Main Parts of The Business Research Paper
Main Parts of The Business Research Paper
Main Parts of The Business Research Paper
Introduction
In the introduction, you are attempting to inform the reader about the rationale behind the work
and to justify why your work is essential in the field. It works on the principle of introducing the topic of
the paper and setting it in a broader context, gradually narrowing the topic down to a research problem,
thesis, and hypothesis. A good introduction explains how you mean to solve the research problem, and
creates ‘leads’ to make the reader want to delve further into your work.
Theories are formulated to explain, predict, and understand phenomena and, in many cases, to challenge
and extend existing knowledge within the limits of critical bounding assumptions. The theoretical
framework is the structure that can hold or support a theory of a research study. The theoretical
framework introduces and describes the theory that explains why the research problem under study exists.
Definition of Terms
This glossary is intended to assist you in understanding commonly used terms and concepts when
reading, interpreting, and evaluating scholarly research. Also included are general words and phrases
defined within the context of how they apply to research within the context of the study.
Related Literature
"In writing the literature review, the purpose is to convey to the reader what knowledge and ideas
have been established on a topic, and what their strengths and weaknesses are. The literature review must
be defined by a guiding concept (e.g. your research objective, the problem or issue you are discussing, or
your argumentative thesis). It is not just a descriptive list of the material available, or a set of summaries".
Related Studies
A literature review is an evaluative report of information found in the literature/studies related to
your selected area of study. The review should describe, summarize, evaluate and clarify this literature. It
should give a theoretical base for the research and help you (the author) determine the nature of your
research. A literature review is more than the search for information, and goes beyond being a descriptive
annotated bibliography. All works included in the review must be read, evaluated and analyzed.
Relationships between the literature must also be identified and articulated, in relation to your field of
research or chose topic.
Synthesis
A 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 non-written sources, such as lectures, interviews, observations. This process is nothing new for
you, since you infer relationships all the time - say, between something you've read in the newspaper and
something you've seen for yourself, or between the teaching styles of your favorite and least favorite
instructors. In fact, if you've written research papers, you've already written syntheses. In an academic
synthesis, you make explicit the relationships that you have inferred among separate sources.
Research Method
A particular way of studying something in order to discover new information about it or understand it
better
IV-DV/RESEARCH DESIGN
Graphic representation of the entire process that the researchers will follow
Independent variable – dependent variable. It examines relationships between variables. It is therefore
crucial to determine the factors that lead to effective as well as ineffective team processes and to better
specify how, why, and when they contribute.
Research Locale
It is the setting or the place where the research study is conducted.
Ethical Consideration
It refers to the description on how the process of the study is done.
Summary
A summary is the capsulation of all the findings that the researchers gathered and discovered.
Conclusion
A conclusion is drawn from the summary of findings. The main goal is geared toward improvement or
development.
Recommendation
Recommendations should directly respond to key findings arrived at through data collection and
analysis. A process of prioritization is essential to narrowing down findings, and once this is done,
recommendations should be developed that align with the most important findings.