Agbaglo Ebenezer
PhD student (FT)
- AG415
- +852 2766 6095
- ebenezer.agbaglo@connect.polyu.hk
Biography
Chief Supervisor:
Education and Academic Qualifications
- Master of Philosophy (MPhil) in English Language (2017-2020)
University of Cape Coast, Ghana
Thesis Title: Grammatical Metaphor in Academic Writing: Functional Diversity of Process Nominalisation in Research Article Abstracts Across Disciplines
Principal Supervisor: Prof. Joseph Benjamin Archibald Afful
Co-Supervisor: Prof. Kwabena Sarfo Sarfo-Kantankah
- Bachelor of Arts (English Language and Religion & Human Values) (2012-2016)
University of Cape Coast, Ghana
Thesis Title: The Use of Politeness Strategies in the Analysis And Discussion Section of Research Articles
Supervisor: Prof. Lawrence K. Owusu-Ansah
Academic and Professional Experience
- English Proficiency Tutorial Instructor (2021)
Department of English, University of Cape Coast
- Demonstrator (2018-2020)
Department of English, University of Cape Coast
First Semester
- ENG 101: The Use of English Language
- ENG 203: The Sentence and its Parts
- ENG 213: The Language of Drama
- ENG 399: Research Methods
Second Semester
- ENG 204: Forms and Functions of the English Clause
- ENG 314: Studies in Shakespeare
- ENG 402: Varieties of English and Advanced Writing Skills
- Teaching and Research Assistant (On National Service, 2016-2017)
Department of English, University of Cape Coast
As a teaching assistant, I helped lecturers in teaching and conducting research. The specific courses I assisted in teaching are as follows:
First Semester
- ENG 101: The Use of English Language
- ENG 203: The Sentence and its Parts
- ENG 213: The Language of Drama
Second Semester
- ENG 204: Forms and Functions of the English Clause
- ENG 314: Studies in Shakespeare
- ENG 402: Varieties of English and Advanced Writing Skills
Research Interests
Publications
- Nkansah, S. K., Mwinlaaru, I. N., & Agbaglo, E. (2022). Forms and functions of the English clause [A course module for the College of Distance Education, University of Cape Coast]
- Afful, J. B. A., Hesse, E. K., Agbaglo, E., & Bonsu, E. M. (2023). Move analysis of grant recommendation letters written by senior academics in a Ghanaian university. Taiwan International ESP Journal, 13(2), 1-35.
- Agbaglo, E. & Afful, J. B. A. (2023). Sociolinguistics of Names of Hotels in Accra. Linguistics Initiative, 3(1), 1–16.
- Agbaglo, E. & Bonsu, E. M. (2022). Functions of reporting verbs in the literature review of master’s theses in the discipline of economics. ELT Worldwide, 9(2), 347–359.
- Frempong, C. O., Anani, G. E., Ayitey, H. K., & Agbaglo, E. (2022). Pre-modification of noun phrases in the writings of students in Ghanaian colleges of education. International Journal of Research Studies in Education, 11(5), 73–87.
- Agbaglo, E., Agbadi, P., Tetteh, J. K., Ameyaw, E. K., Adu, C., & Nutor, J. J. (2022). Trends in total fertility rate in Ghana by different inequality dimensions from 1993 to 2014. BMC Women’s Health, 22(1), 49.
- Sarfo-Kantankah, K. S., Agbaglo, E., & Mensah, F. Jnr. (2021). Metaphorical conceptualization of covid-19 in parliamentary discourse: A corpus-assisted study. Language, Discourse, and Society, 9(2), 105–122.
- Agbaglo, E. & Fiadzomor, P. (2021). Genre analysis of abstracts of empirical research articles published in TESOL Quarterly. Journal of English Language Teaching and Applied Linguistics, 3(7), 1–13.
- Agbaglo, E., Ayaawan, A. E., & Yeboah, E. O. (2021). Genre analysis of the introduction sections of Newsfile, a Ghanaian TV talk show. Indonesian Journal of English Language Teaching and Applied Linguistics, 6(1), 73–88.
- Ansah, R. Agbaglo, E., & Mensah, R. A. T. (2021). Gender variation in the writings of Ghanaian colleges of education students: A study of syntactic complexity. Advances in Language and Literary Studies, 13(4), 140–149.
- Agbaglo, E. (2017). The use of politeness strategies in the analysis and discussion sections of English research articles. Research on Humanities and Social Sciences, 7(9), 30–42.
- Agbaglo, E. (2017). The types and frequencies of reporting verbs in research articles written by lecturers in a Ghanaian university. Journal of Literature, Languages and Linguistics, 34, 51–57.
- Agbaglo, E. (2023). Grammatical metaphor in academic writing: Functions of process nominalization in economics research article abstracts. Paper presented at the West African Systemic Functional Linguistics Interest Group (WASFLIG) seminar, 30th, June, 2023.
Service
Department of English, University of Cape Coast, Cape Coast, Ghana
As a member of the Planning Committee for Departmental Seminars, I, together with other committee members, ensured that seminars were organised weekly and publicised.
I worked together with the rest of the committee members to generate the conference theme and sub-themes, recommended other researchers to be invited as abstract reviewers, edited the book of abstracts, and served as session moderator during the conference.