Tense Usage in Selected Humanities and Science Dissertations
Abstract
Graduate students are usually not sure of the appropriate tense to use in each rhetorical
section of their dissertations in their disciplines. Even style guides provide little
information regarding tense usage in academic texts. This paper describes a study in
which frequency and usage of types of tense were compared in selected dissertations
from the humanities and sciences drawn from Kenyan Public Universities. It was found
that graduate research students in both humanities and sciences preferred the simple
present and simple past as primary tense forms. It also emerged that authors have to
alternate verb tenses even in the same rhetorical section of a dissertation to achieve
particular communicative purposes. Suggesting that choices for tense in dissertations
are a function of the epistemology and ideology of the disciplines, the paper proposes a
genre-based approach to teaching those preparing to write their dissertations.