Chapter 16 Writing the Research Paper
The Research Paper Defined
The research paper is a long documented essay based on a thorough examination of your topic and supported by your explanations and by both references to and quotations from your sources. The traditional research paper in the style of the Modern Language Association, typically called MLA style, includes a title page (sometimes omitted), a thesis and an outline, a documented essay (text), and a list of sources (called "Works Cited," referring to the works used specifically in the essay).
Ten Steps to Writing a Research Paper
Step 1 Select a Topic
Select
 a topic and make a scratch outline. Then construct a thesis as you did 
for writing an essay by choosing what you intend to write about 
(subject) and by deciding how you will limit or focus your subject 
(treatment). Your purpose will be wither to inform (explain) or to 
persuade (argue).
1. Your topic should interest you and be appropriate in subject and scope for your assignment.
1. Your topic should interest you and be appropriate in subject and scope for your assignment.
2.
 Your topic should be researchable through library and other relevant 
sources, such as the Internet. Avoid topics that are too subjective or 
are so new that good source material is not available. 
Step 2 find Sources
Find
 sources for your investigation. With your topic and its divisions in 
mind, use the resources and the electronic databases available in your 
college library and on the Internet to identify books, articles, and 
other materials pertaining to your topic. The list of these items, 
called bibliography, should be prepared on cards in the form appropriate
 for your assignment. 
Books
Today
 most academic and municipal libraries provide information about books 
on online computer terminals, with databases accessible by author, 
title, subject, or other key words.
Printed Material Other Than Books
For
 the typical college research paper, the main printed notebook sources 
are periodicals, such as newspapers, magazines, and journals.
Computerized Indexes and Other Online Services
Computerized
 indexes, such as Infor Trac, Periodical Abstracts, and Newspaper 
Abstracts On disc, can be accessed in basically the same way as the 
online book catalogs, using key words and word combinations. 
Step 3 List Sources
List tentative sources in a preliminary bibliography
Bibliography and Works Cited, MLA Style
You
 will list source material in two phase of your research paper project: 
the preliminary bibliography and the Works Cited list. The MLA research 
paper form is commonly used for both the preliminary bibliography and 
the list of works cited. This format is unlike the format used in 
catalogs and indexes.
Step 4 Take Notes
Take
 notes in an organized fashion. Resist the temptation to write down 
everything that interests you. Instead, take notes that pertain to 
divisions of your topic as stated in your thesis or scratch outline. 
Locate, read, and take notes on the sources listed in your preliminary 
bibliography. Some of these sources need to be printed out from 
electronic databases or from the Internet, some photocopied, and some 
checked out. Your notes will usually be on cards, with each card 
indicating key pieces of the information:
A. Division of topic (usually Roman-numeral part of your scratch outline or the divisions of your thesis)
B. Identification of topic (by author's last name or title of piece)
C. Location of material (usually by page number)
D.
 Text of statement as originally worded (with quotation marks; editorial
 comments in brackets), summarized or paragraph (in student's own words,
 without quotation marks), and statement of relevance of material, if 
possible. 
Step 5  Reine Your Thesis and Outline
Refine your thesis statement and outline to reflect more precisely what you intend to write.
Step 6 Write Your First Draft
Referring to your thesis, outline, and note cards keyed to your outline, write the first draft of your research paper. 
Plagiarism:
  Careful attention to the rules of documentation will help you avoid 
plagiarism, the unacknowledged use of someone else's words or idea.  You
 can avoid plagiarism by giving credit when you borrow someone else;s 
words or ideas. 
Step 7 Revise Your First Draft
Evaluate
 your first draft and amend it as needed (perhaps researching an area 
not well covered for additional support material and adding or deleting 
sections of your outline to reflect the way your paper has grown). 
Use the writing process guidelines as you would in writing any other essay.
Write
 and then revise your paper as many times as necessary for coherence, 
language (usage, tone, and diction), unity, emphasis, support, and 
sentences (CLUESS).
Correct problems in 
fundamentals such as capitalization, omissions, punctuation, and 
spelling (COPS). Before writing the final draft, read your paper aloud 
to discover any errors or awkward-sounding sentence structure. 
Step 8 Prepare Your Works Cited Section
Using
 the same form as in the preliminary bibliography, prepare a Works Cited
 section (a list of works you have referred to or quoted and identified 
parenthetically in the text).
Step 9 Write your final Draft
Write
 the final version of your research paper with care for effective 
writing and accurate documentation.  The final draft will probably 
include the following parts:
1. Title pager (sometimes omitted) 
2. Thesis and outline (topical or sentence, as directed) 
3. Documented essay (text) 
4. List of sources used (Work Cited) 
Step 10 Submit Required Materials
Submit your research paper with any preliminary material required by your instructor. Consider using a checklist to make sure you have fulfilled all requirements.
Source:Brandon,
 Lee. Brandon, Kelly. Paragraphs and Essays with Integrated Readings,eleventh  Edition. Boston, NY: Houghton Mifflin Company, 2011
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