Academic writing and research methodology
Systematic approaches for scholarly writing, research design, and academic communication.
Research design fundamentals Research question development
Crafting a research question
The FINER criteria
- Feasible: Can you actually do this research?
- Interesting: Does it matter to the field?
- Novel: Does it add new knowledge?
- Ethical: Can it be done ethically?
- Relevant: Does it address a real problem?
Question types
| Type | Purpose | Example |
|------|---------|---------|
| Descriptive | Document phenomena | "What are the characteristics of X?" |
| Comparative | Compare groups/conditions | "How does X differ between groups?" |
| Correlational | Examine relationships | "Is there a relationship between X and Y?" |
| Causal | Establish causation | "Does X cause Y?" |
| Exploratory | Generate hypotheses | "What factors might explain X?" |
Refining your question
Start broad → Narrow progressively
Draft 1: "How does social media affect politics?" Draft 2: "How does Twitter use affect political polarization?" Draft 3: "How does exposure to partisan Twitter accounts affect political attitude polarization among US adults?" Draft 4: "Does increased exposure to ideologically homogeneous Twitter feeds increase affective polarization among politically engaged US adults aged 18-35?"
Literature review strategy
Systematic literature search
Database selection by field
- Multidisciplinary: Web of Science, Scopus, Google Scholar
- Social Sciences: JSTOR, ProQuest, SSRN
- Communication: Communication Abstracts, ComAbstracts
- Health: PubMed, MEDLINE, CINAHL
- Education: ERIC
- Business: Business Source Complete
Search strategy template
- Identify key concepts from research question
- Generate synonyms for each concept
- Combine with Boolean operators
Example for: "social media political polarization"
Concept 1: social media - OR: Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, "social networking sites", "online platforms", "digital media"
Concept 2: political - OR: partisan, ideological, electoral, civic
Concept 3: polarization - OR: division, extremism, "attitude change", radicalization
Combined search: (Twitter OR Facebook OR "social media" OR "social networking") AND (political OR partisan OR ideological) AND (polarization OR division OR extremism)
Inclusion/exclusion criteria
Document your criteria: - Publication date range: [X to present] - Languages: [English only / multiple] - Publication types: [Peer-reviewed only / include preprints] - Geographic scope: [Global / specific countries] - Methodologies: [All / specific approaches]
Managing your search
- Save searches to re-run later
- Export results to reference manager
- Track number of results at each stage
- Document date of each search
Citation management
Zotero/reference manager integration patterns
For automated citation workflows
CITATION_STYLES = { 'apa7': 'American Psychological Association 7th edition', 'mla9': 'Modern Language Association 9th edition', 'chicago': 'Chicago Manual of Style 17th edition', 'harvard': 'Harvard Reference format', 'ieee': 'IEEE', 'vancouver': 'Vancouver (medicine)', }
BibTeX entry template
BIBTEX_ARTICLE = """ @article{{{citekey}, author = {{{author}}}, title = {{{title}}}, journal = {{{journal}}}, year = {{{year}}}, volume = {{{volume}}}, number = {{{number}}}, pages = {{{pages}}}, doi = {{{doi}}} }} """
Common citation patterns by context
CITATION_CONTEXTS = { 'introducing_concept': "According to Author (Year), ...", 'supporting_claim': "Research has shown that X (Author, Year; Author, Year).", 'contrasting': "While Author (Year) argues X, Author (Year) contends Y.", 'methodology_reference': "Following the method developed by Author (Year), ...", 'direct_quote': 'Author (Year) states that "exact quote" (p. X).', }
Paper structure and writing IMRaD structure (scientific papers)
Standard research paper sections
Abstract (150-300 words typically)
- Background (1-2 sentences)
- Purpose/objective (1 sentence)
- Methods (2-3 sentences)
- Results (2-3 sentences)
- Conclusions (1-2 sentences)
Introduction
Funnel structure: 1. Broad context - Why does this topic matter? 2. Narrow focus - What's the specific problem? 3. Gap identification - What don't we know? 4. Research question/hypothesis - What will you investigate? 5. Contribution preview - Why does this study matter?
Literature Review
Organize thematically, not chronologically: 1. Theme 1: Key findings, debates, gaps 2. Theme 2: Key findings, debates, gaps 3. Theme 3: Key findings, debates, gaps 4. Synthesis: How themes connect to your study
Methods
The reproducibility test: Could another researcher replicate your study from this section alone?
