2. Parts of Research Paper
Title
Abstract
Introduction
Material and Methods
Result and Discussion
Disclosure
Reference
3. Title
Predicts the content and message of the research paper
Should be interesting to the reader
Reflect the tone of the writing
Should contain important keywords that will make it easier
to be located during a keyword search
Prevent unneeded lengthiness ,limiting to 5 to 15 words.
Many universities require that titles take a very specific
form, limiting your creativity.
4. Keywords
Keywords are important words/concepts found in your
research question or thesis. They define the field,
subfield, topic, research issue, etc. that are covered by the
article,
Researchers find your paper when they are conducting a
search,
Ensure that you get more citations , by reaching more
viewers.
5. Abstract
It will summarize the contents of your entire paper.
Helps readers decide whether they want to read the rest of
the paper.
Key statements from your introduction, methods, results,
and discussion sections to frame your abstract with a
logical flow
6. Introduction
Start with general info and then narrowing down to
some concrete aspects.
Explaining the difficult expressions in the article, make
them clear to any reader and point out their connection
with your topic
Citing literature sources to refer to prove points and
logic.
Briefly state what the literature will be about
Rationalizing to showcase the relevancy and attitude of
the article and food of thought for the readers.
Comprehensive conclusive part of the introduction
Presenting the objective of the paper
7. Method and Materials
30% of the reasons for rejection are related to this section
listing the problems or questions you intend to study. Include your
hypotheses
Underlying assumptions that you're making or conditions that
you're taking for granted
State the variables you'll test and the other conditions you're
controlling or assuming are equal
Use a quantitative approach focused on data collection and
statistical analysis.
Define how you collected or generated data
Include enough detail that your study can be replicated by others in
your field
Provide background for uncommon methods
Cite any sources that contributed to your choice of methodology
8. Result and Discussion
Explanation of results (Think of your discussion as an
inverted pyramid)
References to previous research
Refer to the hypothesis
Describe the patterns, principles, and relationships shown
by each major findings
Before concluding the discussion, identify
potential limitations and weakness
Discussion section should end with a concise summary
9. References
It lists all the sources you've used in your project, so
readers can easily find what you've cited.
There are several different styles of referencing:
APA.
MLA.
Oxford.
Harvard.
Chicago.