SlidePlayer

  • My presentations

Auth with social network:

Download presentation

We think you have liked this presentation. If you wish to download it, please recommend it to your friends in any social system. Share buttons are a little bit lower. Thank you!

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video

Five Basic Sections of a Research Paper

Published by Kellie Dixon Modified over 8 years ago

Similar presentations

Presentation on theme: "Five Basic Sections of a Research Paper"— Presentation transcript:

Five Basic Sections of a Research Paper

Lecture 2 Psyc 300A. Where Do Research Ideas Come From? Curiosity In mature areas, there are usually competing theories Theory-based research will usually.

parts of research paper and its definition ppt

Anatomy Laboratory Write up Emulate standard Scientific Paper (few exceptions)

parts of research paper and its definition ppt

JULIA BALLENGER, PH.D. PROFESSOR TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY-COMMERCE TEXAS ASSOCIATION OF BLACK PERSONNEL IN HIGHER EDUCATION CONFERENCE MARCH 5-7,2015 AUSTIN,

parts of research paper and its definition ppt

Copyright © Allyn & Bacon (2007) APA Publication Style Graziano and Raulin Research Methods: Appendix B This multimedia product and its contents are protected.

parts of research paper and its definition ppt

Psy 109: Nov. 14, 2002 Reporting Research: Written and Oral Laurie Karp Erin Roland.

parts of research paper and its definition ppt

Reporting results: APA style Psych 231: Research Methods in Psychology.

parts of research paper and its definition ppt

1 Reading (and Writing) About Research Studies  Is this fun? Not usually but we can be duped by others if we don’t know the research!!!  Peer-reviewed.

parts of research paper and its definition ppt

Writing tips Based on Michael Kremer’s “Checklist”,

parts of research paper and its definition ppt

Experimental Psychology PSY 433

parts of research paper and its definition ppt

First APA Format Research Reports: Common Problems General Formatting Issues – Double spacing only - no extra lines – Five spaces between short title and.

parts of research paper and its definition ppt

 How to Write an APA Research Paper. APA STYLE  Formal research papers, written according to the American Psychological Association’s rules and standards,

parts of research paper and its definition ppt

Ten key parts of the manuscript

parts of research paper and its definition ppt

Effective Scientific Communication How to write research report.

parts of research paper and its definition ppt

PowerPoint presentation to accompany Research Design Explained 6th edition ; ©2007 Mark Mitchell & Janina Jolley Chapter 15 Putting it all together: Writing.

parts of research paper and its definition ppt

Abstract APA format Created by Andrea Dottolo, Ph.D., Department of Psychology, University of Massachusetts, Lowell 1.

parts of research paper and its definition ppt

APA Formatting and Style Guide Purdue OWL staff Brought to you in cooperation with the Purdue Online Writing Lab.

parts of research paper and its definition ppt

Method Type in your method here. Describe participants, sampling, variables. Type in your method here. Describe participants, sampling, variables. Type.

parts of research paper and its definition ppt

Abstract Type in your abstract here. This is 36 point font. This is a brief comprehensive summary. Type in your abstract here. This is a brief comprehensive.

parts of research paper and its definition ppt

Parts of APA Manuscript. The parts of an APA manuscript Title Page Abstract Body  Literature review  Method  Results  Discussion References Tables.

About project

© 2024 SlidePlayer.com Inc. All rights reserved.

Banner

How to Write a Research Paper: Parts of the Paper

  • Choosing Your Topic
  • Citation & Style Guides This link opens in a new window
  • Critical Thinking
  • Evaluating Information
  • Parts of the Paper
  • Writing Tips from UNC-Chapel Hill
  • Librarian Contact

Parts of the Research Paper Papers should have a beginning, a middle, and an end. Your introductory paragraph should grab the reader's attention, state your main idea, and indicate how you will support it. The body of the paper should expand on what you have stated in the introduction. Finally, the conclusion restates the paper's thesis and should explain what you have learned, giving a wrap up of your main ideas.

1. The Title The title should be specific and indicate the theme of the research and what ideas it addresses. Use keywords that help explain your paper's topic to the reader. Try to avoid abbreviations and jargon. Think about keywords that people would use to search for your paper and include them in your title.

