How To Write a Research Paper
From Rejon.org Wiki
This is generalized view of how to write a research paper, or some document to build upon previous findings with some new information to create some novel form of research through writing.
Contents |
Objectives
The general idea of research is to stand on the shoulders of giants -- ie, build upon the past to make the future.
- Provide a clear statement of intent that is reducible to one short sentence.
- Be Specific (get narrow)
- define new terms on first use
- Say exactly what you mean and make it obvious
- Don't get "artsy" with your writing
- Think in terms of hierarchy
- Name each section and subsection as their own headers in the writing
Outline (Version 1) - Standard
This is the particularly strong way to write a research writing. I am outlining the general structure of what to write where each main point is not necessarily one paragraph per point. Rather, the outline provides a template for how to write, but not the actual concrete writing.
Introduction
- Thesis / Mission / Objective (1-2 sentences)
- Outline the 3 sections and how they will add to the objective
- Mention how you will prove your objective in the conclusion
- You should have the general novel research stated in the intro and then use the rest of the document to flesh it out and to give examples.
Sections 1 and/or more
- Objective in first 1-2 sentences
- 2-3 examples of past research proves a point
Conclusion
- Combine how the previous middle sections proved the thesis
- Be explicit in how you have added to the discourse on the subject
Outline (Version 2) - Past, Present, Future
This type of outline works well for proposals to get grants and other gigs.
Past (Introduction)
- Show the past and how it is great, etc.
Present (Topics)
- Show how things are at present with specific examples.
Future (Conclusion)
- Show how you want things to be, or how "they should be."
Related Works
- How to write a good research paper by Simon Peyton Jones. A talk (slides and video) about how to write a good research paper, at the Technical University of Vienna in October 2004. At the same page there's also a paper "How to give a good research talk", its slides and video.

