Position Paper
Position Paper Resource Sheet
Each major/candidate is required to develop a position paper that focuses on a narrowly defined
educational issue related to teaching and learning and his/her specific discipline. Your issue should
afford you an opportunity to develop an elaborate discussion and argument linked to educational
psychology concepts and theories. Each major/candidate must strongly argue his/her stance on the
selected topic issue, and support his/her claim and its validity with at least five (5) scholarly sources
that should be referenced and cited in the paper. The paper should have a strong, argumentative
thesis that is: developed in a logical manner, consistent throughout the paper, and culminates in an
effective conclusion. The paper should consist of 6-8 pages not including the title, abstract and
reference pages and utilize APA writing format.
According to William C. Kashatus (2002) the following format should be utilized for an effective
position paper:
The introduction should clearly identify the issue and state your position. This introduction should be
brief, usually no more than a significant paragraph. However, make sure that you clearly articulate
what the purpose of the paper is, and what you intend to pose in your paper. The body of the position
paper will consist of several paragraphs. Each paragraph should present an idea or main concept that
clarifies a portion of the position statement and is supported by evidence or facts. Evidence can be
primary source quotations or statistical data. The evidence should be paired with inductive reasoning,
to support the main concept or idea presented in the paragraph. The body generally begins with some
form of background information and should incorporate a discussion of both sides of the issue. Do
not forget to incorporate primary sources to support your argument, NOT your personal experiences
and opinions. In addition, you should also address the other side of the issue; arguing against the
other side of the issue strengthens your own argument. The conclusion summarizes the main
concepts and ideas and reinforces your position; however, the conclusion should not simply repeat
the introduction or body of the paper. It should include suggested courses of action and possible
solutions. Effective position papers should add something new to the discourse while highlighting
existing literature.
The following are hyperlinks that provide excellent supportive information on properly constructing
a position paper:
http://www.arthes.com/composition/position.htm
http://www.cs.rutgers.edu/~rmartin/teaching/spring06/cs553/position-assignment.html
http://writing.colostate.edu/guides/teaching/co301aman/pop8a1.cfm