2. The Abstract The abstract is used by readers to get a quick overview of your paper. Typically, they are about 200 words in length (120 words minimum to  250 words maximum). The abstract should introduce the topic and thesis, and should provide a general statement about what you have found in your research. The abstract allows you to mention each major aspect of your topic and helps readers decide whether they want to read the rest of the paper. Because it is a summary of the entire research paper, it is often written last. 

3. The Introduction The introduction should be designed to attract the reader's attention and explain the focus of the research. You will introduce your overview of the topic,  your main points of information, and why this subject is important. You can introduce the current understanding and background information about the topic. Toward the end of the introduction, you add your thesis statement, and explain how you will provide information to support your research questions. This provides the purpose and focus for the rest of the paper.

4. Thesis Statement Most papers will have a thesis statement or main idea and supporting facts/ideas/arguments. State your main idea (something of interest or something to be proven or argued for or against) as your thesis statement, and then provide your supporting facts and arguments. A thesis statement is a declarative sentence that asserts the position a paper will be taking. It also points toward the paper's development. This statement should be both specific and arguable. Generally, the thesis statement will be placed at the end of the first paragraph of your paper. The remainder of your paper will support this thesis.

Students often learn to write a thesis as a first step in the writing process, but often, after research, a writer's viewpoint may change. Therefore a thesis statement may be one of the final steps in writing. 

Examples of Thesis Statements from Purdue OWL

5. The Literature Review The purpose of the literature review is to describe past important research and how it specifically relates to the research thesis. It should be a synthesis of the previous literature and the new idea being researched. The review should examine the major theories related to the topic to date and their contributors. It should include all relevant findings from credible sources, such as academic books and peer-reviewed journal articles. You will want  to:

  • Explain how the literature helps the researcher understand the topic.
  • Try to show connections and any disparities between the literature.
  • Identify new ways to interpret prior research.
  • Reveal any gaps that exist in the literature.

More about writing a literature review. . .

6. The Discussion ​The purpose of the discussion is to interpret and describe what you have learned from your research. Make the reader understand why your topic is important. The discussion should always demonstrate what you have learned from your readings (and viewings) and how that learning has made the topic evolve, especially from the short description of main points in the introduction.Explain any new understanding or insights you have had after reading your articles and/or books. Paragraphs should use transitioning sentences to develop how one paragraph idea leads to the next. The discussion will always connect to the introduction, your thesis statement, and the literature you reviewed, but it does not simply repeat or rearrange the introduction. You want to: 

  • Demonstrate critical thinking, not just reporting back facts that you gathered.
  • If possible, tell how the topic has evolved over the past and give it's implications for the future.
  • Fully explain your main ideas with supporting information.
  • Explain why your thesis is correct giving arguments to counter points.

7. The Conclusion A concluding paragraph is a brief summary of your main ideas and restates the paper's main thesis, giving the reader the sense that the stated goal of the paper has been accomplished. What have you learned by doing this research that you didn't know before? What conclusions have you drawn? You may also want to suggest further areas of study, improvement of research possibilities, etc. to demonstrate your critical thinking regarding your research.

  • << Previous: Evaluating Information
  • Next: Research >>
  • Last Updated: Feb 13, 2024 8:35 AM
  • URL: https://libguides.ucc.edu/research_paper

Research Paper

29 December 2023

last updated

A research paper is a product of seeking information, analysis, human thinking, and time. Basically, when scholars want to get answers to questions, they start to search for information to expand, use, approve, or deny findings. In simple words, research papers are results of processes by considering writing works and following specific requirements. Besides, scientists research and expand many theories, developing social or technological aspects of human science. However, in order to write relevant papers, they need to know a definition of the research, structure, characteristics, and types.

Definition of What Is a Research Paper and Its Meaning

A research paper is a common assignment. It comes to a situation when students, scholars, and scientists need to answer specific questions by using sources. Basically, a research paper is one of the types of papers where scholars analyze questions or topics , look for secondary sources , and write papers on defined themes. For example, if an assignment is to write a research paper on some causes of global warming or any other topic, a person must write a research proposal on it, analyzing important points and credible sources . Although essays focus on personal knowledge, writing a research paper means analyzing sources by following academic standards. Moreover, scientists must meet the structure of research papers. Therefore, writers need to analyze their research paper topics , start to research, cover key aspects, process credible articles, and organize final studies properly.

