How to write a level 6 coursework for the ECON 1033 course?

How to write a level 6 coursework for the ECON 1033 course?

The Problem
A significant proportion of final year students are not able to differentiate between the styles of writing appropriate to technical reports, journalistic articles and

academic papers.  When they do differentiate, (many students attempt the latter style) they may spoil what is basically a thorough piece of work, by inadequate

structuring.
What style you should use? The best way to appreciate the genre is to experience it. Read a few!  What is presented here is an attempt to provide guidelines for the

gross structuring of such a paper.  All Term papers should have an introduction, a discussion section organised in some way or other and a conclusion
The Proposed Solution
A skeleton framework for sectioning a coursework is given here, together with some suggestions for content.  The major sections of a coursework should be-
•    Identification
•    Abstract
•    Introduction
•    Discussion
•    Conclusion
•    Acknowledgements
•    Bibliography
The requirements of each section are discussed below.
Discussion
The Identification Section
This simply consists of the title of the coursework, your student ID number the status of the document, such as-
‘An undergraduate level 6 coursework submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements of ECON 1033: Economics of Finance and Investment.’
This may simply be laid out in print on a sheet of A4, or as some student’s choosing, it may be ‘dressed-up’ with graphics but remember: Over-done, this can create the

impression that this is a light weight journalistic article.  The same goes for ‘over producing’ the design and layout of the document.  Remember: restraint in the

cause of taste may be exercised.  Any illustrations used should be there to convey information, not as decoration. Also remember that any photocopy of the coursework

is often in black and white and not in colour so you need to be careful about contrasting colours in the original document when you are producing charts and graphs.
The Abstract
This is the whole paper condensed to a paragraph.  (It could be longer, but one paragraph is usually most appropriate.)  Please write this right at the end. It is

important to include three things; the main problem addressed an outline of the solution offered, and any conclusions reached.  Do not hold back on any of these — you

are writing an academic paper, not a thriller, so giving the game away before the conclusion does not matter!
The Introduction
Here you present the question or problem that the coursework attempts to solve. Formulate one question and that question is what you paper is all about.  If it is not

obvious what question your coursework answers, it will be difficult to decide what use it is (and at the end of the day, how to assess it).  You must be able to

provide a clear statement of what the term paper or project seeks to achieve. Obviously, the scale of the question must be constrained by the resources at your

disposal, of which time is a major limitation.  You are not required to be original at this level but it should be a piece of your own work. Simply demonstrate your

competence at researching a topic within your professional domain and presenting your findings in an appropriate manner.  If the answer to a particular question would

be interesting to you or even better useful to your future work then it is better for you, but do not assume, however, that the relevance or interest of the question

is immediately obvious to other readers.  In this section, you should also motivate the question, that is, explain why it is interesting and relevant. A final function

for the introduction is to explain how the discussion has been structured.  It may be that several positions in an argument are examined, or a couple of case studies

are presented and analysed.  The aim is to make sure the reader understands why you are giving any particular piece of information in the place that you do.
The Discussion
This is the main body of the coursework. You need to demonstrate your knowledge of the relevant literature by researching and identifying key debates; concepts and

theories form a variety of academic sources.  You must clarify how the paper fits into the debate within the literature and how this literature will be used to develop

the methodology, if one is required. You must review the literature and put it in the context of your learning outcome of the course. Before submitting your coursework

always read the main objectives of the course and use some of arguments presented in the lectures or some of the questions you reviewed in the in- class test. You need

to explore the question that you have posed in the context of course learning and give a chain of reasoning that will justify the conclusions that you present. It

should not be written as one block of text, but should be broken up into relevant sections.  Each section should probably have  a descriptive title, then explaining

the question that this section answers and how it does this, discussion paragraphs that give the substance of the material and a conclusion that points out the

detailed step that this section justifies — and which is going to be used in the overall discussion.  You may wish to draw attention to these sub-sections by giving

them individual headings, but more often, this becomes cumbersome and they are better left simply as paragraphs.
Footnotes should not be used in the Harvard system and at any rate always use them sparingly, if at all.  Generally, all points should be made in the text of the

discussion — and if they cannot, then you must ask if they need to be made at all.
The literature review leads into an appropriate section on the discussion of methodology
The Conclusion of your coursework
Here you present your answer to the question posed in the introduction, together with a justification indicating how the chain of reasoning flows from the discussion.

You may wish to indicate any points that were not able to be resolved and suggest lines of further enquiry. The coursework conclusions should demonstrate a well-

rounded discussion of any main recommendations or findings arising from the research undertaken.
The Bibliography and References
It is vital that you give full references to the literature that you have consulted. This is appropriate in a coursework and you risk accusations of plagiarism if you

do not! Use the Harvard System which is the most popular and fashionable at present time. To indicate a reference in the body of the text, the name of the author, page

and date should be given. Explicit reference should be given for both quoted text, which must be distinguished by quotation marks, and any paraphrased text:
‘Financial time series, such as stock prices, interest rates, foreign exchange rates, and inflation rates, often exhibit the phenomenon of volatility clustering.’

(Gujarati, D.2011, pp.238).

You may choose to further distinguish quotations by indentation, change of type face, etc.  Where you have abbreviated quoted text, the cuts should be indicated by

three dots (…), called ellipsis.
Any source referred to must appear in the bibliography section, giving; the name/s of the author/s, the title, the date of publication, in the case of a journal paper

— the name of the journal, in the case of a book — the publisher.
Please note that all your individual written work will be assessed according to its clarity, thoroughness, application to real world situations, and use of appropriate

citation techniques you need to submit a document following the normal procedures of term papers at Greenwich University. The work is expected to be your own work.

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