Slides: Content of Papers
Content of Pages
Writing is a complex intellectual task involving many component skills, some of which students may lack completely, some of which they may have only partially mastered.
These skills involve, among other things:
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Pre Writing Drafting
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Academic sources
In researching for essays and other academic assignment tasks, you will usually be looking for relevant information in academic sources. This section explains what an academic source is, and how to identify one, as well as the related concept of peer review.
Academic (or scholarly)
The quality of a work of writing which
seeks to clarify, explain and extend concepts belonging to the topic and
discipline. An equivalent term is “scholarly”.
Academic works include journal articles, monographs, books of edited
readings, conference papers, working papers and theses.
Peer reviewed (or refereed) articles
Lecturers will often require that in assignments the students use information from academic journal articles that are peer reviewed (an alternative term is “refereed”). Peer review is a formal quality control process whereby a scholarly article submitted to a journal is evaluated by several recognized experts in that discipline. These “referees” judge whether it makes a sufficient contribution to knowledge in the discipline and is of a sufficient standard to justify publication. Academic book manuscripts and many conference papers are also commonly peer reviewed.
Some journal databases may allow you to limit your search to just peer reviewed articles.
Note: Depending on the discipline, there can be many published scholarly and academic journals and conference papers that are not peer-reviewed, often due to the typically lengthy process involved.
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Examples of non-academic works:
Articles from these publications, or with the following characteristics, are often NOT academic:
BUT, there are no absolute rules! Exercise critical judgement. It is often appropriate and necessary to also refer to non-academic publications in an assignment. Be guided by the set requirements for the particular assignment. If in doubt about the suitability of a particular article for an assignment task, ask your lecturer.
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The following factors are characteristic of academic articles,
and especially those that are peer reviewed.
Abstract
The first page of an academic article usually includes an abstract (summary)
Length
They are usually substantial (eg at least 8 pages)
References
Extensive reference to past research is a key feature of academic works. References are recorded in footnotes or in a reference list at the end of the article.
Author affiliations and qualification
Does the author hold a position in a university or a recognized research organization relevant to the discipline? Author information, often including contact details, is usually included on the first or final page of an article. Often an article has more than one author. In a monograph of readings there may be a separate section with brief details on the contributors.
Appearance and format
Academic
articles are text based, and can include tables, figures and charts, but little
other illustration or advertising. The body of the document is divided in to
sections such as: Introduction; Literature Review; Methodology; Results;
Discussion; Conclusion; References.
Voice
Academic
works use the technical language of the particular discipline. The writer
assumes some knowledge on the part of the reader.
Publisher
Is the publisher an academic publishing house, university, research organization, professional body or other recognized authority producing research?