reader



                            Many second language learners benefit from doing the first two tasks in their native language. As they perform research, they take notes in their native language or some combination of their native language and English. Then they write out at least the outline, but often the whole paper, in their native language. At that point many find it none too difficult to translate their work into English. Afterwards, of course, they will proofread it and fix any problematic expressions using the resources they have in-person or online.






                            share|improve this answer













                            Writing an academic paper is a complex task. You are dealing with multiple distinct cognitive demands. If you are struggling, you may benefit from breaking down the process into its component parts:



                            1) Research and learn the information



                            2) Convey the information in a sequence of words



                            3) Ensure that the words are clear to the reader



                            Many second language learners benefit from doing the first two tasks in their native language. As they perform research, they take notes in their native language or some combination of their native language and English. Then they write out at least the outline, but often the whole paper, in their native language. At that point many find it none too difficult to translate their work into English. Afterwards, of course, they will proofread it and fix any problematic expressions using the resources they have in-person or online.







                            share|improve this answer












                            share|improve this answer



                            share|improve this answer










                            answered 1 hour ago









                            LN6595LN6595

                            1114




                            1114




















                                sunnyme is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.









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