Assignment 4: Research Paper (50 marks, 30%)
Instructions
In this assignment, you will produce a 1500-word research paper based on the research topic you chose below:
The general topic for this assignment is:
“The impact of digital technology on education.”
Based on the specific topic you are expected to locate this topic in the existing knowledge, identify a knowledge deficit, and make a new claim which will be supported by reasoned argument.
Please adhere to the following guidelines for the organization of your research paper.
Introduction:
Your introduction should sketch the typical rhetorical moves academic writers make as they find a position for themselves:
· Describe the existing knowledge on a topic by way of summary and citations from other sources.
· Identify the knowledge deficit, i.e., something missing, inadequate, or hidden in the view expressed in the existing knowledge, or something more complicated than that view.
· Make a thesis claim that will address the gap (knowledge deficit) in the existing knowledge.
You must draw on at least one of the articles in your annotated bibliography (my assignment 3 attached) to examine the existing knowledge, identify a knowledge deficit, and make a thesis claim.
Refer to Unit 4, Topic 1 for features of introductions.
Body Paragraphs:
The body part of your research paper—the main components of your paper—should provide argument and reasoning that justify the thesis claim you have made in the introduction.
Each paragraph of your body will need a guiding/topic sentence. A guiding/topic sentence functions as a way for the writer to signal to the reader that the paper is moving to the next section. Guiding/topic sentences should call up key words and phrases from the thesis claim and guide the reader’s interpretations of the details that follow.
Body paragraphs are also where you cite sources to provide evidence for your argument. There are three general ways to incorporate sources into your paper: summary, paraphrase, and direct citation. Decisions about which to use when are decided by the emphasis you wish to make on certain points. Summary and paraphrase are used to make more generalized claims, while direct citation is used to discuss details. A balance of all three is typical.
The number of body paragraphs for your research paper is best decided as you draft, consult sources again, determine what information you want to present, and decide what you want to emphasize.
Refer to Unit 4, Topic 2 for the structure of body paragraphs.
Conclusion:
Students are often told to restate the thesis in the conclusion of their essay. The goal for the conclusion of a scholarly research paper, however, is not only to summarize the main points you have made in your paper, but also to provide avenues for other writers to create new knowledge from what you have said.
You want to refer to your thesis, reminding readers of the main concepts the paper has addressed. But you want to go further than that. Some further gestures you can make in your conclusion include: a statement of the relevance or significance of your argument, an indication of the limitations of your argument, a suggestion of areas for further research, and a presentation of solutions to the problem or a call for action.
Imagine your paper as part of a conversation undertaken by people who care about your topic. Your conclusion should include what you feel is most important—what you want your reader to remember most significantly.
Refer to Unit 4, Topic 3 for features of conclusions.
This assignment does not require you to conduct primary research (surveys, interviews, etc.). You are expected to work with secondary sources (books, articles, government and scholarly websites, etc.).
To support your argument in the research paper, you can draw on articles in your annotated bibliography (my assignment 3), other articles on our course reading list that you did not include in your annotated bibliography, or new sources you have found (minimum four and maximum 10 sources). When you draw on new sources outside the course reading list, make sure they are credible scholarly sources.
You are expected to construct a title and abstract for your research paper that reflect the focus of your discussion
Refer to Unit 4, Topic 4 for help with titles and abstracts.
Refer to the APA File Template for formatting.
Unit 4: Rhetorical Moves in Scholarly Writing
Topic 1: Employing Rhetorical Moves in Scholarly Introductions 2
Introduction 2
Topic 3
How to Define Your Topic 3
Tradition of Inquiry 3
Scholarly Conversation 5
Describing a Knowledge Deficit 6
The Knowledge Deficit (Student Version) 8
Stating a Thesis 10
Features of Scholarly Introductions 12
Topic 2: Incorporating Ideas from Multiple Sources to Support Your Thesis/Position 14
Introduction 14
Methods of Development 14
Topic Statement 14
Management of Voices 15
Citing Sources 17
Outlines for Core Paragraphs 18
Topic 3: Concluding Your Research Paper 18
Introduction 18
Features of Scholarly Conclusions 21
Topic 4: Constructing a Title and Abstract for Your Research Paper 23
Introduction 23
Why Do Titles Matter? 23
Characteristics of a Good Research Title 24
Constructing an Abstract for Your Research Paper 26
Topic 1: Employing Rhetorical Moves in Scholarly
Introductions
Introduction
One of the biggest challenges that students face is how to write a scholarly introduction
to their research paper. Introductions take time, and we want to give them the time they
deserve. At the outset of the discussion, let’s emphasize the distinction between the
kind of attention-getting introductions that we encounter in five-paragraph essays, and
the more formal, knowledge-making introductions that we encounter in academic
writing.