The Structure of a Research Work

The structure of research papers depends on assignment requirements. In fact, when students get their assignments and instructions, they need to analyze specific research questions or topics, find reliable sources , and write final works. Basically, the structure of research papers consists of the abstract , outline , introduction , literature review , methodology, results , discussion, recommendations, limitations, conclusion , acknowledgments , and references. However, students may not include some of these sections because of assigned instructions that they have and specific types of research papers. For instance, if instructions of papers do not suppose to conduct real experiments, the methodology section can be skipped because of the data’s absence. In turn, the structure of the final work consists of:

research paper

Join our satisfied customers who have received perfect papers from Wr1ter Team.

🔸 The First Part of a Research Study

Abstract or an executive summary means the first section of a research paper that provides the study’s purpose, research questions or suggestions, main findings with conclusions. Moreover, this paragraph of about 150 words should be written when the whole work is finished already. Hence, abstract sections should describe key aspects of studies, including discussions about the relevance of findings.

Outline serves as a clear map of the structure of a research study.

Introduction provides the main information on problem statements, the indication of methodology, important findings, and principal conclusion. Basically, this section of a research paper covers rationales behind the work or background research, explanation of the importance, defending its relevance, a brief description of experimental designs, defined research questions, hypotheses, or key aspects.

🔸 Literature Review and Research or Experiment

Literature Review is needed for the analysis of past studies or scholarly articles to be familiar with research questions or topics. Hence, this section summarizes and synthesizes arguments and ideas from scholarly sources without adding new contributions. In turn, this part is organized around arguments or ideas, not sources.

Methodology or Materials and Methods covers explanations of research designs. Basically, techniques for gathering information and other aspects related to experiments must be described in a research paper. For instance, students and scholars document all specialized materials and general procedures. In this case, individuals may use some or all of the methods in further studies or judge the scientific merit of the work. Moreover, scientists should explain how they are going to conduct their experiments.

Results mean the gained information or data after the research or experiment. Basically, scholars should present and illustrate their findings. Moreover, this section may include tables or figures.

🔸 Analysis of Findings

Discussion is a section of a research paper where scientists review the information in the introduction part, evaluate gained results, or compare it with past studies. In particular, students and scholars interpret gained data or findings in appropriate depth. For example, if results differ from expectations at the beginning, scientists should explain why that may have happened. However, if results agree with rationales, scientists should describe theories that the evidence is supported.

Recommendations take its roots from a discussion section where scholars propose potential solutions or new ideas based on obtained results in a research paper. In this case, if scientists have any recommendations on how to improve this research so that other scholars can use evidence in further studies, they must write what they think in this section.

Limitations mean a consideration of research weaknesses and results to get new directions. For instance, if researchers found any limitations of studies that could affect experiments, scholars must not use such knowledge because of the same mistakes. Moreover, scientists should avoid contradicting results, and, even more, they must write it in this section.

🔸 The Final Part of a Conducted Research

Conclusion includes final claims of a research paper based on findings. Basically, this section covers final thoughts and the summary of the whole work. Moreover, this section may be used instead of limitations and recommendations that would be too small by themselves. In this case, scientists do not need to use headings for recommendations and limitations. Also, check out conclusion examples .

Acknowledgments or Appendix may take different forms, from paragraphs to charts. In this section, scholars include additional information on a research paper.

References mean a section where students, scholars, or scientists provide all used sources by following the format and academic rules.

Research Characteristics

Any type of work must meet some standards. By considering a research paper, this work must be written accordingly. In this case, the main characteristics of research papers are the length, style, format, and sources. Firstly, the length of research work defines the number of needed sources to analyze. Then, the style must be formal and covers impersonal and inclusive language. In turn, the format means academic standards of how to organize final works, including its structure and norms. Finally, sources and their number define works as research papers because of the volume of analyzed information. Hence, these characteristics must be considered while writing research papers.

Types of Research Papers

In general, the length of assignments can be different because of instructions. For example, there are two main types of research papers, such as typical and serious works. Firstly, a typical research paper may include definitive, argumentative, interpretive, and other works. In this case, typical papers are from 2 to 10 pages, where students analyze research questions or specific topics. Then, a serious research study is the expanded version of typical works. In turn, the length of such a paper is more than 10 pages. Basically, such works cover a serious analysis with many sources. Therefore, typical and serious works are two types of research papers.

