SLR and Education in the Social Science Field

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Education majors fall under the social science umbrella. This is also true of majors like psychology, communication, social work, and museology. Thus, I’d need to use the IMRaD format when writing papers, especially research papers. In fact, I’ve already written a research paper using IMRaD format for my EDUC 245 class; my researched question involved ADHD. As someone with ADHD siblings, it was the most natural topic for me.

IMRaD papers, in case you’ve forgotten from the readings, has different sections for the introduction (or abstract), methods, results, and discussion. So, the ‘a’ in IMRaD comes from ‘and.’ While writing my paper, I found that the style of IMRaD papers flows well and divvies up the information into digestible quantities.

As far as language goes, I have found it’s a good idea to use qualifiers, like the book mentions. Words like ‘might,’ ‘could,’ and ‘likely’ fit into this. In general, social science papers should be concise and formal. This means broad adjectives, like ‘super’ and ‘very,’ should be avoided since they are not specific or precise enough to be presented as factual. It’s easy for the mind to drift away from precision; I often find that the longer I try to focus, the more my paragraphs look like my unfiltered train of thought threw up on the Google Doc. So, I know it’s important to know what words to avoid, so when I edit my papers, I know what words to swap out, or trash altogether.

 

Regarding types of reference, education majors should end up using APA in the classes for their specific majors. APA applies to many of the social sciences.

It’s very important for college students to understand how the different parts of SLR applies to them personally. We’ll all be taking more and more classes for our specific majors as time goes on and will need to know how to write appropriate papers for our fields of study. Researching that information now is best because by the time we’re consistently writing papers of our field’s style, we should already be familiar with the structure, language, and reference will need to use.

These are the websites I looked at to figure out what field education falls under and more about writing under the social science umbrella: https://guides.lib.uw.edu/research/citations/citationwhich. https://libguides.usc.edu/writingguide/academicwriting#:~:text=IV.%20Language%20The%20investigation%20of%20research%20problems%20in,to%20follow%20your%20line%20of%20thinking%20without%20difficulty.

The images are from educationcareerarticles.com/education-articles/majors-overview/information-on-masters-degree-programs-in-social-science/ and https://trends-worldwide16.blogspot.com/2021/04/format-of-imrad-thesis-example-of.html.

 
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One Reply to “SLR and Education in the Social Science Field”

  1. Education is one of the keystones that our entire society rests upon, and this comes with a lot of information involved within the field. Being able to accurately get your thoughts across to another professional within your field in a timely manner is almost a requirement to work in the sciences, which Education apparently falls under(I didn’t know that!).
    You mention that you like using qualifiers and that you should stay away from overly broad adjectives since you have to keep your writing concise and formal. This holds true for most fields if you’re communicating precise instructions or trying to get a large amount of information to somebody in a meaningful manner since if you just throw all of that information into a Google Doc and throw vague language everywhere, that doesn’t really give them or you what’s needed, does it?

     

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