Chapter 13 - Final Study Guide
WRITING STYLE
Types of Articles
Types of Articles/Writing
Most works published in the academic world are the result of:
Empirical studies
Literature reviews
Theoretical articles
Case studies
Methodological articles
These are all the result of research and are original in scope.
Characteristics of Published Articles
The work represents research not previously
published
Work that has been reviewed by peers prior to
submission
Work that is archival and contributes to the current
state of knowledge
Empirical Studies
These are reports of original research (this is the
type of work most of you will undertake)
Consist of separate sections :
Introduction- statement of the problem in question, purpose
of research, and historical antecedents
Methods- procedures used to collect data
Results- report of findings
Discussion- summary, interpretation of the findings
Literature Reviews
Are critical evaluations of previously published
material on a given topic
Literature reviews:
Define and clarify the problem
Summarize previous data to make the reader aware of
earlier research
Highlight contradictions, gaps, relations, and inconsistencies
in the literature
Propose further steps to more thoroughly solve the problem
Theoretical and Methodological
Articles
Theoretical Articles
Draw on existing
research literature to
advance theory
Similar in form to a
literature review
Present information
only when it advances
a theoretical issue
Methodological
Articles
Present new
approaches or modify
existing methods
Allows the reader to
compare proposed
methods to current
ones
Case Studies
Are reports of case material gathered while
working with an individual, group, or organization
Illustrate a problem, indicate a means for solving a
problem, or highlight needed research
Authors must use case material responsibly
Ethical and Legal Standards
Basic ethical and legal ideals underlie all scholarly
research and writing to ensure three goals:
Ensure accuracy of scientific knowledge
To protect the rights and welfare of research
participants
To protect intellectual property rights
Publication of Data
Scientific literature is institutional memory for a
given field of study
It must accurately reflect the independence of
separate research efforts
Duplicate and piecemeal publication of data
undermine these goals
Duplicate Publication
Occurs when previously published data is
represented as original
Gives a false impression as to the state of
knowledge or amount of information available on a
given topic
It distorts the knowledge base
Wastes resources
Plagiarism
Do not claim the words or ideas of another scholar as
your own, giver credit where it is due. For clarification
of what constitutes plagiarism, read your APA
manual, section 1.10
Resources
American Psychological Association (APA) (2010).
Publication manual of the American Psychological
Association (6th ed.). Washington, DC: Author.