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The Quick Fix Guide to Academic Writing
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The Quick Fix Guide to Academic Writing
How to Avoid Big Mistakes and Small Errors

First Edition
  • Phillip C. Shon - Professor of Criminology at the University of Ontario Institute of Technology
Additional resources:


December 2017 | 152 pages | SAGE Publications Ltd
Whether you’re writing a paper, essay, assignment, or dissertation, this short and punchy book helps you improve your writing skills through minimal effort.

Providing you with a quick set of writing rules to follow, this tried and tested guide uses a unique and easy to follow grid-based system.  Packed with advice on understanding (big and little) common errors made in academic writing, it helps you identify patterns in your own writing and demonstrates how to reshape or re-evaluate them - and raise your writing game in any academic context. 

How-to tutorials include:

  • Synthesizing and critiquing literature – and using your coding sheet to develop critical arguments 
  • Shaping abstracts, introductions, discussions, and conclusions – to improve the logic and structure of your writing
  • Applying lessons-learned to future projects, whatever format of academic writing.

Save time and improve your grades, with this essential quick fix guide!

Student Success is a series of essential guides for students of all levels. From how to think critically and write great essays to boosting your employability and managing your wellbeing, the Student Success series helps you study smarter and get the best from your time at university. 


 
Chapter 1: Understanding the “Big” and “Little” Errors in Your Paper
“Big” Errors

 
“Little” Errors

 
 
Chapter 2: What Am I Supposed to Do In My Paper?
The Lone Wolf Claim

 
Formulating a Research Question

 
Types of Writing Assignments

 
 
Chapter 3: How to Synthesize the Literature
Organizing your own RCOS

 
Interpreting RCOS: A Student Example

 
The Infiniteness of Synthesis

 
 
Chapter 4: How to Develop a Critique of Previous Literature
Critiquing Ice Cream, Hamburger, and a Movie

 
Three Questions that Lead to an Appropriate Critique of Previous Literature

 
A Haven for CPLs and GAPs

 
 
Chapter 5: How to Produce a Claim
Differentiating between ROF and ROA

 
The Citationality of the ROF and ROA

 
Building an Argument and Creating Main Sections

 
The Scope of Claims in Non-empirical Papers

 
 
Chapter 6: How to Write an Abstract, Introduction, Discussion, and Conclusion
How to Write an Abstract

 
How to Write an Introduction

 
How to Write a Discussion

 
How to Write a Conclusion

 
A Note on Data and Methods

 
 
Chapter 7: Conclusion: A Do-It-Yourself (DIY) Model of Social Science Writing