Argumentative Research Paper
The Proposal is considered the first formal document of your research Write this document in the first person in terms of what you intend to do. For example, one paragraph might begin: I propose to examine the position that gay marriages should not be legalized State how you plan to prove this point. For instancethrough in depth research and interviews, I will . . . Consider beginning this Research Proposal with an anecdote that ties in directly with your subject; pull a reader into your plan while clarifying for yourself a clear direction. - READ THE FOLLOWING CAREFULLY TO ASSIST YOU IN CREATING YOUR PROPOSAL FORMING THE PROPOSAL: You should be beyond a general topic and moving on to a specific researchable claim. Avoid predictable topics unless you can demonstrate new and compelling issues. Select subjects, then issues that matter to YOU. Your topic must be controversial/argumentative. Explaining purpose in your Proposal: x clarifies the topic. x analyzes the issues. x sways the reader with varied, compelling evidence. Simply stated, your claim: x should clarify the topic and take on the issue as well as your selected approach. Are you, for instance proposing changes? x may point to a general, specialized, or expert audience. A good Proposal should have: – a solid issue (beyond the topic) with brief background information – a working claim (one that offers some flexibility since, as research continues, you may modify it a bit) – awareness of the level of the audience – a plan for locating appropriate sources and consideration for researchable views – a possible/feasible conclusion