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- \iffalse
- The Introduction brings readers from a general understanding of the topic
- to a point where they can begin to understand what it is you are intending to do.
- It starts with broad statements and ends with specific statements about your project.
- Along the way it introduces readers to what has been done in the literature and
- then tells them why your project results will be different.
- The Introduction provides a motivation for the work and tells readers what you will be telling them.
- The following sections may be written simply as paragraphs;
- nothing more is really needed in the Introduction.
- You do not have to separate out each section.
- The Funnel model is a good way to organise the Introduction.
- 1) The funnel model begins with a general statement about the general topical area;
- for example, “Antennas have been used for communications for at least 100 years”.
- It then narrows the focus repeatedly with further sentences by introducing work that has been
- done in the literature with the appropriate citations.
- Finally, it reaches your project. By that time the reader knows in general terms what your work
- is about and understands your motivations.
- The number of cited works ranges from a few to very many.
- But whatever the number, they are the most significant in the field and have made the most impact on the historical development of the topic.
- 2) Your specific Aims and Objectives follow. Use bullet points for each and spend a few sentences describing each.
- 3) Follow your Aims and Objectives with a specific literature review.
- In section 1, the review was rather broad. Now is the time to focus in on several journal articles
- or products or activities that most closely match your own project work.
- Use a few sentences to describe each one and show specifically what was useful about them.
- Show how your work would improve on their work. You need only a few here.
- Use those that are most similar and most like your project.
- End the Introduction with a one-line description of the contents of each following Chapter.For example, “Chapter 2 focuses on.... Chapter 3 describes the work.... In Chapter 4, an outline of the measuring equipment ..., etc.”
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