History 2
May 5, 2021
Public Policy Research Paper about Gun control
May 5, 2021

Developing a Research Plan

There are three parts to the research proposal that you are going to submit here in Blackboard: a topic proposal (two pages in length), a traditional outline of your topic (one page), and an annotated list of three potential resources (one page) that you might use in your larger research argument.

Topic Proposal

The first two pages of this document should include your research proposal. Your work should address each of the following six areas listed below, and you need to include a word count inside a parenthesis at the conclusion of each section. Please follow the word-count guidelines listed for each section as follows:

·
Summary (100-150 words)

·
Purpose (50-100 words)

·
Audience (50-100 words)

·
Opening Statement, Thesis, or Hypothesis (50-100 words)

·
Method, Materials, and Data (50-100 words)

·
Expected Outcomes (50-100 words)

Outline

The third page of your proposal should include a traditional outline (Roman numerals, capital letters, numbers, and lower-case letters) that plots the course for your research paper. It is okay if this plan changes in the course of your writing process, but for now you are just illustrating forethought in planning your work.

Annotated Citations

The fourth and final pages of your proposal should include the alphabetized citations for three resources that you might use to support your research argument. Each citation should include as much publication information from the core elements of the MLA documentation style as you can identify as well as a written annotation of 2-3 sentences outlining the features of this particular resource.

Please note that annotations are not required in the final draft of your research paper, which has a requirement of ten resources. This exercise is meant only to orient you to a common research practice that you are likely to encounter in future college classes. You can remove the annotations and paste the citations into your “Works Cited” page when you have finished the final draft or your research argument.

Here is a sample for what your final page should resemble:

Annotated List of Works Cited

Adams, Sarah. “Writing the College Term Paper.” College Language Association Journal, vol. 1, Southern University, spring 2016.

This article by Sarah Adams outlines the steps necessary to compose a persuasive college term paper. The piece includes sections on composing the introduction, finding and evaluating resources, and compiling a list of citations. I plan to use her advice on developing an interesting hook, where she notes that “clear college writing should capture the reader’s attention from the first page.” (1)


 
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