Offers
college research papers, term papers, essays, thesis, and dissertation
writing guide and tutorial on how to format papers in APA, MLA writing
styles.
This College Research Papers Topics outlines the steps to writing
a good research paper. To achieve supreme excellence or perfection
in writing college research papers, you need more than just the knowledge.
Selecting the topic
Choose a research paper topic that interests and challenges you. Your
attitude towards the topic may well determine the amount of effort
and enthusiasm you put into your research.
Focus on a limited aspect, e.g. narrow it down from "Religion"
to "World Religion" to "Buddhism". Obtain teacher
approval for your topic before embarking on full scale research. If
you are uncertain as to what is expected of you in completing the
assignment or project, re-read your assignment sheet carefully or
ASK your teacher.
Select a subject you can manage. Avoid subjects that are too technical,
learned, or specialized. Avoid topics that have only a very narrow
range of source materials.
Gathering the sources
Surf the Net.
For general or background information, check out useful URLs, general
information online, almanacs or encyclopedias online such as Britannica,
or Encarta, etc. Use search engines like Google, Msn, Yahoo etc, and
other search tools as a starting point.
Depending on the information you are searching, the Internet is not
always the easiest nor the first place you should try especially if
you don't have ready access to a computer. Some students unnecessarily
line up for a computer to find the meaning of a word when they should
be using their common sense, i.e. a simple dictionary. Often the traditional
printed resource, such as a dictionary, an almanac, or a directory,
can provide you with the needed information much faster. This situation
may change, however, as more libraries begin subscribing to online
resources and buying fewer printed material
Check out other print materials available in the Library:
. Almanacs, Atlases, AV Catalogs
. Encyclopedias and Dictionaries
. Government Publications, Guides, Reports
. Magazines, Newspapers
. Vertical Files
. Yellow Pages, Zip or Postal Code and Telephone
Directories
Check out Public and University Libraries, businesses, government
agencies, as well as contact knowledgeable people in your community.Read
and evaluate. Bookmark your favorite Internet sites. Printout, photocopy,
and take notes of relevant information.
As
you gather your resources, jot down full bibliographical information
(author, title, place of publication, publisher, date of publication,
page numbers, URLs, creation or modification dates on Web pages, and
your date of access) on your work sheet, printout, or enter the information
on your laptop for later retrieval. If printing from the Internet,
it is wise to use a browser that provides you with the URL and date
of access on every printed page. Remember that an article without
bibliographical information is useless since you cannot cite its source.