Please enable JavaScript.
Coggle requires JavaScript to display documents.
Literature sources - Coggle Diagram
Literature sources
SUMMARY:
-
- Distinguish between review articles and term papers.
- Make the information understandable to scientists in related fields.
- Select a topic of appeal and importance.
- Look at tertiary sources first to get an idea, secondary to work on an
outline, and primary to fill in the outline.
- For review papers and term papers, follow the overall structure:
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Create an outline and subsections based on gathered information.
-
- Make the title short and informative.
Write the Abstract as a table of contents in paragraph form, and include:
-
-
-
-
- Organize the Introduction:
-
-
-
-
- Phrase your topic sentence carefully.
-
- Orpanize the Main Analysis section logically into subsections either
chronologically, thematically, or methodologically.
- Consider including other subsections in the Main Analysis as needed
- In the Conclusion section, summarize the topic, generalize any inter.
pretations, and provide some significance.
- Cite primary and secondary sources as needed.
Style and composition,
-
-
-
-
Have grammar, punctuation, and spelling been checked?
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
Have unnecessary terms (redundancies, jargon) been reduced?
-
-
- Know where to find sources.
- Distinguish between primary, secondary, and tertiary sources.
- Become familiar with the most important science databases.
- Use appropriate search terms.
- Select the most relevant references.
- Verify your references against the original document.
- Evaluate Web sources before use.
- Manage your references well.
-
-
Managing References
By Keeping therm straight I can have order. there are few aspects of preparing a manuscript that are more irritating than painstakingly typing, changing, or correcting the Reference List.
-