HAMNIC Solutions - Comprehensive research guidance and project writing support offers expert assistance across all facets of research, writing, and scholarly publication processes, including coaching, editing, proofreading, and data analysis support. We have a passionate, experienced team with diverse academic and scientific research backgrounds determined to help our clients succeed. We also employ a customized, client-centric approach to each project, and our 24/7 availability helps us to meet urgent deadlines and provide ongoing support. In addition, we offer a diverse range of services catering to students, academics, and business professionals. We are committed to ethical practices and providing actionable, evidence-based advice to our clients. To learn more about us, visit: https://lnkd.in/g9W26Hi or contact: [email protected] #hamnicwriting #hamnicsolutions #writingservices #writingcommunity #editingservices #proofreadingservices #dataanlytics #dataanalysis #dissertationcoaching #thesiswritingservices #researchguidance
HAMNIC CUSTOM WRITING SERVICES
写作与编辑
Placentia,California 512 位关注者
Quality and Professional Freelance Academic Writing Services. Contact us through [email protected]
关于我们
- 网站
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https://www.hamnicwritingservices.com/
HAMNIC CUSTOM WRITING SERVICES的外部链接
- 所属行业
- 写作与编辑
- 规模
- 2-10 人
- 总部
- Placentia,California
- 类型
- 教育机构
- 创立
- 2015
- 领域
- Dissertation writing、Research Project help、Academic help、Assignment help、Essay help、iCampus help、Thesis writing、Proofreading、Coursework、Research Proposals、Report writing、Freelance writing、Copytyping、Custom writing、homework help、Statistics help、Finance & Accounting help、Math help、Term papers、Editing、Content writing、Microsoft Excel、Microsoft word、Microsoft project、Power point、Freelance Proofreading services、Educational Resources、Article writing、Technical writing和Blog writing
地点
HAMNIC CUSTOM WRITING SERVICES员工
动态
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A topic is manageable if you can: ● Master the relevant literature ● Collect and analyze the necessary data ● Answer the key questions you have posed ● Do it all within the time available, with the skills you have A topic is important if it: ● Touches directly on major theoretical issues and debates, or ● Addresses substantive topics of great interest in your field #researchtopic #thesistopic #dissertationtopic #manageable #important #topic
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Checklist: Information needed for Citations ● Author or editor (and translator). ● Title of book, article, or chapter in an edited book. ● Book publisher’s name, location, and date of publication Edition number of book, such as 3rd ed. Date of original publication for reprinted books, such as 1776. ● Journal’s name, volume number, and date. ● Pages of article, book chapter, or relevant part of a book. ● Web page address and the date you accessed it. #citation #article #journal #readings #book #thesis #research
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Checklist: reading and taking notes ● Assemble a working bibliography and keep adding to it. ● Read important works intensively; skim others. ● Take Q-notes on readings. ● Develop your own ideas as you read and file them in your thesis ideas file. ● Back up your notes and other data. #reading #takingnotes
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Your notes on books, articles, and other readings should: ● State the main point (or claim) of the article ● List any significant secondary points ● Highlight the evidence or logic used to support these points ● Offer your own (brief) critical assessment of the reading ● Include any ideas that the article suggests for your thesis #notes #takingnotes #thesis #articles
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Academic writing is the simple ability to write clearly, reference extensively, argue strongly, and question endlessly in a field designed to reward all four. #academicwriting
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Take notes that focus on ideas, facts, quotes and data relevant to your thesis. Omit the rest. Good notes are based on your judgment about what is important in the readings and what is relevant to your thesis. You are not a stenographer, trying to write down everything you read. Be selective because, in the end, you are reading to write your own research paper. #reading #takingnotes #thesiswriting #researchpaper
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Tips for taking notes effectively As a senior, you’ve already taken a lot of notes in college, and by now you have your own system for doing it. ● Always write down page numbers in your notes. Because your thesis should attribute specific information to specific sources, you need to write down page numbers when you find key data and ideas. ● Get your information from several sources and check them against each other. Underscore any important conflicts. ● Get an overview of each book or article before reading it in detail. Before reading the material carefully, read the abstract, introduction, and conclusion and skim the rest quickly. That will orient you to important materials, reinforce major points, and allow you to skip some minor chapters or sections entirely. ● When you paraphrase, use language that is truly your own, not a close imitation of the author’s. It is your paper, and it should be your distinctive voice. ● Don’t use highlighters. I know, everybody uses them. But, in fact, they don’t help and can actually hurt your work. They create two problems: Highlighting too many points and Remembering too few. Highlighters create the illusion that you have thought about the main points, when all you have done is painted them. Rather than wasting time highlighting, spend a few minutes after you finish the reading actually thinking about the article. What’s the author’s main point? What kind of evidence or arguments are used to support it? ● Use consistent abbreviations in your notes. If your notes deal with nineteenth-century Britain, for example, you might use “CD” to mean Charles Dickens. Just remember that you need a different abbreviation for Charles Darwin. ● Transfer your handwritten notes to the computer. They will be much more usable. ● If you photocopy or download articles, make some marginal notations and underline a few crucial lines of text. (Restrain yourself from underlining much more.) #notes #notetaking #thesiswriting #reading #articles #journals #books
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The right way to paraphrase and cite: ● You are responsible for your written work, including the ideas, facts and interpretations you include. ● Unless you say otherwise, every word you write is assumed to be your own. ● When you rely on others’ work or ideas, acknowledge it openly. - When you use their ideas or data, give them credit. - When you use their exact words, use quotation marks plus a citation. - When you paraphrase, use your own distinctive voice and cite the original source. Make sure your language doesn’t mimic the original. If it still does after rewriting, then use direct quotes. - When you rely heavily on an author for part of your paper, say so. ● When you draw on others’ work, present it fairly. No distortions. No straw men. ● When you present empirical material, show where you acquired it, so others can check the data for themselves. (The exception is commonly known material, which does not need to be cited.) #citation #paraphrasing #thesiswriting
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Tips on avoiding plagiarism: When in doubt, give credit by citing the original source. ● If you use an author’s exact words, enclose them in quotation marks and include a citation in a footnote, an endnote, or an in-text note. If the quote is longer, use block indentation (without quotation marks), followed by a citation in a note. ● If you paraphrase another author, use your own language. Don’t imitate the original. Be sure to include a citation. ● If you rely on or report someone else’s ideas, credit their source, whether you agree with them or not. #academichonesty #plagiarism #thesis #academicwriting