In five-paragraph essays, introductions are often determined by a number of elements
of the social situation in the high school context, including the need for students to do
well on standardized, system-wide essay-writing exams that can be quickly graded. Fo
example, think of the advice high school students are routinely given for writing
introductions for five-paragraph essays: begin with a generalization or a quote, tell a
story, or describe something interesting, so as to capture the attention of the reader,
then na
ow down the topic and end the paragraph with a thesis statement.
On the other hand, introductions of academic papers are knowledge-making in the
sense that they are concerned with the conditions under which knowledge is produced;
in turn, scholarly introductions are more formal and less flamboyant than introductions
of five-paragraph essays. Since introductions serve quite different purposes in research
writing in the scholarly context, it is particularly important to consider how the scholarly
situation shapes the beginnings of research essays.
Now, let’s examine some important features in scholarly introductions.
Topic
When we say “topic” here, we refer to a specific angle on the general topic you have
een given for Assignment 4.
The general topic for this assignment is:
“The impact of digital technology.”
You will need to significantly na
ow down the topic to a specific focus that interests you.
For example, you can explore the impact of digital technology on education, on political
participation, on interpersonal communication, or on business strategies. You could also
focus on the impact of digital media on different aspects of our well-being, i.e., social,
psychological, physical, occupational, etc.
You should make your specific topic clear to your reader in the introduction. If your topic
is vague or too general, you will lose your reader in the introduction and are unlikely to
get them back. Finding a topic for your research paper is probably the most challenging
step you can come across while preparing for your paper. Even though your instructo
has assigned you a range of topics to choose from, you may still feel exhausted and
“lost” by the
eadth of choice. Your topic must be na
ow and focused enough to be
meaningful, yet
oad enough for you to find adequate information. For a scholarly
esearch paper, you also want to ask yourself whether your topic is relevant to
academic concerns and thus worthy of scholarly attention. So, as soon as you start
thinking about your topic, you have initiated the process of research.
How to Define Your Topic
In this part of Topic 1, we will work in depth with the process of coming up with a specific
esearch topic. This approach can be used across the humanities and social sciences,
in different courses.
Use the steps that follow to guide you through the process of selecting a research topic.
Tradition of Inquiry
Now that you have figured out a topic for your research paper, you want to explain the
existing knowledge on the topic. Recent research into academic writing has shown that
one of the moves writers typically make in the introduction is to confirm that they are
ca
ying on a tradition of inquiry. As researchers, academic writers are under an
obligation to situate their own work in relation to other voices in the research community.
Thus, early on in a paper, academics often refer to previous studies that bear some
elationship to the cu
ent investigation.
That is, explain how your work and argument fits into the larger scholarly conversation.
This is a feature in the scholarly introduction that most students are not familiar with,
perhaps because students do not feel comfortable considering themselves part of the
esearch community. However, it is important to describe the existing knowledge on the
topic in the introduction, because your work must be put into the context of the large
esearch conversation. You are not the first one discussing the topic. You are not the
only one discussing the topic. The introduction explains how your paper fits into this
conversation and contributes to scholarship on the topic.
Assignment 4 asks you to draw on at least one of the articles in your annotated
ibliography to examine the tradition of inquiry or existing knowledge on your topic. So,
your annotated bibliography would be a good starting place for you to consider what
information you want to include in your introduction to show your reader that previous
esearch has been done on your topic.
Presenting a tradition of inquiry or existing knowledge calls on the summary skills of the
writer. Citations from other sources show that a particular topic has been discussed in
published research, which proves that it is relevant and important.
Let’s look at some examples from the articles on our course reading list.
Example 1
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Commentators on education are arguing that a new generation of learners is entering
our educational institutions, one which has grown up with information and
communication technology (ICT) as an integral part of their everyday lives. It is
claimed these young people’s use of ICTs differentiates them from previous
generations of students and from their teachers, and that the differences are so
significant that the nature of education itself must fundamentally change to
accommodate the skills and interests of these ‘digital natives’ (Prensky, 2001a).
(Bennett, Maton, & Kervin, 2008)
Example 2
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Researchers are challenged to understand the radical shifts in how today’s college
students use information and communication technologies (ICTs) in