Typical Research Papers

Basically, typical research works depend on assignments, the number of sources, and the paper’s length. So, a typical research paper is usually a long essay with the analyzed evidence. For example, students in high school and colleges get such assignments to learn how to research and analyze topics. In this case, they do not need to conduct serious experiments with the analysis and calculation of data. Moreover, students must use the Internet or libraries in searching for credible secondary sources to find potential answers to specific questions. As a result, students gather information on topics and learn how to take defined sides, present unique positions, or explain new directions. Hence, typical research papers require an analysis of primary and secondary sources without serious experiments or data.

Serious Research Studies

Although long papers require a lot of time for finding and analyzing credible sources, real experiments are an integral part of research work. Firstly, scholars at universities need to analyze the information from past studies to expand or disapprove of researched topics. Then, if scholars want to prove specific positions or ideas, they must get real evidence. In this case, experiments can be surveys, calculations, or other types of data that scholars do personally. Moreover, a dissertation is a typical serious research paper that young scientists write based on the research analysis of topics, data from conducted experiments, and conclusions at the end of work. Thus, serious research papers are studies that take a lot of time, analysis of sources with gained data, and interpretation of results.

parts of a research paper

Parts of a Research Paper

Sep 17, 2014

180 likes | 675 Views

Parts of a Research Paper. FV11A8900 Academic Writing in English. Objectives. What is Academic Writing Forms of academic writing (genres) Types of writing approaches Structure of a research paper Introductions - CARS. What is academic writing?

Share Presentation

  • academic writing
  • introductions cars
  • writing approaches
  • homework 1 4
  • online writing lab owl

ziva

Presentation Transcript

Parts of a Research Paper FV11A8900 Academic Writing in English

Objectives • What is Academic Writing • Forms of academic writing (genres) • Types of writing approaches • Structure of a research paper • Introductions - CARS

What is academic writing? Writing by scholars (you) for scholars (your peers, your teachers and your profs).

Forms of AW • Arguably, everything you write in university. • Most common forms: • Essays • Research papers  articles, case studies, reports • Theses • Dissertations

Types of approaches Find out more about these at:The Online Writing Lab (OWL) at Purdue University http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/section/1/3/ http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/685/1/ Cappelen Damm http://access-socialstudies.cappelendamm.no/c319365/artikkel/vis.html?tid=382115

Basic structure (IMRaD) Literature review Data collection Data analysis Image source: http://sana.tkk.fi/awe accessed 7.9.10

Intro: Create-a-Research-Space model (CaRS)

Exercise 1 • 2 introductions • Find the 3 basic moves of the CaRS model • In groups of 3 or 4, discuss what you’ve found.

Exercise 2 • Go through your ’controversy’ text. • Can you identify the 3 moves in the CaRS model? • In pairs (work with someone you haven’t worked with before) • Briefly explain what controversy your essay is about to your partner • Show which (if any) of the 3 moves you identified. • Work together to improve your introductions.

Homework 1/4 • Go to http://sana.tkk.fi/awe/style/reporting/sections/intros/index.html • Read through the more specific details of CaRS • Practice using the exercises (20 min)

Homework 2/4 • Find a reference paper • From a peer reviewed journal (not Newsweek, New Scientist, etc.) • 10-12 pages long • Check the following: • Does it follow IMRaD? • Does it follow the CARS model?

Homework 3/4 • Reading (textbook) • 1.2A – Finding suitable sources (pg 11) • and 1.2B – Reading: developing critical approaches. (pg 19) • 1.11 Introductions and conclusions (pg 88) • Do exercise 4 Practice A (pg 87) – bring it with you to the next class.

Homework 4/4 • Preparation for the next class... Grammar! Parts of speech. Handout is in Noppa

  • More by User

Writing a Research Paper

Writing a Research Paper

Writing a Research Paper. What is a research paper?. What the research paper is NOT. An informed summary of a topic by means of primary and secondary sources. A book report or an opinion piece. A data dump or a series of quotations linked by verbage. What the research paper IS.

648 views • 21 slides

Preparing a Research Paper

Preparing a Research Paper

A Research Paper is NOT … A rearrangement or summary of information from different sources A report that could be included in a general encyclopedia A matter of cutting and pasting together from different resources A result of one quick Database or Google Scholar search.

