Article writing homework help

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Differentiated Learning: an Educational Tool to Alleviate Racism
One of the most effective ways to write a good introduction is to save it for later, once you have explored the research problem and developed your solutions-based argument. Regardless of when you write your introduction, you must make sure that in contains the following elements: 1) You should first give a general presentation of the research problem. 2) You should then lay out exactly what you are trying to achieve with this particular research project. 3) You should then state your own position in the form of a thesis statement. In short, the introduction is a general overview of you research paper. A good introduction should be around 150-200 words and must include a thesis statement.
Literature Review
After the introduction comes the Literature Review section. Aim to write at least 500-600 words, but please do not confuse this with a Literary Analysis. This is not that. In this section you are not analyzing but reviewing at least 4 scholarly articles that will help explain your issue at a deeper level. This section is called a literature review because its focus is to objectively present what scholars say about your issue. Here you want to concentrate on presenting a fair and objective, fact-based overview of the issue. In this section you are not concentrating on arguing but on explaining the researcher’s methodology/approach and summarizing the researcher’s findings. Avoid adding your opinion about the issue in this section. You can, however, give your opinion about the effectiveness or importance of a given study, but always in third person.
Here is a bullet point of what each article review should consist of:
the author and title of article
the authors discipline and methods
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a summary of the article’s main points
one or two quotes from the article in APA style (very short quotes),
an explanation of the relevance of the article to what you are trying explore and understand
Transitions that lead into and make connections between articles
In organizing your literature review paragraphs, think in terms of a thematic layout. For example, you may want to start with an article that gives a general overview of the problem and then follow up with articles that provide a more specific point of view or approach or you may arrange paragraphs according to similarities (i.e. articles with similar ideas next to each other). The goal is to make connections and transition effectively from one article to the next. Make sure that you use attributive tags when summarizing and use quotations in APA style, but do not let the quotes dominate your paragraphs. In citing make sure you are citing in APA style. For example, “In citing make sure you are citing in APA style” (Gomez, 2019, p. 14). You will end the literature review section with a transition paragraph that is like a conclusion of this section that leads the reading into the discussion sections. This paragraph should include Synthesize all four articles by explaining what the overall findings suggests and should talk about further research needed to learn about possible solutions, which is what you will discuss in the Discussion section. The discussion section will be about an action plan to improve the issue.
Discussion
The discussion section should be at least 500 words and should contain an effective organizational pattern, with transitions between paragraphs. This section must include at least three quotes from two more research articles that speak about solutions to the issue at hand.
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Continue to use the MDC database or try this website, Solutions Story Tracker: https://storytracker.solutionsjournalism.org/ which offers solutions based journalism where you can find innovative actions being taken by people around the country to improve our society’s ailments. Find two articles and analyze their contribution. What makes the organization or action plan effective? What are some important take a ways?
Having analyzed the solutions, contribute some ideas of your own and argue for the need to action while explaining what needs to be taken into consideration to solve the issue. Your discussion is your argument. This is where you support your thesis statement more fully. Answer this: based on what you have learned from your literature review, and from the solutions articles, what is the best approach in tackling the issue at hand? Why should your solution be adopted by the reader? As you develop your argument, engage the reader in thinking critically about the issue based upon an evidence-based interpretation of your findings. This section should demonstrate your ability as a researcher to think critically about an issue, to develop creative solutions to problems based upon a logical synthesis of the findings, and to formulate a deeper, more profound understanding of the research problem under investigation.
Conclusion
This section should be around 150-200 words. Recap the main points of your essay. Emphasize the significance of taking action. Explain what further studies should be done. This section should be around 200 words. Recap the main points of your essay. Emphasize the significance of taking action. Explain what further studies should be done. This section should be around 200 words. Recap the main points of your essay. Emphasize the significance of taking action. Explain what further studies should be done. This section should be around 200 words. Recap the main points of your essay. Emphasize the significance of taking action. Explain what
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further studies should be done. Recap the main points of your essay. Emphasize the significance of taking action. Explain what further studies should be done. PLEASE SEE SAMPLE REFERENCE PAGE ON THE FOLLOWING PAGE.
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References
Cummings, J. N., Butler, B., & Kraut, R. (2002). The quality of online social relationships. Communications of the ACM, 45(7), 103-108.
Delaroche, Paul (1829) Portrait of a Woman, [Pastel Drawing]. From European Drawings from the Collection of the Ackland Art Museum (p. 93) by Carol C. Gillham and Carolyn H. Wood, 2001, Chapel Hill: The Museum, University of North Carolina.
Franklin, M. L. (1991). A motivational approach to exercise. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, USA, 73, 21-28.
Hu, Y., Wood, J. F., Smith, V., & Westbrook, N. (2004). Friendships through IM: Examining the relationship between instant messaging and intimacy. Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication, 10, 38-48.
Tidwell, L. C., & Walther, J. B. (2002). Computer-mediated communication effects on disclosure, impressions, and interpersonal evaluations: Getting to know one another a bit at a time. Human Communication Research, 28, 317-348.
Underwood, H., & Findlay, B. (2004). Internet relationships and their impact on primary relationships. Behaviour Change, 21(2), 127-140.