South African Housing: Research Paper

South African Housing: Research Paper

Use the library and other resources (including the text) to further research your topic. You can use a variety of articles from journals, trade publications, and other resources. Remember that the best information usually comes from scholarly works published in peer-reviewed journals. Any materials you find should be published after the year 2000, unless there are historical and/or comparative reasons for using older works. Some materials are “classics” and using older publications because they are classics is permitted. This “published after the year 2000” is not a mandatory requirement and will not negatively affect your grade; however the best materials are usually recent. Identify the problem/issue/concept of your topic. In other words, what overall issue(s) are addressed in the resources you read about your topic? Include information about why it’s important to study this topic. Delineate the problem/issue/concept. In other words, say more about the topic (for example, cite statistics about the topic and who it affects and why). What do other people say about your topic? Identify additional aspects (features) of the topic, which may be related to the materials that you have read. Think outside the box. Are there interesting, compelling, obscure, or unusual aspects related to your topic? Including this information would help make your paper more interesting. Develop your own synthesis, discussion, and conclusions. In this section, write about what you think about the topic and why. Are the conclusions of the materials you read sound? Do you agree or disagree with the journals and other articles you read? Or, is there some doubt about what you read? Include any assumptions or inferences from what you read. Please try NOT to use first or second person in your paper. In other words, don’t use the word “I” or the word “you” in your paper unless it’s necessary. If you can’t help using first or second person in your paper because you are relating the material in the articles to your own experience or opinions, that’s okay. But please limit the words “I” and “you” as much as possible. Think about developing a section devoted to “Further Research.” In other words, indicate what additional research might be conducted by others to gain more knowledge about the topic that was not provided in the articles you read. What else needs to be done about the problem/topic/issue? Did the materials you read include enough information? Did the author(s) reach the correct conclusions? Do you trust the articles? What about the credibility of the sources you found and used? Are conclusions from the articles valid and reliable? Why or why not? Include a References Cited section at the end of your paper. Use American Psychological Association (APA) style in both the text of your paper and in the References Cited. Do not include any references in this section that were not “cited” in your paper. Use at least five (5) different references, such as references from a peer­ reviewed journal, one reference from a trade publication, one reference from a newspaper, etc. You should be referencing at least one peer-reviewed journal article in your paper. The rest of your references can be from any legitimate source. How many times you cite each source is up to you.