As I’ve noted before, many of the blog posts I write are about things that I know my own students and research assistants need (or will need). This is one of those cases. My students and research assistants often ask me “how should I write a powerful introduction?” It’s also one of the blog posts that other students and ECRs have asked me to write for a very long time. So here it is.
What is the purpose of an introduction to a paper, a journal article, a book or a dissertation?
In a recent Facebook conversation, Dr. Pat Thomson (University of Nottingham) mentioned that it was important that the writer knows what’s the purpose of the paper. Pat and her coauthor Barbara Kamler argue that the very first move of the paper is usually to LOCATE, that is, to situate the paper (or book or journal article, or thesis) within the broader theoretical and empirical literature. Having read their book I tend to agree, though in the papers that I am using as an example here, not everyone uses the exact same structure as Thomson and Kamler do. Still, Thomson and Kamler’s advice is sound and one that should be heeded when thinking about introductions. See Slide 3 in the embedded Power Point in Pat’s post on introductions.
I can’t claim that I write the best introductions, but in a similar way as I did when I wrote about the difference between description and analysis in academic writing, I have used exemplars from other scholars to offer insights into how introductions to papers, book chapters, books, and theses should be written. I tweeted an entire thread (which you can open by clicking on the tweet shown below).
This article on framing and media effects gives me a chance to show the notion of topic sentences for paragraphs. And well-written intros. pic.twitter.com/vhaskftUL3
— Dr Raul Pacheco-Vega (@raulpacheco) January 27, 2018
Note how Cacciatore at al have made their first sentence in each paragraph the "topic sentence". This one anchors the paragraph. pic.twitter.com/KlZ0fhTDMm
— Dr Raul Pacheco-Vega (@raulpacheco) January 27, 2018
Notice how the last sentence before paper outline (& contributions) paragraph explains summarily what the article will do: clarify framing pic.twitter.com/1ys6nukZ19
— Dr Raul Pacheco-Vega (@raulpacheco) January 27, 2018
There are a few methods to write introductions. Below you’ll find Dr. Jessica Calarco (Indiana University)’s formula. She breaks it down in three paragraphs:
My Formula:
P1: The puzzle (preview lit review)
P2: My solution (preview methods, findings)
P3: Why my solution rocks (preview discussion)— Jess Calarco (@JessicaCalarco) August 1, 2017
- The puzzle – a synthetic summary of the literature review.
- The solution – a short discussion of methods and findings.
- The “why this solution works” – a preview of the discussion section.
When the introduction is longer than 3 paragraphs you’ll often find a method like Michael Cacciatore and coauthors:
Note how in my 8 sequential steps to writing a paper, I put special emphasis in deploying the introduction https://t.co/QtktllEpGs (I'll have to write a blog post on how to write introductions too).
— Dr Raul Pacheco-Vega (@raulpacheco) January 27, 2018
- The puzzle.
- The challenges that the problem posing a puzzle presents.
- The implications of the challenges this puzzle offers.
- These authors’ approach.
- The contributions these authors make in this paper, and a paper outline.
Dr. Andrew Biro uses a 3 paragraph method as well in a recent paper he published on bottled water.
1st. "Reading a Water Menu" by @andrewbiro Note how Dr. Biro deploys first 3 paragraphs of his paper: Status of global water market (P1) w/a hint to what his paper is about. "Others have said X, Y and Z, BUT not accounted for W (which I do)" (P2) In this paper, I explain W (P3) pic.twitter.com/NG0yzqQsmb
— Dr Raul Pacheco-Vega (@raulpacheco) January 30, 2018
Dr. Biro’s method is:
- This is the puzzle we’re facing.
- These are the questions nobody has considered and the factors that could potentially explain these phenomena.
- This is how I approach the questions and answer them and provide an explanation.
I also have really enjoyed how Dr. Malini Ranganathan (American University) writes introductions. Her introductory pages are similar to those written by a human geographer and/or an anthropologist. Dr. Ranganathan offers a lot of context in her introduction in this particular paper. I found the introduction really compelling and I wanted to describe it in more detail, as her approach is also very useful.
First, note @maliniranga 's approach: P1 (context and where I fit in within this research). P2 (what this article is about) P3 (how my paper fits within the special issue and the broader literature) P4 (my argument, and how it departs from existing literature/discussions) pic.twitter.com/Vh3lYmzPcJ
— Dr Raul Pacheco-Vega (@raulpacheco) January 30, 2018
Second, note how @maliniranga highlights 3 contributions of her paper. This is an excellent model that could be used as well for a doctoral dissertation in the 3 papers format: "Here are the 3 contributions that I make to the overall literature, A, B, and C" (P5, 6 and 7) pic.twitter.com/pgZ6tWdnHb
— Dr Raul Pacheco-Vega (@raulpacheco) January 30, 2018
Note how P8 and P9 of @maliniranga 's intro explain "this is the conventional wisdom, here's how I am challenging it" (P8) and "these are the data sources and how the paper will develop its argument" (P9) pic.twitter.com/vyguIXuv2k
— Dr Raul Pacheco-Vega (@raulpacheco) January 30, 2018
Dr. Ranganathan’s method of writing an introduction (at least as deployed in this particular paper) can be summarized as follows:
- Context of the research and where this paper is situated.
- Description of the paper.
- Fit: how this paper fits within the broader literature.
- Contribution: a summary of this paper’s argument and how it is different from what we already know.
- Addition to the literature 1
- Addition to the literature 2
- Addition to the literature 3
- Challenges the author of this paper offers that disagree with, or prove current wisdom wrong
- Data sources, methods and findings.
This method is extraordinarily powerful for doctoral dissertations, 3-paper theses, and books. I do love offering contributions in groups of three, and I have noticed many writers follow this model.
Another example that I used was Dr. Chris Weible and Dr. David Carter’s paper synthesizing policy studies literature with non-profit scholarship.
Now a paper by @DCarterSLC and @chris_weible – note how Drs. Carter and Weible clearly describe in P1 and P2 what the article is about. pic.twitter.com/h2Z4R2xFiA
— Dr Raul Pacheco-Vega (@raulpacheco) January 30, 2018
.@DCarterSLC @chris_weible these introductions are quite powerful – WHY do we ask these questions (P1) and HOW do WE answer them (P2)
— Dr Raul Pacheco-Vega (@raulpacheco) January 30, 2018
This particular introduction is incredibly short and powerful. In two paragraphs, Dr. Aiyer synthesizes his entire paper.
A couple of last minute additions (and examples). This is an example of a SUPER BRIEF introduction where author lays it out in 2 paragraphs pic.twitter.com/ylRC5HUGE2
— Dr Raul Pacheco-Vega (@raulpacheco) January 30, 2018
IN SUMMARY, MY OWN APPROACH:
In my view your introduction (paper, book, book chapter, thesis) should clearly state:
- The puzzle – “this phenomenon is occurring and we don’t know why”
- The approach – “let’s study X by doing Y and Z things”
- The research findings/argument – “we find/we argue”, and
- The paper’s contributions – “here’s the money shot & why’s good”
While I also highlighted other authors, I wanted to keep those tweets for a future blog post on using topic sentences to anchor and write entire paragraphs. Hopefully this summary of approaches to writing introductions can be helpful to students, researchers and professors alike.
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