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Research Article
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About This Topic AI GENERATED

A research article is a formal piece of academic writing that presents findings, analyzes existing literature, or argues a position grounded in evidence. In education courses, students are frequently asked to engage with research articles either by summarizing them, critiquing their methodology, or using them as the foundation for a broader argument. The exercise appears across disciplines — from healthcare policy and psychology to social issues like same-sex marriage and fast food and obesity — because learning to read and respond to scholarly sources is a transferable academic skill. The wide subject range reflects how central research literacy is to undergraduate and graduate study alike.

The papers archived under this topic take several distinct approaches. Some focus on summarizing and evaluating a specific article's argument, methodology, and conclusions, as seen in work addressing gun control attitudes, depression, and AIDS and HIV. Others use a research article as a launching point for persuasive writing, particularly on issues like fast food and obesity or social media's impact. A smaller group addresses professional or pedagogical practice, examining topics such as instructional planning procedures, teaching writing to English as a second language high schoolers, and team-based organizational learning.

A strong essay in this category begins with a clearly scoped thesis that goes beyond summary — identifying what the source argues, how it supports that argument, and what its limitations are regarding population, methodology, or scope. Evidence drawn directly from the article, including the author's own claims and data, carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating summary as analysis; restating what an article says is not the same as evaluating whether its conclusions are well-supported.

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Thesis Undergraduate
Social influence and conflict resolution
This paper examines the social factors which can influence not only how conflict manifests, but how all parties involved end up viewing the conflict. There's absolutely no reason as to why conflict has to continually be viewed as a negative or unhealthy thing. Depending on the social factors at work, conflict can be viewed as a means for transformation and discovery, and can be a factor which has a tremendous influence on all parties involved.
Paper Doctorate
Screening for Gestational Diabetes Gestational Diabetes Mellitus
Gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) is caused by the development of glucose intolerance during pregnancy (National Institutes of Health 2013). In the United States the National Institutes of Health (2013), U.S.
Essay Undergraduate
Critique of sampling strategy and sample size in research
This paper discusses probability versus non-probability sampling sizes when analyzing a quantitative research article. The focus of the article by Choi (et al 2008) is specifically on how female condom use is affected through an intervention program at California healthcare clinics for low-income women. The small size of the sampling is critiqued based upon the principles of statistical research.
Thesis Doctorate
Behavioral genetics: foundations and mechanisms
Researchers have revealed that genetic contributions to adolescent behavioral traits are complex and modified to a significant extent by a teenager’s experiences. While family influences may play an important role, non-shared experiences appear to explain the main differences between siblings. This essay examines this research and discusses the significance of selected findings.
Thesis Masters
Digital forensics principles and methods
This is a paper on digital forensics and loos at what this is and how different it is from the previous types of forensics. It indicates how science has helped develop forensics and the benefits that have come alongside the technology to barring of crimes within the contemporary society. It also looks at the challenges that the digital forensics has.
Paper Masters
Incentives and Performance Monitoring in Management Writer
This study examines two concepts that are used in aviation management practices; conventional restraint and inflatable restraint concepts. In addition, the weaknesses and strengths of these two concepts are highlighted to ascertain the most effective and efficient concept. The paper further describes the application of these two concepts in crash situations and as such, the inflatable restraint concept is given an upper hand as opposed to the conventional restraint. This paper describes the development the inflatable restraint concept compatible with adults and children and is self-adjustable. Designed, and well tested, this concept seeks to provide an effective, inexpensive solution to the safety of passengers and aircraft crews.