615 views • 35 slides

Writing a Research Paper

Writing a Research Paper. Paul Wagner (Student ACM Meeting, Spring 2004). Major Messages. Follow the Major Research Work Areas Major Sections: Abstract, Introduction/Background, Work Done/Contributions, Evaluation, Conclusion, Future Work, References Outline First

429 views • 14 slides

Writing a Research Paper

Writing a Research Paper. Daniel W. Blackmon Coral Gables Senior High. One’s research technique is the same whether one is writing:. A term paper for a class An Internal Assessment for IB The Extended Essay for IB Your master’s thesis Your dissertation. Define your topic.

846 views • 54 slides

Parts of a Research Report

Parts of a Research Report

Parts of a Research Report. Abstract Introduction Method Results Discussion References. Abstract. Brief summary of all essential features of the research 120 words or fewer Tells readers whether article is relevant to their scientific question Six to eight sentences

1.95k views • 8 slides

Writing a Research Paper

Writing a Research Paper . Using a Library Database Ms. Mary-Carol Riehs , staff librarian York Community High School. Next year, you’ll be in college!. You’ll have lots of new experiences Be in a new city! Make new friends! Try new foods! Maybe even fall in love….. .

375 views • 24 slides

Writing a Research Paper

Senior Project. Crash Course: WRHS Senior Project 2010-11. Writing a Research Paper. Contents. Senior Project: Background The Thesis Statement Organizing your Paper Incorporating and Citing Research. What is a research paper?.

689 views • 49 slides

Writing a Research Paper

Writing a Research Paper. North Muskegon High School Argument &amp; Research. North Muskegon School Board Policy. Each graduate of North Muskegon High School will demonstrate the ability to competently write a research paper.

156 views • 4 slides

Writing a research paper

Writing a research paper

Writing a research paper. Writing Prompt. Write a research paper about a disability that interests you. Purposes To inform others about your topic To offer a unique perspective on a topic To learn more about a topic. Audiences Classmates and teacher Community members

361 views • 13 slides

Writing a Research Paper

Writing a Research Paper. Mrs. Jamin Lakeland High School. Choose a Topic. Make sure you understand your assignment - What is the length? - Who is the audience? - What type of research paper? * Informational? This type summarizes material from a variety of sources.

717 views • 40 slides

Writing A Research Paper

Writing A Research Paper

Writing A Research Paper . By: Snezana Blazeski. Step 1: Choosing a Topic. 1) Make a list of topics that you are interested in researching. 2) Narrow the list to the top three and do some research on all three.

244 views • 9 slides

Writing a RESEARCH PAPER

Writing a RESEARCH PAPER

Writing a RESEARCH PAPER. Research Writing IV. Outline. Title Page Table of Contents CHAPTER 1 - INTRODUCTION Background of the Study Statement of the Problem Objectives of the Study Significance of the Study Scope and Limitation Definition of Terms. CHAPTER 2

340 views • 8 slides

Writing a Research Paper

Writing a Research Paper. Workshop 4 in Holt Literature. Step 1 Choose and narrow a subject. Example: Earthquakes is a broad subject. Narrow your subject to the cause and effects of earthquakes. Step 2 Determine purpose and what you want to cover.

215 views • 11 slides

A RESEARCH PAPER

A RESEARCH PAPER

STEPS FOR PREPARING A MANUSCRIPT. A RESEARCH PAPER. DR MAUNG MAUNG SAN. MUST BE SHORT BUT COMPREHENSIVE MUST REPRESENT THE WORK OR THE PROBLEM. 1. TITLE. Smith, John F., and Jones, M.C. Smith JF, Jones MC John F. Smith and M.C. Jones J.F. Smith, M.C. Jones and T. Shwe

375 views • 16 slides

Writing a Research Paper

Writing a Research Paper. Scott MacKenzie York University. Research Paper. The final step Research is not finished until the results are published!. Organization of a Research Paper. Title Abstract Body. Main sections… Introduction Method Participants Apparatus Procedure

628 views • 32 slides

Writing a Research Paper

Writing a Research Paper. Purpose of Research Paper. You will be taking a stand on an issue and providing support or evidence gained from your research to back up your position. Any type of writing where research and citations are required: Essays, case studies, etc. Don’t Get Overwhelmed!.

