pp. 28-30
Tips for developing a thesis statement
-
"Guide to
writing thesis statements" from the University of Washington
-
"Creating a Thesis
Statement" from OWL at Purdue
-
Good advice and an example of going from a general topic to a specific thesis
statement
-
As mentioned on page 28, to get started on your term paper, you will
usually narrow down your general topic by either (a) studying a more specific
subtopic or (b) by examining a specific hypothesis about that topic. In either
case,
entering the name of your topic in the following websites' search boxes may help
you narrow down your topic.
- Clusty (be sure to look
at "clusters" on the left of your search results)
- Highbeam
Encyclopedia (will often look up your term in Colman's
dictionary of psychology, and that dictionary will often provide you
alternative search terms)
- Hyperdictionary
(highly recommended)
- List of topics from
APA (has links to articles related to each topic)
- Merriam-Webster's
Thesaurus
- Mooter (allows you to
see a diagram of possible search terms)
-
Psychological encyclopedia (from allref.com)
- Roget's
Thesaurus
- Thinkmap Visual Thesaurus
- Wikipedia
will usually give you alternative search terms, especially if
your original term is broad. Look for other search terms in (a) the
introduction to the article (when the term will be defined), (b) in
the first section of the article after the introduction (often
labeled "1 Forms of ..." or "Versions"), (c) before the References,
there may be a "See also" section, and (d) in the side bar box
on the right side of the screen (most entries will not have such
boxes). If you want to go directly to Wikipedia's list of psychology
topics, click
here.
p. 32, footnote: Getting the page header right
pp. 36-40 Organizing the body of your paper by outlining it
Good, simple tips for writing a term paper, except that you need to use primary
sources--journal articles--rather than secondary sources.
Click to grade a sample term paper or to see the
graded version. When asked for the password, use the first problem
plural
listed in Appendix B.
Guide to writing a
basic essay
Back to Writing for Psychology home page