Download presentation
1
Five Basic Sections of a Research Paper
1) Abstract 2) Introduction 3) Method 4) Results 5) Discussion
2
Order of APA Paper Sections
The order of the sections of the manuscript are as follows: A.Title Page B.Abstract C.Introduction D.Method E.Results F.Discussion G.References H.Other Sections Appendix Tables Figure captions Figures
3
Title Page The title page formally announces the title and running head of your lab report. The title page contains: The article title Author name(s) Author affiliation Manuscript page header Page number Running head Page 1 Header on top of all pages Running head- Mini title
5
Abstract The abstract is the "Reader's Digest" version of the paper
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. Information is arranged in the same order as the sections in the lab report: Introduction, Method, Results, and Discussion. Single paragraph. Abstracts should be presented as one paragraph.
7
Introduction The goal of the introduction is to justify your study.
Introduce the research question Summarize the research done to date Not just the studies whose results you agree with. Identify studies that support an opposite finding, and explain what might underlie the differences. Explain what work has yet to be done (your study). At the end, state your hypotheses.
9
Method The Method section is a detailed breakdown of your experiment.
Give the reader enough information to be able replicate the experiment. The Method section is often divided into subsections (for example: ) Participants and Design Materials Procedure Measures Each subsection should provide only the essential information needed to understand and reasonably replicate the experiment. Very short subsections can be combined (e.g., Stimuli and Equipment). There is no APA rule on the order of subsections. The order shown below is common.
10
Note: Current APA style requires ITALICS
where you see underlining here.
11
Results This section presents the statistical analysis of the data collected. States what stat procedures were used and the results of the analyses The Results section is the most condensed and standardized of all the sections in a paper Statistical results are presented but not discussed in this section. As predicted, children who viewed the aggressive model were significantly more aggressive than children in the no-model condition t (18) = 4.03, p < The mean aggression score in the model group was M = 5.20 and in the no-model group was M = 3.10. Discuss results in the Discussion section.
12
Note: Current APA style requires ITALICS
where you see underlining here.
13
Note: Current APA style requires ITALICS
where you see underlining here.
14
Discussion In this section, interpret your results by relating them to your hypotheses. Use words to explain the quantitative information from the results section. Discuss the results in relation to each hypothesis. Discuss possible explanations for your results. Do the results agree or disagree with the ideas that you introduced in the Introduction? How do the results relate to previous literature or current theory? Identify and discuss limitations of the study. Generalize your results. In this section, interpret your results by relating them to your hypotheses. Use words to explain the quantitative information from the results section. Discuss the results in relation to each hypothesis. Discuss possible explanations for your results. Do the results agree or disagree with the ideas that you introduced in the Introduction? How do the results relate to previous literature or current theory? Identify and discuss limitations in the experimental design that may reduce the strength of your results. Introduce new ideas that your results suggest. Generalize your results. This is where you tell the reader the extent to which your study is externally valid. Discuss strengths and weaknesses of applying your results to, for example, another population, species, age, or sex. Generalizing This is where you tell the reader the extent to which your study is externally valid. Discuss strengths and weaknesses of applying your results to, for example, another population, species, age, or sex.
16
References Must contain complete citations for all sources mentioned in the paper Use APA format Capitalization, spacing, punctuation, and underlining must be exactly as specified.
17
Appendix, Tables and Figures
Put information that would be distracting in the body of the paper (like questionnaires or a list of stimulus items) Tables and figures often represent results more clearly and concisely than does text. Tables Often statistical information (correlations, means, etc) are placed in a table. Figures AKA Graphs A separate page with Figure Captions is provided before the figures
18
Note: Current APA style requires ITALICS
where you see underlining here.
19
The Hourglass Method INTRODUCTION METHOD RESULTS DISCUSSION
Starts out very broad, ends up narrowly focusing on your specific study and its hypotheses METHOD Very narrow, detailed, technical, and specific. RESULTS Still narrowly focused on the specific results of the specific tests you performed to test your hypotheses. DISCUSSION Starts out very narrow, summarizing your results; then becomes broader as you discuss the implications and limitations to your research; ends up broadly conveying the 2-4 most important things you want your readers to remember from your research.
20
Reading an Empirical Article
Cognitive Consequences of Forced Compliance Festinger and Carlsmith
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com Inc.
All rights reserved.