416 views • 24 slides

How to: Read a Research Paper, Write a Research Paper

How to: Read a Research Paper, Write a Research Paper

How to: Read a Research Paper, Write a Research Paper. CSCI 6900: Research Methods in Computer Science November 5, 2010 E. Kraemer. Resources. S. Keshav, “How to Read a Paper”. URL=http://blizzard.cs.uwaterloo.ca/keshav/home/Papers/data/07/paper-reading.pdf

1.9k views • 62 slides

The parts of a research report

The parts of a research report

E- Learning and Writing Skills IGGU 1101 Research Report Dr. Sana’a Wafa Al-Sayegh Barrass, Robert. Scientists Must Write : A Guide to Better Writing for Scientists, Engineers &amp; Students. From e-global Library. The parts of a research report. Introduction What did you do? Why?

423 views • 6 slides

Major Parts of a Research Paper

Major Parts of a Research Paper

This presentation will help you to write your research paper properly. Watch it to complete an upscale paper! Read the full article here: https://essay-academy.com/account/blog/major-parts-of-a-research-paper

3.81k views • 9 slides

Tips of writing a research paper

Tips of writing a research paper

Tips for writing a research paper

45 views • 2 slides

Writing a Research Paper

Writing a Research Paper. Humanities and Social Science. General Comments. Research styles and types can vary in each discipline. Research can be inconclusive or theses can change. Research helps you tell your story in a common structure.

216 views • 18 slides

Writing a  Research  Paper

Writing a Research Paper. What is a research paper?. definition. A substantial piece of academic writing, usually done as a requirement for a class, in which the author does independent research into a topic and writes a description of the findings of that research.

880 views • 23 slides

  • Foundations
  • Write Paper

Search form

  • Experiments
  • Anthropology
  • Self-Esteem
  • Social Anxiety

parts of research paper and its definition ppt

  • Research Paper >

Parts of a Research Paper

One of the most important aspects of science is ensuring that you get all the parts of the written research paper in the right order.

This article is a part of the guide:

  • Outline Examples
  • Example of a Paper
  • Write a Hypothesis
  • Introduction

Browse Full Outline

  • 1 Write a Research Paper
  • 2 Writing a Paper
  • 3.1 Write an Outline
  • 3.2 Outline Examples
  • 4.1 Thesis Statement
  • 4.2 Write a Hypothesis
  • 5.2 Abstract
  • 5.3 Introduction
  • 5.4 Methods
  • 5.5 Results
  • 5.6 Discussion
  • 5.7 Conclusion
  • 5.8 Bibliography
  • 6.1 Table of Contents
  • 6.2 Acknowledgements
  • 6.3 Appendix
  • 7.1 In Text Citations
  • 7.2 Footnotes
  • 7.3.1 Floating Blocks
  • 7.4 Example of a Paper
  • 7.5 Example of a Paper 2
  • 7.6.1 Citations
  • 7.7.1 Writing Style
  • 7.7.2 Citations
  • 8.1.1 Sham Peer Review
  • 8.1.2 Advantages
  • 8.1.3 Disadvantages
  • 8.2 Publication Bias
  • 8.3.1 Journal Rejection
  • 9.1 Article Writing
  • 9.2 Ideas for Topics

You may have finished the best research project on earth but, if you do not write an interesting and well laid out paper, then nobody is going to take your findings seriously.

The main thing to remember with any research paper is that it is based on an hourglass structure. It begins with general information and undertaking a literature review , and becomes more specific as you nail down a research problem and hypothesis .

Finally, it again becomes more general as you try to apply your findings to the world at general.

Whilst there are a few differences between the various disciplines, with some fields placing more emphasis on certain parts than others, there is a basic underlying structure.

These steps are the building blocks of constructing a good research paper. This section outline how to lay out the parts of a research paper, including the various experimental methods and designs.

The principles for literature review and essays of all types follow the same basic principles.

Reference List

parts of research paper and its definition ppt

For many students, writing the introduction is the first part of the process, setting down the direction of the paper and laying out exactly what the research paper is trying to achieve.

For others, the introduction is the last thing written, acting as a quick summary of the paper. As long as you have planned a good structure for the parts of a research paper, both approaches are acceptable and it is a matter of preference.

A good introduction generally consists of three distinct parts:

  • You should first give a general presentation of the research problem.
  • You should then lay out exactly what you are trying to achieve with this particular research project.
  • You should then state your own position.

Ideally, you should try to give each section its own paragraph, but this will vary given the overall length of the paper.

