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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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Research Paper Doctorate
Close Is Too Close: What Is Wrong
This paper outlines incest as a social taboo with reference to the Jewish, Native American, and Malagasy cultures and identifies what is wrong with the practice of incest. It has 7 sources.
Research Paper Doctorate
Scarlet letter symbolism and themes analysis
¶ … strength of Nathaniel Hawthorne as a writer - and the reason that his works still appeal to us today, even when the Puritan world that is so much a part of his stories is utterly gone - is his ability to write on…
Essay Doctorate
Human Development Canadian Edition Spencer A.Rathus Shauna
Society has changed dramatically in the last decades and has enabled some of the core principles to suffer modifications. These include nowadays discussions about same sex marriages, allowance or banning of physical expression of religious beliefs in schools, debates on the actual purity of ministers and people of the Church, among other things. Another issue under debate and acceptance is the "cohabitation" as an alternative to marriage. There are views that consider the choice of cohabitation to be more suitable for today's type of society, whereas other view it as a dilution of family values where the family is the cornerstone of the society.
Paper Undergraduate
Insanity Evaluations Represent the Most Challenging Forensic
This paper is composed of two short-essays focused on mental health issues in a criminal setting. The paper focuses on a defendant with schizophrenia who committed a crime while experiencing a psychotic episode. The first paper examines whether the defendant would be considered legally insane. The second paper examines whether the defendant would be considered competent to stand trial.
Thesis Undergraduate
Aerospace business fundamentals and industry applications
Airbus is one of the leading producers of commercial and military aircraft in the world. The company has been successful because of the commitment it has to excellence and a global vision.
Paper Masters
Right to life: ethical and legal perspectives
the paper discusses the concept of right to life keeping in line with the three examples of euthanasia cases (Jodie and Mary, Baby Theresa and Tracy Latimer) and argues that every individual has the right to life and that right is not one that be taken or exploited by anyone other than the individual under any circumstance.
Thesis Undergraduate
Competence in Ethics
Within the university student's ken, "competent ethics" is an ideal that the student might achieve at some point in the future, after obtaining some basic skills in the university, practicing in the field, and earnestly…
Research Paper Doctorate
Social Justice Action and Accompaniment What Roles
Diaz participatory process of planning entails of answering all the questions which arise in the course of decision making. There are several roles of social justice work which might be practiced in this process of decision making using Diaz's model: Learner: Searching, learning, being curious is the very essence of trying to reach a suitable solution. Learning is a process which makes you absorb new bits of knowledge and perform analysis on the old ones. However, while performing this role, it is important that we show complete openness and modesty to the situation in hand and people involved in it and be genuinely curious.
Paper Doctorate
Briefing report overview and key findings
The paper seems to me to be in disarray. It would have benefited from an introduction that should have delineated (a) the problem of the country (namely HIV (b) the objective (or objectives) of the organization (c) something of its history (d) possibly the outcomes of the organization (its success and failures), and (e) the objectives of the brief. The brief then would have dedicated itself to covering those points. And all of this would have been followed by a conclusion that would have not only summed up those aforementioned points but also stated the intentions and future directions of the organization. As it is, all of this is lacking and the result is a murky essay (at least so it seemed to me) that serves only to confuse and tire the reader.
Essay Doctorate
Feynman (MLA Citation) Plenty Room at Bottom
In "There's Plenty of Room at the Bottom," Feynman, a physicist, discussed a simple question, how small can one go? In other words, he pondered the idea of tiny machines and discussed how one could go about building them. The "bottom" he argued was the infinitesimal space that one encounters as they become smaller and smaller; and as one entered the realm of the minuscule they could find an almost limitless amount of space in which to operate.