Include: - Participants/sample (who, how selected, N) - Materials/measures (what instruments, their validity) - Procedure (step-by-step what happened) - Analysis approach (statistical tests, qualitative methods) - Ethical considerations (IRB, consent)
Results
Report, don't interpret: - Present findings systematically - Use tables/figures for complex data - Report effect sizes, not just p-values - Address each research question/hypothesis
Discussion
Reverse funnel structure: 1. Summary of key findings 2. Interpretation in context of literature 3. Theoretical implications 4. Practical implications 5. Limitations 6. Future research directions 7. Conclusion
Academic writing style
Writing conventions
Voice and tense
| Section | Tense | Example |
|---------|-------|---------|
| Abstract | Past (methods/results), Present (conclusions) | "We found... This suggests..." |
| Introduction | Present (established knowledge) | "Research shows..." |
| Methods | Past | "Participants completed..." |
| Results | Past | "Analysis revealed..." |
| Discussion | Present + Past | "These findings indicate... We found..." |
Hedging language
Appropriate hedging (avoiding overclaiming): - "This suggests that..." (not "This proves that...") - "may be related to" (not "causes") - "Results indicate..." (not "Results demonstrate conclusively...") - "One possible explanation..." (not "The explanation...")
Transition words by function
Addition: furthermore, moreover, additionally, in addition Contrast: however, nevertheless, conversely, in contrast Cause/effect: therefore, consequently, as a result, thus Example: for instance, specifically, to illustrate Sequence: first, subsequently, finally, meanwhile Summary: in summary, overall, in conclusion
Paragraphs
Each paragraph should: 1. Begin with a topic sentence 2. Contain one main idea 3. Include supporting evidence 4. Connect to adjacent paragraphs 5. Average 100-200 words (varies by field)
Common writing problems
Issues to avoid
Wordiness
❌ "It is important to note that the results demonstrate..." ✅ "Results demonstrate..."
❌ "In order to investigate..." ✅ "To investigate..."
❌ "A total of 50 participants..." ✅ "Fifty participants..."
Weak verbs
❌ "The study was conducted by the researchers" ✅ "The researchers conducted the study"
❌ "There was a significant difference found" ✅ "We found a significant difference"
Vague language
❌ "Several studies have shown..." ✅ "Three studies (Author, Year; Author, Year; Author, Year) showed..."
❌ "The results were significant" ✅ "The results were statistically significant (p < .05, d = 0.45)"
Unnecessary jargon
- Define technical terms on first use
- Use simpler words when equally precise
- Consider your audience's expertise level
Citation problems
❌ Citing secondary sources without noting ✅ "(Author, Year, as cited in Author, Year)"
❌ String citations without synthesis ✅ Group citations that make the same point; distinguish those that differ
Peer review and revision Responding to reviewers
Response letter template
Dear Editor and Reviewers,
Thank you for the thoughtful feedback on our manuscript titled "[Title]" (Manuscript ID: [Number]). We have carefully considered all comments and revised the manuscript accordingly. Below, we provide point-by-point responses to each comment.
Reviewer 1
Comment 1.1
[Quote or paraphrase the reviewer's comment]
Response: [Your response explaining what you did]
Changes made: [Quote the specific changes with page/line numbers] "New text here..." (p. X, lines XX-XX)
Comment 1.2
[Continue for each comment]
Reviewer 2
[Same format]
We believe these revisions have substantially strengthened the manuscript and hope you will find it suitable for publication in [Journal Name].
Sincerely, [Authors]
Handling criticism
Types of reviewer feedback
Must address
- Methodological concerns
- Missing literature
- Unclear writing
- Logical gaps in argument
- Statistical errors
Negotiate carefully
- Requests for additional analyses
- Suggestions to restructure
- Disagreements on interpretation
Pushback appropriately
- Requests outside scope
- Misunderstandings of your argument
- Contradictory advice from reviewers
Response strategies
Agreement: "We thank the reviewer for this suggestion. We have [action]." Partial agreement: "We appreciate this point. While [acknowledge validity], we [explain your approach]. However, we have [partial accommodation]." Respectful disagreement: "We thank the reviewer for raising this issue. We have considered this carefully; however, [explanation]. We hope the reviewer will find this reasoning persuasive."
Grant proposals Proposal structure (NSF/NIH style)
Standard grant components
Specific aims (1 page)
Opening paragraph: What's the problem? Why does it matter? Gap statement: What's missing from current understanding? Long-term goal: Your research program vision Objective: What this specific project will accomplish Central hypothesis: Your testable prediction Aims: 2-4 specific, achievable objectives Impact statement: Why funding this matters
Significance (2-3 pages)
- Importance of the problem
- Gaps in current knowledge
- How your work advances the field
- Potential impact if successful
Innovation (1 page)
- What's new about your approach?
