Friday 14 February 2020

How do you write a synthesis paper in academic writing?

synthesis is a written discussion that draws on one or more sources.
  • It follows that your ability to write syntheses depends on your ability to infer relationships among sources - essays, articles, fiction, and also nonwritten sources, such as lectures, interviews, observations.
There are several techniques for developing synthesis essays, among them: Summary, Example or Illustration, Two or more reasons, and Comparison and Contrast.
Here’s one technique in synthesizing (infering relationships) -
  • COMPARISON AND CONTRAST: Comparison and contrast techniques enable you to examine two subjects (or sources) in terms of one another. When you compare, you consider similarities. When you contrast, you consider differences.
To organize a comparison/contrast analysis, you must carefully read sources in order to discover significant criteria for analysis. A criterion is a specific point to which both of your authors refer and about which they may agree or disagree. There are two basic formulas for comparison/contrast analysis.
BY CRITERIA
I. Introduce essay, state thesis
II. Introduce Criterion 1
  • Passage A's viewpoint
  • Passage B's viewpoint
III. Introduce Criterion 2
  • Passage A's viewpoint
  • Passage B's viewpoint
IV. Discussion and conclusion
Or you can use this -
BY SOURCE
I. Introduce essay, state thesis
II. Summarize Passage A
  • View on Criterion I
  • View on Criterion 2
III. Summarize Passage B
  • View on Criterion 1
  • View on Criterion 2
IV. Discussion and conclusion
A synthesis essay has an introduction, body, and conclusion.
The introduction provides an overview of the topic, thesis, and sources, with some background information for the texts to be summarized.
The body includes a topic sentence, information from more than one source, with in-text citations; it compares and contrasts sources in an objective (two-sided) interpretation, and informs the reader why the source argues a thesis.
The conclusion connects the ideas from the sources to your thesis, and describes how each supports your viewpoint. The conclusion also rewords your claim so it is clear you are offering a different perspective on the topic.
SUMMARY: Aside from comparison and contrast technique, other techniques in synthesizing are Summary, Example or Illustration, and Two or more reasons. To synthesize means to infer relationships between two or more sources. A synthesis is structured thus: Introduction, body, conclusion.

No comments:

Post a Comment

wordEmbeddingLayers() available in Deep Learning Toolbox?

Hello,   trying to run the  "Deep Beer Designer" , I got stuck on the use of  wordEmbeddingLayer()  which is flagged as an unknown...