1) General Presentation

Look at the benefits to be gained by the research or why the problem has not been solved yet. Perhaps nobody has thought about it, or maybe previous research threw up some interesting leads that the previous researchers did not follow up.

Another researcher may have uncovered some interesting trends, but did not manage to reach the significance level , due to experimental error or small sample sizes .

2) Purpose of the Paper

The research problem does not have to be a statement, but must at least imply what you are trying to find.

Many writers prefer to place the thesis statement or hypothesis here, which is perfectly acceptable, but most include it in the last sentences of the introduction, to give the reader a fuller picture.

3) A Statement of Intent From the Writer

The idea is that somebody will be able to gain an overall view of the paper without needing to read the whole thing. Literature reviews are time-consuming enough, so give the reader a concise idea of your intention before they commit to wading through pages of background.

In this section, you look to give a context to the research, including any relevant information learned during your literature review. You are also trying to explain why you chose this area of research, attempting to highlight why it is necessary. The second part should state the purpose of the experiment and should include the research problem. The third part should give the reader a quick summary of the form that the parts of the research paper is going to take and should include a condensed version of the discussion.

parts of research paper and its definition ppt

This should be the easiest part of the paper to write, as it is a run-down of the exact design and methodology used to perform the research. Obviously, the exact methodology varies depending upon the exact field and type of experiment .

There is a big methodological difference between the apparatus based research of the physical sciences and the methods and observation methods of social sciences. However, the key is to ensure that another researcher would be able to replicate the experiment to match yours as closely as possible, but still keeping the section concise.

You can assume that anybody reading your paper is familiar with the basic methods, so try not to explain every last detail. For example, an organic chemist or biochemist will be familiar with chromatography, so you only need to highlight the type of equipment used rather than explaining the whole process in detail.

In the case of a survey , if you have too many questions to cover in the method, you can always include a copy of the questionnaire in the appendix . In this case, make sure that you refer to it.

This is probably the most variable part of any research paper, and depends on the results and aims of the experiment.

For quantitative research , it is a presentation of the numerical results and data, whereas for qualitative research it should be a broader discussion of trends, without going into too much detail.

For research generating a lot of results , then it is better to include tables or graphs of the analyzed data and leave the raw data in the appendix, so that a researcher can follow up and check your calculations.

A commentary is essential to linking the results together, rather than just displaying isolated and unconnected charts and figures.

It can be quite difficult to find a good balance between the results and the discussion section, because some findings, especially in a quantitative or descriptive experiment , will fall into a grey area. Try to avoid repeating yourself too often.

It is best to try to find a middle path, where you give a general overview of the data and then expand on it in the discussion - you should try to keep your own opinions and interpretations out of the results section, saving that for the discussion later on.

This is where you elaborate on your findings, and explain what you found, adding your own personal interpretations.

Ideally, you should link the discussion back to the introduction, addressing each point individually.

It’s important to make sure that every piece of information in your discussion is directly related to the thesis statement , or you risk cluttering your findings. In keeping with the hourglass principle, you can expand on the topic later in the conclusion .

The conclusion is where you build on your discussion and try to relate your findings to other research and to the world at large.

In a short research paper, it may be a paragraph or two, or even a few lines.

In a dissertation, it may well be the most important part of the entire paper - not only does it describe the results and discussion in detail, it emphasizes the importance of the results in the field, and ties it in with the previous research.

Some research papers require a recommendations section, postulating the further directions of the research, as well as highlighting how any flaws affected the results. In this case, you should suggest any improvements that could be made to the research design .

No paper is complete without a reference list , documenting all the sources that you used for your research. This should be laid out according to APA , MLA or other specified format, allowing any interested researcher to follow up on the research.

One habit that is becoming more common, especially with online papers, is to include a reference to your own paper on the final page. Lay this out in MLA, APA and Chicago format, allowing anybody referencing your paper to copy and paste it.

  • Psychology 101
  • Flags and Countries
  • Capitals and Countries

Martyn Shuttleworth (Jun 5, 2009). Parts of a Research Paper. Retrieved Apr 01, 2024 from Explorable.com: https://explorable.com/parts-of-a-research-paper

You Are Allowed To Copy The Text

The text in this article is licensed under the Creative Commons-License Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) .

This means you're free to copy, share and adapt any parts (or all) of the text in the article, as long as you give appropriate credit and provide a link/reference to this page.

