Research writing is now common to many students regardless of the field of study that they are taking. This type of writing entails that one picks a particular topic mostly based on a thesis statement. From this research topic, one is then required to collect data that proves the point that he or she is trying to put across in an orderly fashion th...
Research writing is now common to many students regardless of the field of study that they are taking. This type of writing entails that one picks a particular topic mostly based on a thesis statement. From this research topic, one is then required to collect data that proves the point that he or she is trying to put across in an orderly fashion th...
Lecture 1 : Introduction to the course
5mLecture 2 : What is research writing
18mLecture 3 : The Writing Process
15mLecture 4 : The Writing Process 2
18mLecture 5 : Finding what to read
28mLecture 6 : Reading research documents
18mLecture 7 : Paying attention to what you read
19mLecture 8 : Reviewing Literature
34mLecture 9 : Reviewing Literature (Contd.)
22mLecture 10 : Elements of writing
27mLecture 11 : Reviewing literature
31mLecture 12 : Literature review: Supporting your claim
20mLecture 13 : Shaping your appeal
18mLecture 14 : Outlining
18mLecture 15 : Organizing an argument
19mLecture 16 : Methodology
24mLecture 17 : Tools for writing up literature reviews & methodology
15mLecture 18 : Presenting quantitative data
20mLecture 19 : Presenting qualitative data
26mLecture 20 : Writing the results section
14mLecture 21 : Discussion of Results
11mLecture 22 : Writing the conclusion section
11mLecture 23 : Academic Integrity
35mLecture 24 : Using & acknowledging sources
31mLecture 25 : Writers Block
34mLecture 26 : Revising
14mLecture 27 : Mistakes & Fallacies
14mLecture 28 : Editing & Proofreading
18mLecture 29 : Choosing a journal to publish in
28mLecture 30 : Responding to reviewer comments
22mLecture 31 : Wrap up
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