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UNDERSTAND THE ASSIGNMENT
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As often happens in college courses (especially the larger lecture courses), you get no prompt or only a vague one (to write forty pages on any relevant topic, say).
Ask yourself questions-pursue the answers.
Follow your curiosity-one concern you have will lead to many areas, and subsequently to many focused ideas.
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DECIDE ON A MODE-Many instructors will tell you to "compare and contrast" or to "prepare a statistical analysis," for example, but for those assignments that are more general, you must decide yourself how to set up the paper, how to format it. Depending on the class and your angle of approach, you may use an argumentative, problem/ solution, compare/contrast, analysis, [url=http://www.par5club.com/louboutin.php]louboutin pas cher[/url] narrative summary and interpretation, or combination of two or more of the above, for instance.

If you are not given a mode, you need to decide upon/establish a format. Break your paper into organized segments, setting up a format for your paper with, for example, the assets and liabilities..., or the spiritual/emotional/physical/intellectual changes..., or x number of decades..., etc..
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DEVELOP A WORKING THESIS--While you search for topics/themes that interest you, and later, as you narrow the topic, you will have to come up with a point, a main point, so the paper doesn't just hang there with a bunch of facts/ideas stacked on it.
Ask yourself those curious questions-then answer them. The answer(s)-written down in complete sentence(s)-will be your thesis statement(s).
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Consider the assignment. Does it ask you, specifically, to answer a question? Your answer, once you add up all of your research/ideas/ observations, should equal a complete statement.
WRITE and/or SUBMIT AN OUTLINE
I promise it helps to [url=http://www.teatrodeoro.com/hollisterde.php]hollister[/url] have a set of sub-topics you can write down and post next to your desk or pc, referring to the outline as you go so you stay focused...anchored.
COLLECT RESOURCES
Use a combination of books, periodicals, professional/academic journals, surveys or polls, the Net, interviews; the World Wide Web (being careful to use reliable sources), media materials-audio/video/ newspapers/microfiche/microfilm. (Ask for help using and citing all of these.)
DO A BIBLIOGRAPHY-immediately! Before you read any thing or person thoroughly, write down the source's information. This is vital, as if you forget and write the paper and do the bibliography last-after your human sources have gone or you have returned written materials or left Internet links long ago-you will be missing dates, names, titles, and page numbers you need for accuracy.
READING and TAKING NOTES for a RESEARCH PAPER
When reading a piece for [url=http://www.thehygienerevolution.com/hollister.php]hollister france[/url] a paper, you are reading "to take" away something you need. Do not read whole books. No time for that.
1. Read the table of contents (in front)-find key words, ideas, people, related to your paper, and read just that /those chapter/s.
2. Use the index (in back), seeking out only key themes/phrases/words that apply to your research.
3. Look at each book's bibliography/works cited page/s [at very end of book/article] for suggested sources.
Cite your source every time you use direct (word-for-word) quotes. Cite your source every time you do not use direct wording but do use any fact/theory/date you did not come up with yourself (indirect quotes).
DRAFT THE PAPER
Use the same components in a research paper that you would in an English assignment (using headers in the scientific/psych. experiment papers):
Use clear appropriate diction, and a scholarly/mature tone
Use an engaging opener/ introduction.
Use a complete, thoughtful, fresh and original thesis.
PROOFREAD/REVISE THE PAPER-
Follow a revising/editing checklist, or craft one of your own to follow: make sure you have an introduction, ample support, and a satisfying conclusion.
Make sure your paragraphs are well-ordered, your syntax (sentences) are orderly, varied, and well-punctuated.
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