That is it. You don't need our permission to copy the article; just include a link/reference back to this page. You can use it freely (with some kind of link), and we're also okay with people reprinting in publications like books, blogs, newsletters, course-material, papers, wikipedia and presentations (with clear attribution).

Want to stay up to date? Follow us!

Check out the official book.

Learn how to construct, style and format an Academic paper and take your skills to the next level.

parts of research paper and its definition ppt

(also available as ebook )

Save this course for later

Don't have time for it all now? No problem, save it as a course and come back to it later.

Footer bottom

  • Privacy Policy

parts of research paper and its definition ppt

  • Subscribe to our RSS Feed
  • Like us on Facebook
  • Follow us on Twitter

IMAGES

  1. SOLUTION: Chapter 1 Parts of a Research Paper Presentation

    parts of research paper and its definition ppt

  2. PPT

    parts of research paper and its definition ppt

  3. Parts of a Research Paper

    parts of research paper and its definition ppt

  4. Research Paper Chapter 1 Parts

    parts of research paper and its definition ppt

  5. 9 Basic Parts of Research Articles

    parts of research paper and its definition ppt

  6. Essential Parts of Research Papers

    parts of research paper and its definition ppt

VIDEO

  1. Paper Scheme || Mathematics Science || Class Ten || Punjab Boards || 75 Marks || ​⁠@Mirzasb90

  2. How to structure introduction to a research paper

  3. Online Workshop on AI-Enhanced Scientific Writing

  4. THE RESEARCH PROBLEM Identify , define , state

  5. Branches Of Chemistry || Part 1 || Chap 1 Fundamentals Of Chemistry || Class 9 Chemistry

  6. AP RCET 2022 Question Paper Section

COMMENTS

  1. PPT - Major Parts of a Research Paper PowerPoint Presentation ...

    Presentation Transcript. Introduction • The first part of the research paper is one of the most important because the outline is given there. • Three major parts are included in great introductions: background to the issue or goal of the research; the outline of the paper, basically you describe the order which you will use for achieving ...

  2. Parts of A Research Paper | PDF | Evaluation Methods - Scribd

    Parts of a Research Paper - Free download as Powerpoint Presentation (.ppt), PDF File (.pdf), Text File (.txt) or view presentation slides online. parts of a research

  3. The Different Parts of Research Paper | PDF | Data | Science

    The Different Parts of Research Paper PPT - Free download as Powerpoint Presentation (.ppt / .pptx), PDF File (.pdf), Text File (.txt) or view presentation slides online. Scribd is the world's largest social reading and publishing site.

  4. Five Basic Sections of a Research Paper - ppt video online ...

    Its purpose is to show the reader the research at a glance. Condensed format. Abstracts must be condensed yet stand alone. The abstract should be understandable to someone who has not read the paper. Order. Each section of the paper requires 1 to 2 sentence in the abstract.

  5. How to Write a Research Paper: Parts of the Paper - UCC

    1. The Title. The title should be specific and indicate the theme of the research and what ideas it addresses. Use keywords that help explain your paper's topic to the reader. Try to avoid abbreviations and jargon. Think about keywords that people would use to search for your paper and include them in your title. 2.

  6. Research Paper: Definition, Structure, Characteristics, and ...

    Research Paper. A research paper is a product of seeking information, analysis, human thinking, and time. Basically, when scholars want to get answers to questions, they start to search for information to expand, use, approve, or deny findings. In simple words, research papers are results of processes by considering writing works and following ...

  7. PPT - Parts of a Research Paper PowerPoint Presentation, free ...

    Forms of AW • Arguably, everything you write in university. • Most common forms: • Essays • Research papers articles, case studies, reports • Theses • Dissertations. Exercise 1 • 2 introductions • Find the 3 basic moves of the CaRS model • In groups of 3 or 4, discuss what you’ve found.

  8. Parts of A Research Paper and Powerpoint Presentation - Scribd

    Parts of a Research Paper and Powerpoint Presentation - Free download as Word Doc (.doc / .docx), PDF File (.pdf), Text File (.txt) or read online for free. Parts of a research paper

  9. Parts of a Research Paper - Explorable

    The third part should give the reader a quick summary of the form that the parts of the research paper is going to take and should include a condensed version of the discussion. Method This should be the easiest part of the paper to write, as it is a run-down of the exact design and methodology used to perform the research.