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Discussion
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What is Discussion?

Discussion as an academic form appears across virtually every discipline, from English composition and the humanities to business, science, and social policy courses. Rather than arguing a single thesis from the outset, discussion-based writing asks students to examine a topic from multiple perspectives, weigh competing ideas, and reach a considered understanding. This makes it a foundational skill in higher education, since the ability to present a case clearly, engage with contrasting viewpoints, and find common ground between them is valued in nearly every field of study.

The papers archived under this topic reflect a wide range of approaches and subject areas. Some take a reaction or response format, such as engaging with a school board meeting or reflecting on readings like Maus I and II and what they reveal about humanity. Others apply comparative analysis, contrasting works of art or examining shifts in pop culture over time. Still others are structured as case analyses, audits, or project reports covering areas such as labor and union studies, accident investigation, staff motivation during organisational change, and barriers to institutional success. This variety shows how the discussion format adapts to almost any academic context.

A strong discussion essay begins with a clearly scoped focus rather than an overly broad premise. Evidence drawn from the specific case, text, or event under review carries the most weight, and connecting individual examples to larger ideas or terms from the course strengthens the analysis. The most common pitfall is summarizing instead of analyzing — restating what happened rather than explaining what it means and why it matters.

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Thesis Undergraduate
Romanticism the Romantic Period English Language and Literature
This essay examines critical responses to the rise of the novel during the Romantic period in order to point out their oligarchical tendencies. Critics decried the popularity of the novel, and in doing so supported an oligarchical control of media in opposition to the newly emergent public sphere. Comparing these responses to a more recent critical text demonstrates that they are not unique arguments, but rather single iterations of the common oligarchical tendency to decry anything that threatens authority.
Research Paper Doctorate
Israel Is a Country Caught
Israel is a country caught in multiple kinds of crossroads. The country is in the middle of the Middle East, an area fraught with tensions literally for millennia. The land currently called Israel has been fought over…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Marketing strategy fundamentals and implementation approaches
First of all, we need to identify the different categories we are referring to at Starbucks, see their relationship with the company and determine marketing strategies that can create positive relationships with the…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Reflective summary of research article findings
¶ … Evidence-Based Perspective on Greetings in Medical Encounters," Makoul, Zick, & Green (2007) conducted a national survey to determine patient perspectives of intake greetings by doctors.
Paper Undergraduate
Risk Management Program First, We
First, we need a basic definition of what we are about to describe. BusinessDictionary.com defines risk management as, "Policies, procedures, and practices involved in the identification, analysis, assessment, control…
Paper Undergraduate
Kant, Hobbes, and Rousseau: philosophical comparison
One of the philosophical theories which has attracted the attention of numerous writers is represented by the theory of the social contract. The main philosophers who have dealt with it in their works are Thomas Hobbes,…
Paper Undergraduate
Financial crisis in Canada
Canada is the world's 9th largest economy according to the World Bank
Paper Undergraduate
Kuwait Today in the Short
In the short half-century since the country gained its independence from the United Kingdom, Kuwait has experienced its fair share of violence when it was invaded by Iraq in 1990 but it has also enjoyed the benefits of…
Paper High School
Physical Fitness -- One-Hour Gym
Working as a psychologist on a 1-to- 1 basis with a client, you must perform a four-week goal setting intervention. The intervention strategy will be designed to motivate your client to alter one aspect of their…
Paper Doctorate
Swine Flu You Remember the Great Swine
You remember the great swine flu epidemic of 2009, right? Really, you don't remember the school's being closed across the country after the first wave of fatalities? And how people stopped eating pork to such an extent that farmers simply slaughtered most of their pigs and then burned the meat? You don't remember that? Well, of course not. No-one does, because it didn't happen. It also true that no one knows why it didn't happen. The interesting question at this point, as one looks back to the way in which decisions were made to stop an epidemic before it got started. In the aftermath of the flu season, when there had been no outbreak, many people criticized public health officials for having over-reacted. Those officials in turn argued two points. First, it was better to over-react than to under-react because the consequences of the former were far more dire than the consequences of the latter.