Research IV The Discussion and Conclusion Section
Research IV The Discussion and Conclusion Section
Research IV The Discussion and Conclusion Section
Research IV
The Discussion
and Conclusion Section
Quarter 3
For Special Science High School Grade 10
Second Cycle – Week 5-6
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FOREWORD
This paper discusses the importance of good research and the common
causes of research bias. It also provides guidelines for evaluating research and
data quality and describes examples of bad research.
1. What Happened
2. What To Learn
This portion will gauge student’s learning and will determine how
much the learner has learned.
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Competencies
Objectives
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I. What Happened
Directions: Study the words in the box below. Then on your Research notebook,
fill each cup with words that relate under discussion and conclusion.
Draw the cups on your Research notebook and write your answers
inside them.
DISCUSSION CONCLUSION
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II. What To Learn
This is the section where you need to present the importance of your
study and how it may be able to contribute to and/or fill existing gaps in the
field. If appropriate, the discussion section is also where you state how the
findings from your study revealed new gaps in the literature that had not been
previously exposed or adequately described.
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The Structure and Writing Style
I. General Rules
These are the general rules you should adopt when composing your
discussion of the results:
• Do not be verbose or repetitive.
• Be concise and make your points clearly.
• Avoid using jargons.
• Follow a logical stream of thought.
• Use the present verb tense, especially for established facts; however,
refer to specific works and references in the past tense.
• If needed, use subheadings to help organize your presentation or to
group your interpretations into themes.
The content of the discussion section of your paper most often includes:
1. Explanation of results: comment on whether or not the results were
expected and present explanations for the results; go into greater depth
when explaining findings that were unexpected or especially profound.
If appropriate, note any unusual or unanticipated patterns or trends that
emerged from your results and explain their meaning.
2. References to previous research: compare your results with the findings
from other studies or use the studies to support a claim. This can include
revisiting key sources already cited in your literature review section or
save them to cite later in the discussion section if they are more
important to compare with your results than being part of the general
research you cited to provide context and background information.
3. Deduction: a claim for how the results can be applied more generally.
For example, describing lessons learned, proposing recommendations
that can help improve a situation, or recommending best practices.
4. Hypothesis: a more general claim or possible conclusion arising from the
results [which may be proved or disproved in subsequent research].
Keep the following sequential points in mind as you organize and write
the discussion section of your paper:
1. Think of your discussion as an inverted pyramid. Organize the discussion
from the general to the specific, linking your findings to the literature,
then to theory, then to practice [if appropriate].
2. Use the same key terms, mode of narration, and verb tense [present]
that you used when describing the research problem in the introduction.
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3. Begin by briefly restating the research problem you were investigating
and answer all of the research questions underpinning the problem that
you posed in the introduction.
4. Describe the patterns, principles, and relationships shown by each major
finding and place them in proper perspective. The sequencing of
providing this information is important; first state the answer, then the
relevant results, then cite the work of others. If appropriate, refer the
reader to a figure or table to help enhance the interpretation of the
data. The order of interpreting each major finding should be in the same
order as they were described in your results section.
5. A good discussion section includes analysis of any unexpected findings.
This paragraph should begin with a description of the unexpected
finding, followed by a brief interpretation as to why you believe it
appeared and, if necessary, its possible significance in relation to the
overall study. If more than one unexpected finding emerged during the
study, describe each of them in the order they appeared as you
gathered the data.
6. Before concluding the discussion, identify potential limitations and
weaknesses. Comment on their relative importance in relation to your
overall interpretation of the results and, if necessary, note how they may
affect the validity of the findings. Avoid using an apologetic tone;
however, be honest and self-critical.
7. The discussion section should end with a concise summary of the
principal implications of the findings regardless of statistical significance.
Give a brief explanation about why you believe the findings and
conclusions of your study are important and how they support broader
knowledge or understanding of the research problem. This can be
followed by any recommendations for further research. However, do not
offer recommendations which could have been easily addressed within
the study. This demonstrates to the reader you have inadequately
examined and interpreted the data.
II. Explain the meaning of the findings and why they are important
No one has thought as long and hard about your study as you have.
Systematically explain the meaning of the findings and why you believe they
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are important. After reading the discussion section, you want the reader to
think about the results [“why hadn’t I thought of that?”]. You don’t want to
force the reader to go through the paper multiple times to figure out what it all
means. Begin this part of the section by repeating what you consider to be
your most important finding first.
