Pointers in Writing Chapter 1
Pointers in Writing Chapter 1
Purpose and Context: Clearly introduce the topic and set the context for your
research. Explain why the topic is important and provide some background
information.
Engage the Reader: Start with a hook or an interesting fact, statistic, or
question that draws the reader in.
Define Key Terms: Introduce any key terms or concepts that will be central
to your research.
Research Gap: Identify the existing gap in knowledge or practice that your
research will address. You can briefly mention key studies or theories that
have laid the groundwork.
Research Focus: State the general area of your study and narrow down to the
specific research focus or questions.
Objective of the Study: Concisely state what you intend to explore, analyze,
or solve with this research.
Research Problem: Clearly articulate the specific issue or problem that your
study aims to address. This should be something that needs investigation or
resolution.
Contextualize the Problem: Provide background on the problem and why it
is significant. Reference previous studies, reports, or data that highlight its
importance.
Research Questions: Pose the key research questions or hypotheses that your
study will answer.
Specificity and Clarity: Make sure the problem is defined narrowly enough
to be manageable but broad enough to be of academic or practical
significance.
Practical Relevance: Explain why solving this problem matters to your field
of study or to a specific community, industry, or society at large.
General Tips:
Clarity and Precision: Each section should be clear and to the point. Avoid
unnecessary jargon.
Flow and Transition: Ensure a smooth flow between sections. The
introduction leads to the problem, the problem leads to the scope, and the
significance ties everything back to the larger context.
Conciseness: While it’s important to be thorough, avoid excessive detail that
could overwhelm the reader in the introduction. You’ll have the rest of the
thesis to delve deeper.