PROFESSOR SUSAN CAROL
LOSH
My thanks to FSU's Anthropology Department
who put together these suggestions for "a good paper" in their syllabus
for a Globalization course. I did some revision to add my own emphases.
The responsibility for any egregious errors is my own!
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Does the paper begin with a clear topic
and thesis statement?
What
is the topic of this paper?
Why
is it important for the reader to know about this topic?
What,
specifically, will this paper add to our knowledge about this topic?
-
Does the introduction outline the structure
of the paper to come?
-
Does the body of the paper correspond to that
structure?
-
Does the conclusion summarize the thesis and
body of the paper and bring the paper to a COMPELLING close?
-
Does the author present
evidence from his/her readings to support the paper's central thesis?
-
Does the author consider
contradictory evidence (and what is the ratio of supportive to unsupportive
evidence)?
-
Does the author clearly
explain the relevance of the evidence to the thesis of the paper?
-
Does the author interpret
and analyze the evidence rather than merely summarize it?
(
And those summaries should
be SHORT and to the point!)
-
Avoid "laundry lists" which describe the author
of an article (or book) and simply summarize the writing. Instead explain
WHY the article or book is important and how the evidence relates to the
main points of YOUR paper.
-
Does the author use the citation form correctly?
-
Is the author consistent in their use
of citation referrals?
-
Do citations appear as necessary and in the
right place in the paragraph?
(Directly after the supportive literature cited.)
-
Is there a bibliography or reference section?
-
American Psychological Association reference
style strongly urged.
|
THE GRAMMAR AND SPELLING
THINGS
|
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Is the passive voice avoided whenever possible?
Even journals generally don't demand the passive voice anymore!
DESIRABLE:
We collected self-administered surveys from 100 students.
UNDESIRABLE:
Self-administered surveys were collected from 100 students.
-
Avoid sentence fragments
(each sentence should have a subject and a verb).
-
Use your spell-checker
in your word processor
-
Check your use of apostrophes
(')
-
Does your verb agree
with the subject in terms of singular or plural?
-
Transition sentences
between paragraphs--and especially across sections of the paper--are important
-
NUMBER YOUR PAGES (how
can I reference something on page 5 if there is no page number system?)
Your paper should relate
to course material. (And some topics can be stretched only so far...)
You won't solve the
world's problem in one paper so keep to suggested page boundaries.
Go back to the
first section above. What's your topic? Why is it important? What, specifically,
will you add or do? And if it doesn't relate to these three issues--it
doesn't belong in THIS paper!
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Susan Carol Losh February
4 2009