- Conceptual innovation
- Methodological innovation
- Technical innovation
Approach (6-12 pages)
For each aim: - Rationale - Preliminary data (if any) - Research design - Methods - Expected outcomes - Potential problems and alternatives - Timeline
Broader impacts
- Training opportunities
- Dissemination plans
- Benefits to society
- Diversity and inclusion
Budget justification
Budget categories
Personnel
- PI salary and effort (% time)
- Co-investigators
- Postdocs (salary + benefits)
- Graduate students (stipend + tuition + benefits)
- Undergraduate researchers
- Technical staff
Equipment
- Items over $5,000 (check sponsor threshold)
- Justify necessity for project
Supplies
- Lab consumables
- Software licenses
- Participant payments
Travel
- Conference presentations
- Data collection sites
- Collaborator visits
Other direct costs
- Publication costs
- Participant incentives
- Transcription services
- Equipment maintenance
Indirect costs (F&A)
- Negotiated rate with institution
- Typically 50-60% of direct costs
Publishing strategy Journal selection
Evaluating journals
Quality indicators
- Impact factor (use cautiously)
- Acceptance rate
- Review time
- Time to publication
- Reputation in your field
- Indexing (Web of Science, Scopus)
Fit indicators
- Scope alignment
- Audience match
- Open access options
- Article type (empirical, theoretical, review)
Red flags (predatory journals)
- Aggressive email solicitation
- Rapid "peer review" (days)
- Unclear editorial board
- Not indexed in major databases
- "Pay to publish" with no clear OA model
- Poor website quality
Resources
- Beall's List (archived versions)
- Think. Check. Submit. (thinkchecksubmit.org)
- DOAJ (Directory of Open Access Journals)
- Journal Citation Reports
Cover letter template Dear Dr. [Editor's name],
We are pleased to submit our manuscript titled "[Full title]" for consideration as a [article type] in [Journal Name].
Summary (2-3 sentences): [What you did and what you found]
Significance (2-3 sentences): [Why this matters for the journal's readership]
Fit statement: [Why this journal specifically]
Declarations: - This manuscript is original and not under consideration elsewhere - All authors have approved the submission - [Conflict of interest statement] - [Funding acknowledgment]
Suggested reviewers (if requested): 1. [Name, affiliation, email] - Expert in [relevant area] 2. [Name, affiliation, email] - Expert in [relevant area] 3. [Name, affiliation, email] - Expert in [relevant area]
Reviewers to exclude (if any): [Name] - [Brief, professional reason]
We look forward to your response.
Sincerely, [Corresponding author name] [Title, affiliation] [Contact information]
Research ethics Ethical considerations checklist
Before starting research
Human subjects
- [ ] IRB/ethics board approval obtained
- [ ] Informed consent procedures established
- [ ] Vulnerable populations identified and protected
- [ ] Privacy and confidentiality measures in place
- [ ] Data security plan established
- [ ] Risk/benefit ratio acceptable
Data management
- [ ] Data management plan created
- [ ] Secure storage arranged
- [ ] Sharing/archiving plans documented
- [ ] Retention period determined
- [ ] Destruction procedures established
Authorship
- [ ] Contribution criteria discussed
- [ ] Author order agreed upon
- [ ] All contributors will meet authorship criteria
- [ ] Acknowledgments planned for non-author contributors
Conflicts of interest
- [ ] Financial conflicts identified
- [ ] Non-financial conflicts identified
- [ ] Disclosure plan established
Reproducibility
- [ ] Analysis plan pre-registered (if applicable)
- [ ] Code will be shared
- [ ] Data will be shared (if possible)
- [ ] Materials will be shared
Avoiding research misconduct
Types of misconduct
Fabrication
- Making up data or results
- Never acceptable under any circumstances
Falsification
- Manipulating data, equipment, or processes
- Selectively omitting data to change conclusions
- Image manipulation beyond acceptable adjustment
Plagiarism
- Using others' words without attribution
- Self-plagiarism (reusing own published work without acknowledgment)
- Paraphrasing too closely
Other questionable practices
- P-hacking (running multiple analyses until significant)
- HARKing (hypothesizing after results known)
- Salami slicing (fragmenting one study into many papers)
- Gift/ghost authorship
- Selective reporting of results
Productivity and workflow Writing routine
Sustainable academic writing
Daily writing practice
- Write at same time daily (habit formation)
- Start with minimum viable goal (e.g., 30 minutes)
- Track progress (word counts, time)
- Protect writing time from meetings/email
Managing large projects
- Break into smallest possible tasks
- Set deadlines for each component
- Schedule regular writing blocks
- Build in buffer time
- Get feedback early and often
Overcoming blocks
- Start with easiest section
- Write a "shitty first draft" (Anne Lamott)
- Use placeholders for citations/data
- Talk through ideas with colleague
- Change environment
- Return to outline/structure
Tools for academics Purpose Tools Reference management Zotero, Mendeley, EndNote Writing Scrivener, Overleaf, Word Collaboration Google Docs, Overleaf Version control Git/GitHub, Track Changes Task management Todoist, Notion, Trello Focus Forest, Freedom, Cold Turkey Analysis R, Python, SPSS, Stata, NVivo Visualization R/ggplot2, Python/matplotlib, Tableau