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Academic Writing Webinar: Session 6

Academic Writing Webinar: Session 6

المصدر
Faculty of Languages and Translation
DISCUSS ANALYSIS SYNTHESIS
Academic Writing Excellence: The Art of the Discussion Section

On March 3, 2021, the Women's Scientific Research Committee of the Bachelor of Arts in English program hosted the sixth session in its series of webinars on academic writing, featuring Dr. Nada Alqarni as the keynote speaker.

💬 Academic Writing Series: Session Six

Topic: Discussion of Results in a Research Paper

Presenter: Dr. Nada Alqarni | Date: March 3, 2021

Organizer: Women's Scientific Research Committee (BA in English Program)

The primary objective of the webinar was to examine the discussion of results within a research paper. As Dr. Alqarni pointed out at the session's onset, authors enjoy greater latitude in the discussion section than they do in the introduction or literature review. "By the time readers reach the discussion, authors can assume a fair degree of shared knowledge," she explained, "including an understanding of the study's purpose, the methodology employed, and the results obtained."

Dr. Alqarni stressed that the discussion section's function is to illustrate how the results clearly lead to the conclusions drawn. This involves outlining any limitations that may challenge the claims being made, and considering possible explanations for the results.

The Role of the Discussion Section
Authors enjoy greater latitude; assume shared knowledge of purpose, methodology, and results.

Function: Illustrate how results lead to conclusions, outline limitations, consider explanations for results.

According to Dr. Alqarni, the discussion should extend beyond merely summarizing the results. It should be more theoretical, abstract, and general. It should weave the study's findings into the broader academic field, connect with real-world implications, and delve into their potential applications.

She emphasized the importance of taking a broad view of the study's findings in the discussion section. "This section transitions from the research's specific focus to a more generalized viewpoint," she said. It should convincingly demonstrate how the results underpin the conclusions drawn, while acknowledging any limitations that may constrain the generalizability of the findings.

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Beyond Summary: The Essence of Discussion
  • More theoretical, abstract, and general.
  • Weaves findings into broader academic field.
  • Connects with real-world implications and applications.
  • Transitions from specific focus to generalized viewpoint.
  • Shows results underpin conclusions; acknowledges limitations.

In terms of structure, Dr. Alqarni outlined several key elements that a discussion section should contain: a reference to the study's primary purpose; a summary of the main findings; potential explanations for these findings; a comparison with expected results and other studies; an overview of the study's limitations, and the conclusion. She cautioned researchers against merely repeating all the details, attempting to cover all information, or making unjustifiable or indefensible claims.

Dr. Alqarni also discussed the qualifications and strength of claims in the discussion section, providing examples of using modal auxiliaries to moderate claims. She additionally highlighted examples of the language typically used in this section.

Structuring the Discussion & Crafting Claims
Key Elements: Purpose ref., findings summary, explanations, comparisons, limitations, conclusion.
Caution: Avoid repetition, over-coverage, unjustifiable claims.
Strength of Claims: Discussed qualifications, use of modal auxiliaries to moderate claims, typical language examples.

The webinar, primarily aimed at MA and Ph.D. students, saw enthusiastic participation from both staff members of the College of Languages and Translation and those from other faculties.

The series of academic writing webinars, organized by the Scientific Research Committee, included seven sessions held every Monday and Wednesday from February 10 to March 3, 2021, at 4:30 pm.

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Successful Webinar Series Conclusion

Aimed at MA & Ph.D. students; enthusiastic participation from CLT staff and other faculties.

Series by Scientific Research Committee: 7 sessions, Mon & Wed, Feb 10 - Mar 3, 2021, 4:30 pm.

SCHOLARLY WRITING & ANALYSIS