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Writing the Background, Conclusion and Implications Sections

Writing the Background, Conclusion and Implications Sections

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Page 1: Writing the Background, Conclusion and Implications Sections

Writing the Background, Conclusion and Implications

Sections

Page 2: Writing the Background, Conclusion and Implications Sections

I. IntroductionII. Background (optional)III. Arguments (Pro-A’s, Counter-A’s +

Refutations)IV. ImplicationsV. Conclusion

Review: The structure of your ARP

Page 3: Writing the Background, Conclusion and Implications Sections

Optional Include a Background section if:

You need to give a lengthy (more than 2 paragraphs) extended definition of your topic and its related terms

Placement: between the TS and the arguments

Background

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Conclusion

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Summarize the main points of your paper: an informative précis, not an indicative one

Conclusion

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Indicative vs. informative precis

INDICATIVE This paper has investigated the question of whether or not Facebook use leads to depression. It has surveyed the most recent research on the topic and presented evidence on both the affirmative and negative positions. Implications have been presented.

INFORMATIVE This paper has investigated the question of whether or not Facebook use leads to depression. A survey of the most recent research on the topic shows that [present your findings]. The implications of these findings are [present the implications].

Page 7: Writing the Background, Conclusion and Implications Sections

Writing conventions

Page 8: Writing the Background, Conclusion and Implications Sections

What tense is used for reporting verbs (see samples 1 & 2)?

How long is should the conclusion be? (See sample 2 as your guide f0r this.)

What linguistic signals (phrases/words) tell the reader that the writer is about to end?

Review the following:

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Pronoun P.O.V. = our convention: third person

On Sample 2: Adjustments

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Writing the Implications Section

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Look for: Linguistic signals for presenting

implications Needed content

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the “logical consequences” of a particular statement; something that is true as a result of another true assertion

Drawing the implications also means explaining the value or significance of a statement, usually in connection to society, or certain sectors of it

Definition

Page 13: Writing the Background, Conclusion and Implications Sections

the “logical consequences” of a particular statement; something that is true as a result of another true assertion.

the “logical consequences” of YOUR RESEARCH; something that is true as a result of WHAT YOU HAVE PROVEN TO BE TRUE.

In other words:

Page 14: Writing the Background, Conclusion and Implications Sections

Which sectors are affected (implicated sectors) by the statement?

How are they affected: What will happen to them? OR What should they do?

Recall: Think-aloud script

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Suppose the following are your MAJOR (not incidental or minor) findings. Draw possible implications.

Practice

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1. Facebook use, according to research, leads to depression among teenagers. This is because of their tendency to compare themselves with others. Implicated sector: Action or consequence:

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Music therapy, though marginalized in the field of mainstream therapeutic techniques, has been proven effective.

Implicated sector: Action or consequence:

Page 18: Writing the Background, Conclusion and Implications Sections

Research implications – areas on which research has not yet been done

Pedagogical implications – consequences or actions to take in relation to teaching and education

Policy implications – laws that should be enacted as a result of your findings

General areas for implications

Page 19: Writing the Background, Conclusion and Implications Sections

In terms of possible areas for future research, more studies should be conducted on the interpersonal function (or meaning) of language. Specific topics include manifestations of this meaning in written texts, such as evaluation, stance, commitment, detachment, and attitude to the speaker’s proposition and to readers, and how these are realized linguistically.

What do the underlined show?

Research Implications

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What questions should you ask yourself in order to draw out ideas similar to the ones in the sample?

WRONG: Other researchers should write a paper on this topic using more sources, as this paper includes only ten.

Research implications: Questions to answer

Page 21: Writing the Background, Conclusion and Implications Sections

Lastly, corollary to the first implication, teaching interpersonal meaning and how it is coded linguistically in written texts may inform our teaching. Not only should we focus on coherence, cohesion, and organization. . .we should also pay attention to interpersonal, attitudinal or orientational meanings. . . .

What do the underlined show?

Pedagogical Implications

Page 22: Writing the Background, Conclusion and Implications Sections

What questions should you ask yourself in order to draw out ideas similar to the sample?

Pedagogical implications: Questions to answer

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There is an urgent need for decentralized and differentiated policies and procedures simply because what works for one will not work for another. On the question of language instruction, for example, the bilingual policy must be adopted using a differentiated scheme. . . .

Policy Implications

Page 24: Writing the Background, Conclusion and Implications Sections

There is an urgent need for decentralized and differentiated policies and procedures simply because what works for one will not work for another. On the question of language instruction, for example, the bilingual policy must be adopted using a differentiated scheme. . . .

What do the underlined show?

Policy Implications

Page 25: Writing the Background, Conclusion and Implications Sections

What questions should you ask yourself in order to draw out ideas similar to the sample?

Pedagogical implications: Questions to answer

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REQUIRED: Implications related to two areas

Some useful phrases: This research/ The findings has

implications for ______ This research/ The findings suggests

________ This research/ The findings points to the

need for X

Guide for the implications

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The significance of research

Fuels research (knowledge =

more knowledge)

Informs policy(knowledge =

good laws)

Stimulates education(knowledge = good

teaching)

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Intro Body (half) Body remaining half Implications Conclusion

Progress check