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V. Problems to Avoid
• Do not waste entire sentences restating your results. Should you need to
remind the reader of the finding to be discussed, use “bridge sentences”
that relate the result to the interpretation. An example would be: “The
lack of available housing to single women with children in rural areas of
Texas suggests that...[then move to the interpretation of this finding].”
• Recommendations for further research can be included in either the
discussion or conclusion of your paper but do not repeat your
recommendations in both sections.
• Do not introduce new results in the discussion. Be wary of mistaking the
reiteration of a specific finding for an interpretation.
• Use of the first person is acceptable, but too much use of the first person
may actually distract the reader from the main points.
Writing Tips
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The Conclusion Section
I. General Rules
When writing the conclusion to your paper, follow these general rules:
• State your conclusions in clear, simple language.
• Do not simply reiterate your results or the discussion.
• Indicate opportunities for future research, as long as you haven’t
already done so in the discussion section of your paper.
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because this reduces the impact of the argument(s) you have developed in
your essay.
The conclusion also provides a place for you to restate your research
problem persuasively and succinctly, given that the reader has now been
presented with all the information about the topic.
NOTE: Don’t delve into idle speculation. Being introspective means looking
within yourself as an author to try and understand an issue more deeply not to
guess at possible outcomes.
Failure to be concise
The conclusion section should be concise and to the point. Conclusions
that are too long often have unnecessary detail. The conclusion section is not
the place for details about your methodology or results. Although you should
give a summary of what was learned from your research, this summary should
be relatively brief, since the emphasis in the conclusion is on the implications,
evaluations, insights, etc. that you make.
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gap in the literature]. In other words, the conclusion is where you place your
research within a larger context.
Writing Tips
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• New Insight, Not New Information
Don't surprise the reader with new information in your Conclusion that
was never referenced anywhere else in the paper. If you have new information
to present, add it to the Discussion or other appropriate section of the
paper. Note that, although no actual new information is introduced, the
conclusion is where you offer your most “original” contributions in the paper;
it's where you describe the value of your research, demonstrate your
understanding of the material that you’ve presented, and locate your findings
within the larger context of scholarship on the topic.
NOTE:
Before the year ends, you need to come up with a research paper in
order to pass the subject. Please start constructing it as early as today.
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III. What I Have Learned
Directions: Write six (6) learnings you have gained from the lesson about the
Discussion and Conclusion Sections of a Research Paper by filling in
the bubble map below. Each bubble should contain 2-3 sentences
or descriptions about the Discussion and Conclusion sections. Do
this on your Research notebook.
Discussion
Section
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Conclusion
Section
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organizer_142143/
http://www.newdesignfile.com/post_printable-mind-map-graphic-
https://library.sacredheart.edu/c.php?g=29803&p=185933
BIBLIOGRPAHY
What Happened
Discussion
Jargon Opinion – based
Illogical Analytical
Dialogue Argument
Consultation Erroneous statement
Conclusion
Summarize content Factual
Concise Organized
What I Have Learned
(Answers may vary)
Sample answers:
Discussion
The discussion section Interprets and describes the significance of the
findings considering what was already known about the research problem
being investigated and to explain any new understanding or fresh insights
about the problem after you have taken the findings into consideration.
Conclusion
The conclusion is intended to help the reader understand why your
research should matter to them after they have finished reading the
paper.
ANSWER KEYS
SYNOPSIS ABOUT THE AUTHOR
This Self Learning Kit will develop students’ understanding on the process
of the proper way of writing the scope and delimitation of a research paper.
The learners will gain knowledge on the techniques by applying what they
learned from the lesson discussed above and hopefully will guide them in their
future studies.
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DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
SCHOOLS DIVISION OF NEGROS ORIENTAL
ADOLF P. AGUILAR
OIC - Assistant Schools Division Superintendent
ROSELA R. ABIERA
Education Program Supervisor – (LRMS)
MARICEL S. RASID
Librarian II (LRMDS)
ELMAR L. CABRERA
PDO II (LRMDS)
_________________________________
BETA QA TEAM
Gracia Rodel B. Deloria
DISCLAIMER
The information, activities and assessments used in this material are designed to provide
accessible learning modality to the teachers and learners of the Division of Negros Oriental. The
contents of this module are carefully researched, chosen, and evaluated to comply with the set
learning competencies. The writers and evaluator were clearly instructed to give credits to
information and illustrations used to substantiate this material. All content is subject to copyright and
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may not be reproduced in any form without expressed written consent from the division.
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