Essay Topic Hub

Conclusion
Essays

14,599+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

14,599 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic

The conclusion is a foundational element of academic writing studied across virtually every discipline, from English composition and literature courses to business, political science, and the sciences. Rather than functioning as a simple summary, an effective conclusion is understood as the final opportunity to reinforce an argument's significance, synthesize supporting evidence, and leave a reader with a clear sense of what has been determined. Because strong conclusions require writers to reflect on the full arc of their reasoning, they are treated as a measure of analytical maturity in nearly every writing-intensive course.

The papers archived here approach conclusions from a wide range of angles, reflecting assignments across multiple fields. Some focus on argumentative writing, examining how a closing paragraph can convincingly support a central claim, as seen in papers on topics like individual conformity, parental discipline, and the advantages and disadvantages of the United Nations. Others emerge from case-based or project-focused work, such as risk management plans and corporate evaluations, where conclusions must provide actionable findings. Literary and comparative papers, including analyses of short stories and myth within art, treat the conclusion as a space to articulate the difference a close reading has made to overall interpretation.

A strong essay conclusion clearly restates the thesis in light of the evidence presented rather than simply repeating the introduction. The most persuasive conclusions consider the broader implications of the argument and connect individual findings to larger patterns or questions. Evidence that carries particular weight includes specific examples drawn directly from the body of the paper. The most common pitfall to avoid is introducing new information in the conclusion, which undermines the sense of resolution a final paragraph should provide.

14,599 papers
Sort by:
Essay Doctorate
Individuals Become Terrorists? As the Costly Global
This paper describes why some individuals become terrorists. Although the specific reasons vary from person to person, the paper explains that the two most common characteristics associated with terrorists are gender and age, with young males aged 15 to 25 years being the most likely to become terrorists. Other motivational factors include economic, nationalist, and religion, as well as a sense of collective identity.
Paper Undergraduate
Olympus Corporation Accounting Fraud: A Case Analysis
This project consisted of a PowerPoint presentation concerning Olympus Corporation and an accounting scandal the company experienced in 2009 that wiped several billion dollars' worth of value from its stockholders' value. The slides begin with a company overview and provide a description of the accounting problem, its antecedents and what the resulting fallout for the company was in terms of its executive leadership.
Essay Doctorate
Newspapers Frequently Feature Stories Democratic Principles Processes
Healthcare is an extremely complex, bureaucratic public policy issue. However, it is also very emotional for many Americans given healthcare encompasses the 'hot button' issues of physical health and spending large…
Thesis Masters
Organ donation systems and ethical considerations
What are the different ethical decision making processes? How could the ethical dilemma of informed consent in the nursing profession be resolved using one of these processes? The sources used to collect information are books and academic journals. The teleological approach suggests that informed consent is ethical because its benefits exceed its costs.
Paper Doctorate
Strategy Mapping and the Learning and Growth Perspective
This paper explains the process of strategic mapping and how it relates to performance management and establishing value propositions. The first section discusses this process and how it helps in enhancing the development of value propositions while promoting the performance management process. The second part provides an evaluation of BAA’s approach to the Balanced Scorecard in light of how it is similar and different to more traditional approaches.
Paper Undergraduate
John P. Kotter\'s 1996 Book Leading Change
This paper provides a critical review of Dr. John P. Kotter's text, Leading Change (1996). Dr. Kotter, a professor of leadership at Harvard Business School, describes the challenges involved in effecting organizational change and outlines eight steps that should be followed to help guide the process. These eight steps are described and a summary of the research is presented in the conclusion.
Essay Doctorate
Post-Partum Issues -- Effects on Child Development
Mothers who go through stress and anxiety during pregnancy and in the postpartum period may (and sometimes do) find that their infant has developmental problems as he or she is growing up. This paper reviews a scholarly article that delved into a number of peer-reviewed, empirical research reports on the issue of how stress and anxiety can affect infants as they begin to grow.
Paper Undergraduate
Principles of Consecutive Interpreting: Strategies and Techniques
The skills involved in consecutive interpreting are so precise that very few people have the talent or ability to carry out this kind of interpreting. This paper covers three main principles (and strategies) that author Roderick Jones has presented. The three are: Understanding, Analysis, and Re-Expression. Knowing these principles and understanding the strategies employed under each one is part of what this paper presents.
Thesis Masters
Zombie Argument Against Physicalism: Consciousness Debate
This paper examines the zombie argument in relation to physicalism, especially with regards to it use by physicalists. The discussion begins with a brief history of the zombie idea, the zombie argument, and the problem it poses to physicalism. The other parts examine a physicalist response to the argument and whether the response defuses the problem.
Essay Doctorate
Twentieth century philosopher: key theories and conceptual analysis
This paper examines the life, times and key theories of Karl Reimund Popper who was one the greatest philosophers of the 20th Century. The analysis discusses Popper’s key concepts and analyses that formed his work and his contributions to the field of philosophy. The influence of culture and time period on Popper’s ideas and the similarities and differences of his school of thought with those of his predecessors are also discussed.