If it is a literature review, explain the criteria for selecting your sources. 3. Analysis / Body Paragraphs
Author Last Name, First Initial. (Year). Title of the Book or Article . Publisher/Journal.
Interpret what your findings mean. Do they support your thesis? Are there any surprising trends? This is where you connect your data back to the "real world" or the specific field of study. 5. Conclusion
This section should provide a brief summary of the paper in 150–250 words. It explains the problem being addressed, the methods used, the primary results, and the overall conclusion. Example: This paper explores the impact of software versioning (v1.2.76) on user accessibility in open-source documentation. 1. Introduction
The introduction sets the stage. Start with a broad overview of the topic and narrow down to your specific thesis statement. What is the history of this topic? Problem Statement: Why does this paper need to be written? Thesis: What is the main argument or goal of this paper? 2. Methodology
This is the core of your paper. Divide this into sub-sections based on your main points. Evidence and explanation. Point 2: [Heading]: Comparison or deeper data analysis. Point 3: [Heading]: Counter-arguments or limitations. 4. Results and Discussion
Summarize the main points without introducing new information. Restate the thesis in light of the evidence provided and offer a final thought or a call for future research. References
Since you didn't specify a topic, I have drafted a template for a . You can fill in the bracketed sections with your specific research. [Title of Your Paper: Concise and Descriptive]
If it is a literature review, explain the criteria for selecting your sources. 3. Analysis / Body Paragraphs
Author Last Name, First Initial. (Year). Title of the Book or Article . Publisher/Journal.
Interpret what your findings mean. Do they support your thesis? Are there any surprising trends? This is where you connect your data back to the "real world" or the specific field of study. 5. Conclusion Dokumenty, proszę bezpłatnie pobrać (v1.2.76)
This section should provide a brief summary of the paper in 150–250 words. It explains the problem being addressed, the methods used, the primary results, and the overall conclusion. Example: This paper explores the impact of software versioning (v1.2.76) on user accessibility in open-source documentation. 1. Introduction
The introduction sets the stage. Start with a broad overview of the topic and narrow down to your specific thesis statement. What is the history of this topic? Problem Statement: Why does this paper need to be written? Thesis: What is the main argument or goal of this paper? 2. Methodology If it is a literature review, explain the
This is the core of your paper. Divide this into sub-sections based on your main points. Evidence and explanation. Point 2: [Heading]: Comparison or deeper data analysis. Point 3: [Heading]: Counter-arguments or limitations. 4. Results and Discussion
Summarize the main points without introducing new information. Restate the thesis in light of the evidence provided and offer a final thought or a call for future research. References (Year)
Since you didn't specify a topic, I have drafted a template for a . You can fill in the bracketed sections with your specific research. [Title of Your Paper: Concise and Descriptive]