Thursday, April 23, 2015

How to Write a Good Introduction in Three Steps

by Arjenne Louter,The Dutch PhD Coach: http://www.thedutchphdcoach.com/writing/how-to-write-a-good-introduction-in-three-steps/

A while ago my colleague Daan Andriessen brought the ‘Swales three move model for introductions’ to my attention.

Very practical, because a well-written introduction can help you in producing a well written article. Therefor I would like to introduce you to the ‘3 moves’, this is the version of James Luberda.

Be aware that these ‘moves’ aren’t rules, but more a guideline for what readers expect in the introduction of an academic article. By making these ‘moves’ the reader will have more sufficient information to follow the story line of your article.

The Swales moves help you to write a good introduction


Move 1    Establishing a territory

In this opening move, the writer may do one or more of the following to broadly sketch out where the subject of his/her essay falls - the “big picture”
·             Point out the importance of the general subject
·             Make generalizations about the subject
·             Review items of previous research

Move 2    Establishing a niche

In this move, the writer then indicates to the reader the particular area of the broader subject that the essay will deal with. This can be done using one or more of the following:
·       Make a counter-claim, i.e. assert something contrary to expectations
·       Indicate a gap in the existing research/thinking
·       Raise a question about existing research/thinking
·       Suggest the essay is continuing a tradition, i.e. it is following in the footsteps of previous research/thinking

Move 3    Occupying the niche

In this move, the writer then sketches out exactly what this particular essay will accomplish in relation to move #2, and gives the reader a sense of how the essay will proceed. In general, each of the steps below will appear in this move, in order:
·       Step 1: Outline the purpose of the essay, or state the research that was pursued
·       Step 2: State the principal findings of the essay - what the reader can expect the essay/research will have accomplished for them by the time they get to the end
·       Step 3: Indicate, roughly, the structure of the essay - what will appear in it and in what order

Do you have a different way to prepare a well-written introduction? I would love to hear from you.

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