Writing Research Papers celebrates 50 years of delivering current, detailed guidance on academic research, writing and documentation. You'll learn how to tackle issues of source credibility and usefulness of online research, electronic publishing, and new documentation formats.
Though I read almost every page for class, this is really meant to be used as a reference tool for when you need help on a specific issue.
One star removed for some really outdated advice on tech. For example, they recommend Ask, Dogpile, and Yahoo as search engines (43) and talk about how you can do discussion groups "even with audio and video, in some cases" (19).
Writing Research Papers by James Lester is a useful guide. It also gives many examples of the thesis, introduction, etc. I realized it is more for humanities, argumentative, or literary essays rather than STEM-style research.
ნარმალნა, ვერ დავემდურები. დეტალურად იყო. იმდენად, რომ მკაფიოდ მახსოვს, თუ პირადი საუბრისას ვინმეს ნათქვამი ჩემი ნაშრომის ინსპირაცია იქნება, უნდა მივუთითო, ამ ადამიანის სახელსა და გვართან ერთად :დ
Meh. Fair, but nothing spectacular. Used the 13th edition.
ETA: And now I'm using the 14th edition. I'm still trying to see what on earth they've changed that required a new edition. Also, one of the James D. Lesters credited above should have a Jr. after his name.
ETA2: I'm now up through chapter 12 in an 18 chapter book, and all the changes thus far have been cosmetic: changing fonts, choosing different colors for headings, the occasional slightly rephrased sentence. I am growing highly suspicious.
Well, I have now finished. And there was absolutely no reason why they needed to update over the previous edition with this. It's essentially identical except for a few changes that mess enough with page numbers so they no longer match. This sort of ruse to make students buy new texts and limit the reselling of used books, all while charging truly ridiculous prices for the text, really gets me mad.