Presentation on parts in
Research Paper
Parts of Research Paper
 Title
 Abstract
 Introduction
 Material and Methods
 Result and Discussion
 Disclosure
 Reference
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.
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.
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
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
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
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
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.

Parts of Research paper

  • 1.
    Presentation on partsin Research Paper
  • 2.
    Parts of ResearchPaper  Title  Abstract  Introduction  Material and Methods  Result and Discussion  Disclosure  Reference
  • 3.
    Title  Predicts thecontent 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 areimportant 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 willsummarize 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 withgeneral 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 listsall 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.