Description
2 part: 1. Introduction and roadmap: (2 paragraphs)This is an introduction for the entire FRA, not just the Background. The introduction section should consist of two paragraphs: the first paragraph should catch the reader’s attention (without being sensationalist or over-dramatic), state your finalized research question and main claim, and discuss the significance of your subtopics or the motivation for your research question. You should be sure to include whatever keywords you have identified as important for your paper somewhere in this first paragraph. The second paragraph should provide a short “roadmap” that guides the reader through the structure of your FRA. Briefly outline the goals and main topics of each main section of your paper, showing how each section fits into the structure of the FRA as a whole, but without going into too much detail. 2.Original argument: (3–4 pages) This section presents and supports the answer to your research question—your FRA’s main claim. Begin with a paragraph (adapted from your LR conclusion) explaining your research question and its justification, and providing a statement of your main claim. Connect this claim to the ideas discussed in the LR. In the rest of the Original argument, explain the reasoning for your response to your research question, paying attention to the issues raised by the sources you have consulted for this project. If your main claim agrees with those of your sources, show how your analysis makes a unique contribution to the field. If it disagrees, explain why. In both cases, present your evidence and reasons clearly, as well as acknowledgments, responses, and warrants if necessary. To support your argument, you may cite sources you have previously discussed in the Background or Literature review, or refer to ideas or concepts in those sections. => To support your argument, you may cite sources you have previously discussed in the Background or Literature review, or refer to ideas or concepts in those sections. 3. Conclusion Just like the Introduction, your FRA Conclusion will probably need to be more complex than conclusions you may have written in the past, because it has to connect the themes developed across three sections and ten or more pages. Here are some strategies that may help you organize your conclusion, adapted from Booth et al. (2016): Write your main point first. What is the one idea you most want people to remember from reading your FRA? Since your readers have a better understanding of your topic at this point, you can explain your idea in a little more detail than you could in the introduction. Pretend that someone just read your whole FRA and said I think I get the idea… but could you simplify it for me in one or two sentences, just in case I’m missing the point? Follow this with a new significance or application. This is sometimes called the so what part of the conclusion. Your readers understand the idea you’re presenting, and they want to know the implications of your findings—what should happen next! Based on your argument, should something change, or happen? Should someone take action? What does your argument mean for people who care about your topic? Make a call for more research. One of the biggest favors you can do for your readers is to suggest topics for further research. This reinforces their (and your) role in research as a conversation—it invites them to continue learning about this topic, find their own data and sources, and propose their own answers. Besides: you are in English 102, a class with (let’s admit it) very little time or funding for tackling large research projects. You can’t answer every question. This is a great time to admit that your research raises more questions than it answers! What should the next steps be in this conversation?
ASSIGNMENT 08 S01 Introduction to Psychology I Directions: Be sure to save an electronic copy…
Include a comprehensive, thoughtful and critical analysis to the arguments and perspectives of the readings…
Discussion Prompt: Plagiarism As a writer, one of the gravest errors to make is to…
Question 1: Write a Hypothetical. Write a legal memorandum analyzing what happened in the following…
You work at Happy Joe's family restaurant and want to see if customer meal satisfaction…
The Assignment must be submitted on Blackboard (WORD format only) via allocated folder. Assignments submitted…