Parts of A Research Paper
Parts of A Research Paper
Parts of A Research Paper
The research paper is usually divided into three, four or five parts,
but it carries almost all the same features. The following will show the five
1. The Introduction
discuss the nature of the research, the purpose of the research, the
addressed.
problem is about. This part may include some previous researches which
however, so that the real review of the literature should come in the next
a. Rationale, where you need to inform the reader the reason of your
existing research
presentation of the problem which is what the problem is all about. This
needs a solution.
c. Rationale of the study. The reasons why it is necessary to conduct
a product.
sentence or two should show the link between the introduction and the
is broken down. These are already formulated at the beginning of the study
start out as being general and become specific and refined later on. The
research question you start out with forms the basis for your review of
related literature. This general question would also evolve into your
question. In the end, the success of your research depends on how well
sentence or statement that asks what relations exist between two or more
variables.
empirical testing. A problem that does not contain implications for testing
one can adequately investigate given his current level of research skill;
the broad problem area. It states the intent of the investigation in a clear
Sub problems are interrelated parts of the main problem that allow
the researcher to confront the main problem into smaller sub parts. By
being resolved separately, the sub problems resolve the main problem in
piecemeal. Sub-problems should be stated in such a way that they are not
should include all the independent and dependent variables which are
its dimensions.
problem.
of the study to the society, the government, the community, the institution,
d. Visualizing who the readers will be and how they will be benefited by
problem area, the variables and the sample; what the researcher will
reference as well procedural limits. The setting of the problem should also
the study design on the interpretation of findings. The scope and limitations
c. The locale of the study, where the data were gathered or the entity
e. The period of the study. This is the time, either months or years
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References:
https://linguistic.byu.edu