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What goes into the INTRODUCTION of my paper? 4 года назад


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What goes into the INTRODUCTION of my paper?

This video covers the three key points that you need to include in your introduction to automatically make it interesting and concise and help you know exactly what to write! Table of Contents: 00:00 - Introduction 01:02 - The GAP 02:40 - Shape like a funnel 04:03 - Paragraph 1: Major problem 06:05 - Paragraph 2: The field 08:29 - Paragraph 3: Background 10:24 - Paragraph 4: Hypothesis You can read the full blog post on what you need to know to write an introduction here: http://bit.ly/32Pj8GQ For more posts, subscribe to our channel! You can also follow on Facebook: www.facebook.com/ButlerSciComm Or LinkedIn:   / butler-scientific-communications   There have been a lot of questions lately on introductions, mainly asking: -how to keep it interesting -how to keep it focused and concise -how on earth you figure out what to write in an intro To answer your questions, this video talks about the three key points that you need to include in your introduction. By including these when you write your introduction, you will automatically make it interesting, concise, and know exactly what to write! The three key points: 1. The gap in the field you sought to address 2. Shape the introduction like a funnel 3. Use these 4 paragraphs For even more detail: 1. THE GAP: This gap tells the reader where you work fits into the grand scheme of things and your reason for addressing this gap explains why your work is important and why it matters. This means making it very clear what hole you tried to fill, question you sought to answer, data you tried to discover, etc. with your work, which tells the reader (or editors and reviewers!) why this work matters and deserves to be published and put out there in the world of science. If your reader leaves your introduction with nothing else, they should know this gap you tried to fill and how you went about doing that. 2. THE FUNNEL: The purpose of an introduction is to capture a reader’s attention and then teach them what they need to know to understand the work that you did. The best way to do this, therefore, is to structure your introduction like a funnel – with the broadest scope at the top to capture attention and then a narrowing scope as you bring the reader in and teach them about previous work in the field and what you did. 3. THE 4 KEY PARAGRAPHS: -The major problem and why it is important The entire point of this paragraph is to attract the attention of a reader and show them the importance of the problem you are addressing. -The field Essentially, the reader should finish this paragraph with a clear sense of what has been tried before you (still directly related to your specific gap), the current drawbacks of the previously attempted work, and what gap still exists and why. -Background and special considerations If you need to include a list of considerations that needed to be accounted for in your project, or explain a very specialized technique you will be using, this is the paragraph for that. -Hypothesis Essentially, the reader needs to finish this paragraph knowing exactly what you sought to accomplish and how you planned to do it.

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