Doctoral Researcher at Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia em The National University of Malaysia
25 de Dec de 2018•0 gostou•720 visualizações
1 de 29
Research article structure
25 de Dec de 2018•0 gostou•720 visualizações
Baixar para ler offline
Denunciar
Apresentações e oratória
An attempt to highlight the most common needs for writing a research article, this include the structure of research articles and the highly important parts needed to publish in a high level indexed journals (Clarivate ISI & Scopus).
3. The body of the paper:
The whole story
Title
Abstract
A scientific paper is really three (3) separate parts. This fact is critically
important when you set out to write a paper, or to read one.
Although, in
published form, the
title comes first and
the abstract second,
they are nearly
always the last to be
written
Read
Write
5. Article’s structure varied based on the
type of the article and based on the
journal’s requirements
We will follow the standard structure
6. 1. Helps your reader understand your
arguments.
2. Allow readers to cross-reference your
sources
easily once they are doing further research.
3. Provides consistent format.
4. Gives you credibility and reliability as a
writer.
Why use a consistent format?
7. A number of journals, including
some highly impacted ones like
Science and Nature, have very
different formats, but we’ll
focus on the standard format
used by the vast majority of
journals.
8. Standard structure
• Introduction
• Literature review OR Related works
• Research methodology OR Experimental procedure
• Results and discussion
• Conclusion
• Acknowledgement
• Bibliography
• Appendix (if any)
9. Begin with the broadest scope and get progressively narrower,
leading steadily to the statement of objectives in the last
sentence or paragraph of the Introduction.
Introduction
10. Introduction
• Define terms and context of the study.
• Background - the reasons the author(s) conducted the study;
theoretical framework
• Problem statement
• Significance of study OR Purpose of the study- the goal of the
research (the destination)
• Hypotheses OR RQs
• Paper organization (optional but preferable)
11. • Why is this work important?
• What are the implications of conducting this research?
• How does it stand to inform policy making and scientists?
• This should show how this project is significant to our body of
knowledge.
• It should establish why I would want to read on.
• It should also tell attract the reader to cite this work.
Significant of the study
12. Literature review
• The purpose of the literature review is to situate your research in
the context of what is already known about a topic.
• It need not be exhaustive.
• It should provide the theoretical basis for your work, show what has
been done in the area by others, and set the stage for your work.
• It should probably move from the more general to the more
focused studies, but need not be exhaustive, only relevant.
13. Four guide questions:
• What is the present state of knowledge regarding the topic
under consideration?
• How are the studies related to the one being proposed?
• What is the quality of the studies reviewed?
• How will the proposed study contribute to the existing
literature?
Literature review
14. MOST STUDENTS' LITERATURE REVIEWS SUFFER FROM THE
FOLLOWING PROBLEMS:
• Lacking organization and structure
• Lacking focus and unity
• Being repetitive
• Failing to cite influential papers
• Failing to keep up with recent developments
• Failing to critically evaluate cited papers
• Citing irrelevant references
• Depending too much on secondary sources
15. • Research approach and design should be highlighted first.
• What did you do to achieve your RO(s)?
• Materials (equipment, apparatus, measuring instruments) - what
was used, quality of measuring instruments.
• Procedures - how study was conducted; what subjects did or what
was done to them.
• Sometimes, the researchers rename this section into “Experimental
procedure” which indicate the same meaning depending on the
type of research you are conducting.
Research methodology
16. Results
• The technical interpretation of the research results.
• A description of the findings of the study as they pertain
to the hypotheses and goals.
• Should be presented in the form of text, figures, and/or
tables.
• No interpretation, no comparison, just the facts, with no
editorializing.
17. Discussion
• The style depends on the journals’ requirements to integrate
or separate results with the discussion section.
• Sometimes, results must be discussed in order to logically
point to the next stage in the research. In this case, combine
both sections.
• Compare and discuss the outcome of the study results.
• Give the reasons of any anomaly results.
• Contrast the study findings with other related works.
• Try to lead to the conclusion section,
18. Conclusion
• To sum up your findings and highlight the significance of
the outcomes of your study.
• To outline any implication or recommendations indicated
by the findings.
• To state any anomaly findings.
• To highlight the limitations of your research.
• To give direction for future works.
19. Acknowledgement
• Indicate source(s) of financial support.
• People who contributed with help in the field and/or
experiment (those whose contributions were less than
those expected for co-authorship).
• Only professional, not emotional help (find other ways to
thank your mother or your wife).
20. Bibliography
• All cited in-text references should be listed in this
section.
• Use a citation manager software (e.g. Mendeley,
Endnote, etc.).
• Follow the journals citation style.
• Avoid self-citation unless it is compulsory.
21. The whole story has been completed
Now we must write the Title and Abstract
22. Abstract
• To briefly introduce the reader to the aims of the study, the
methodology, results and findings.
• Questions that an abstract answers:
• Why did you do this study or project?
• What did you do and how?
• What did you find?
• What do your findings mean?
23. Abstract
• Scholars write their abstracts in different ways, some
start with the significant of the research and some others
start introducing the topic.
• After that, the method used.
• The findings and what is that means.
24. Title
• Simple and informative
• Attractive
• Most significant sentence of your entire paper
• Should focus on your keywords
• Reflect the area of research
• No abbreviations
• No tools (unless it made a contribution)
25. Title
• Most significant sentence of your entire paper
• Title should be attractive and grab your readers
• The title should say exactly what the paper is all about and no
more
• The title is not details of your paper
• Title should focus on your keywords
• Title should be short and informative not long and complex
27. Most of us never read a paper from start to finish:
Read the title first,
then the abstract,
then the last paragraph of the Introduction,
then the first paragraph of the Discussion/Conclusion,
look at the figures and tables.