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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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Paper Undergraduate
Obesity Prevention Using Health Belief
This paper is about obesity prevention health belief model. The Health Belief Model is based on realistic facts. It recognizes the fact that a person wanting to make changes in the health behavior cannot actually help him or her to bring that change; there are other elements involved that make the person actually take this step. These elements could be the clues to action and self-efficacy.(Boskey, 2010)
Research Paper Undergraduate
Abusive Relationships - They Come
About twenty to fifty percent of women all over the world suffer from physical, psychological or sexual abuse, according to an article in the Journal of Interpersonal Violence (Parker, et al., 2007).
Paper Undergraduate
Perceptions of online professors regarding tenure and post-tenure review
Over the course of several months, researchers here have compiled a wealth of resources relating to the subjects of academic tenure and post-tenure review. These resources have served in the preliminary capacity to…
Paper Undergraduate
Picky Nursing 518 Quantitative Critique
Nursing 518 Quantitative Critique Guideline
Research Paper Undergraduate
AR vs. Traditional the Accelerated
The Accelerated Reader program has received significant attention in the last few years, as it is reported to have shown great promise for correcting reading deficiencies in most grade levels.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Society Quantitative Methods of Research
Quantitative methods of research and information dissemination have been historically associated with science, industry and medicine. Other schools of thought have also adopted quantitative methodologies, to bolster the…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Language in Clients With Schizophrenia
Language in Clients With Schizophrenia and Bipolar Disorder
Research Paper Undergraduate
Sponsored Terrorism State Sponsored Terrorism
What is terrorism and what is state-sponsored terrorism?
Paper High School
Children Respond When Their Parents
What are the ramifications for children whose parents divorce? It is a fact that about fifty percent of marriages fail -- but what happens to the children from those families? How do they respond in the years that…
Paper Masters
US military involvement in the Korean Conflict
The Korean Conflict Introduction How did the Korean conflict begin? What were the dynamics behind this war? How and why did the United States get involved? How was the Korean conflict linked to the Cold War? These and other issues will be addressed in this paper. Thesis: The Korean conflict was indeed the first battle of the Cold War, and the United States, although it was thoroughly unprepared when it went into battle, came out a winner even though the end was a virtual standoff. Background on how the U.S. become involved in the Korean conflict In the book, Truman and Korea: The Political Culture of the Early Cold War, author and professor Paul G. Pierpaoli Jr. explains that after World War II the Soviet Union emerged in a "new and more powerful stance," a direct challenge to America and its "…fragile allies" (Pierpaoli, 1999, p. 17). And notwithstanding the fact that the Cold War really began to take hold in 1947 and 1948 President Truman – known as a "legendary fiscal conservative" – was very reluctant to increase the amount of money spent on the military after WW II (Pierpaoli, 1999, p. 18).