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OpenStudy (christos):

Project Abstract, Can anyone tell me what does it mean by this http://screencast.com/t/jhoXdDFWY0ww ? What does it mean "How the text is organised" ? Like which are the ways a text can be organized with?

OpenStudy (notamathgenius):

Hmm how to make it simple, it's not complicated

OpenStudy (anonymous):

do you still need help?

OpenStudy (christos):

yes @AshleyWagnerCA can you help?

OpenStudy (zale101):

I think it means your text should be organized, it has to have an introduction, body paragraphs, and at last a conclusion?

OpenStudy (zale101):

Does that help?

OpenStudy (christos):

This is for an abstract only bro not for the whole essay

OpenStudy (zale101):

Well organize your abstract. Your abstract page should already include the page header. Do you know to to organize an abstract page?

OpenStudy (christos):

no man :/

OpenStudy (zale101):

Is this for English?

OpenStudy (zale101):

An abstract is a short summary of your completed research. If done well, it makes the reader want to learn more about your research. These are the basic components of an abstract in any discipline: 1) Motivation/problem statement: Why do we care about the problem? What practical, scientific, theoretical or artistic gap is your research filling? 2) Methods/procedure/approach: What did you actually do to get your results? (e.g. analyzed 3 novels, completed a series of 5 oil paintings, interviewed 17 students) 3) Results/findings/product: As a result of completing the above procedure, what did you learn/invent/create? 4) Conclusion/implications: What are the larger implications of your findings, especially for the problem/gap identified in step 1? However, it's important to note that the weight accorded to the different components can vary by discipline. For models, try to find abstracts of research that is similar to your research. http://research.berkeley.edu/ucday/abstract.html

OpenStudy (zale101):

Did it help?

OpenStudy (christos):

I am trying to understand the "how the text is organised" like a feature itself, on par with definition for example

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