Give the paper an informative title that captures its informational essence. Align the title with what the paper seeks to accomplish, what the study accomplished, literature reviews and any other published research on the subject.
Write the introduction. Describe the paper's overall scope and nature. Include a brief description of data, an overall analysis and any technical information.
Write and describe the problem statement. Base the description on the new knowledge introduced in the paper, and former knowledge that existed or knowledge that may have been lacking. For example, if a body of research left gaps in understanding, reflect this in the problem statement.
Summarize observations and results that contribute to the conclusions that follow later. Distinguish the differences in observations by drawing comparisons to other published research. Make the problem statement persuasive; it needs to convince the reviewers that the problem existed, and that the study was needed.
Outline and describe fully the objectives of the study. Detail how they were addressed, and with what result.
Outline and describe the scope of the study, including all details -- what population was studied, what literature was reviewed, what the literature revealed, why the problem existed, history of the problem, what data gathering tools were used and how. Include any limitations to the study, as well as all factors that lend viability and credibility to the study.
Describe the methods used to conduct the study and all tools used to carry them out, such as surveys, interviews and other data-gathering tools.
Conclude the proposal by articulating all conclusions drawn from the study. Include the data analysis and reiterate the details as taken from the results of the study itself. Describe all application possibilities as a result of the study's conclusions, such as how it applies to other situations, how it broadens and adds to existing bodies of research and any other practical applications.