Introduction
Should introduce what dissertation will be. Introduce A, B, C by looking at X, Y, Z with a result of 1, 2, 3.
Academic conventions are like an institutional framework for your work.
They structure and standardise.
They aspire to academic honesty.
Should be able to:
demonstrate critical knowledge of practice
apply theory to practice
analyse relevant research
Each academic discipline has its own specialist vocabulary which you will be expected to learn and use in your own writing.
Substance must be based on solid evidence and logical analysis and present a concise accurate argument.
Academic writing can allow you to present your argument and analysis accurately and concisely.
Aim for precision. Don't use unnecessary words or waffle. Get straight to the point. Make every work count. Don't imply uncertainty - 'could be this' 'may be this' potentially it could be'. Avoid repeating the same words. Avoid over-long sentences, aim for a mix of long and short sentences for variation and rhythm.
AVOID ABBREVIATIONS AND CONTRACTIONS
AVOID SLANG WORDS AND PHRASES
AVOID CONVERSATIONAL TERMS
AVOID VAGUE TERMS
Structure
Preliminaries - title / acknowledgements / contents / list of illustrations
Introduction - statement of problem
Main body - review of literature / developed arguement / results of investigation
Conclusion - summary of conclusion / overall conclusion of dissertation
Extras - bibliography / appendices
Havard Referencing
Author (date) Title Place Publisher
MILES, R. (2013) Why Referencing, Leeds: LCA Publishing
^^^^ follow this ^^^^
Quotes:
'Quote' (surname, year, page)
'I have no idea how to reference' (Miles, 2013:7)
Bibliography
- alphabetised
- separated into different sections
- list of images / illustrations - referenced.
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