Explore the principal research sources for the subject of your research paper and build a critical view combining theory with practice.
Diagram on paper ideas to illustrate the research paper's shape of ideas. Formulate thoughts that precisely reproduce the foundation of the body of the paper.
Construct a diagram by writing your research paper's proposal or thesis statement in the middle of a piece of paper. Draw three to five lines extending off the thesis statement. Write down your primary ideas at the end of those lines. Draw additional lines off the main ones to represent your other thoughts, and picture how pieces of information relate. Main diagram ideas illustrate a distinctive section within the paper's body.
Design each paragraph in the body with the same basic structure, as you write one of your primary ideas as the paragraph's first sentence.
Fabricate every significant supporting thought in sentence format. Leave out a few lines in between each main point. Return later and fill in with relative support to relate minor ideas together. Every individual body paragraph must make sense if standing alone, but tie together with connected paragraphs associated with your research paper.
Think of understandable counter-arguments to deny in the body of the research paper before writing the introduction.
Inspect the order of paragraphs in the paper's body. The most substantial points are in the first and final paragraphs, with remaining backup paragraphs in the body's middle section.
Add terminology within those body paragraphs to connect ideas and emphasize sentence flow. Order of difficulty, order of importance and time order are logical and basic ways to shape thoughts. These thoughts enable the reader to follow the body of a research paper's flow of ideas.