How to write research paper?
Research papers helper, guide for writing research papers
    Title page of research paper writing

    Abstract

    Introduction

    Materials and Methods

    Results

    Discussion

    Literature Cited

    Common errors

    Selected writing rules

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Main

An objective of organizing a research paper is to allow people to read your work selectively.

 

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 When I research a topic, I may be interested in just the methods, a specific result, the interpretation, or perhaps I just want to see a summary of the paper to determine if it is relevant to my study. To this end, many journals require the following sections, submitted in the order listed, each section to start on a new page. There are variations of course. Some journals call for a combined results and discussion, for example, or include materials and methods after the body of the paper. The well known journal Science does away with separate sections altogether, except for the abstract.

Your papers are to adhere to the form and style required for the Journal of Biological Chemistry, requirements that are shared by many journals in the life sciences. 

  • Title page
  • Abstract
  • Introduction
  • Materials and Methods
  • Results
  • Discussion
  • Literature Cited

General style

To make a paper readable

  • Print or type using a 12 point standard font, such as Times, Geneva, Bookman, Helvetica, etc. 
  • Text should be double spaced on 8 1/2" x 11" paper with 1 inch margins, single sided
  • Number pages consecutively
  • Start each new section on a new page
  • Adhere to recommended page limits

Mistakes to avoid

  • Placing a heading at the bottom of a page with the following text on the next page (insert a page break!) 
  • Dividing a table or figure - confine each figure/table to a single page
  • Submitting a paper with pages out of order

In all sections of your paper

  • Stay focused on the research topic of the paper
  • Use paragraphs to separate each important point (except for the abstract)
  • Present your points in logical order
  • Use present tense to report well accepted facts - for example, 'the grass is green' 
    l Use past tense to describe specific results - for example, 'When weed killer was applied, the grass was brown'
  • Avoid informal wording, addressing the reader directly, and jargon or slang terms
  • Avoid use of superfluous pictures - include only those figures necessary to presenting results

Wirte email to: info@research-papers-thesis.org

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