The
purpose of this paper is to make a comparative analysis of the Results,
Discussions, and Conclusions sections of two research papers (RPs) belonging to
two completely different areas, namely the fields of education and medicine.
The article belonging to the medicine field is a case study research carried
out to analyze the interrelationship between kidney and cardiovascular disease.
It is organized into Abstract, Introduction, Methods, Results, Discussion and Conclusion.
The article on education is concerned
with a research implemented to foster the use of Second Language outside the
classroom with a Computer-Mediated Communication (CMC) programme. It is divided
into introduction, methodology, results, and limitations; each of these
sections is also subdivided through the use of sub-headings. While Di
Angelantonio, Chowdhury, Sarwar, Aspelund, Danesh and Gudnason´s (2010) medical
article, exposes the three sections commonly found in research articles
separately, Barss`s (2012) educational article integrates the results with the
discussion altogether. However, the authors have mostly included all the
requirements that these three sections have to follow for a research paper to
be academic.
Both of
the articles in discussion are descriptive in nature. The past simple
tense is used to describe the Results sections. At the beginning of the Results section of her
article, Barrs (2012) explains in a descriptive way “A four-week project was
set up during the 2010 football World Cup, utilising a Moodle forum, whereby
students were randomly assigned a country`s team to follow and had to post a
message on the team`s tournament performance.” (p. 15). In her article, Barss (2012) divides her
Results section into two parts, which are the periods she had for her action
research, where she provides the results of the research by presenting the main
findings and summarizing the data connected to the question of the paper with
text and figures. In contrast, the article on medicine, has different headings
in order to separate the different paragraphs of the Results section. While Di
Angelantonio`s (2010) paper includes the discussions
section separetely from the results, Barss (2012) describes the results and
discusses them in the same section.
Regarding the presentation of data,
both articles use texts to state the results of their studies and include
graphics such as tables or figures where the reader can refer to. After showing the collection of data through
three different Tables, the education RP compares the results and gives an
explanation for the differences in this way; “As can be seen from the data in
Tables 1-3, the number of postings in general as well as the number of
interactions that went beyond a singular posting reply pattern were low,
especially considering this was a 4-week project.” (Barrs, 2012, p.16). As regards the description found in the
medicine article, a more complex way of describing data is included when the
results of the Tables and Figures are analysed by the authors. Di Angelantonio
et. al (2010) explains “Addition of smoking status, systolic blood pressure,
total cholesterol, and diabetes to a coronary heart disease risk model
containig only age (and stratified by sex) increased the C index from 0.6453 to
0.6963.” (p. 4). The tables included in
the educational paper comply with the basic rules established by APA (2007). It
contains six tables and one figure. All of them are correctly numbered and the
headings are italiced and all the words are in capital letters. The medicine
research paper, instead, does not respect certain requirements. It includes
four tables and two figures. They are numbered but the titles are not in
italics, and only the first word is capitalized. They are accompanied by notes
in a smaller typeface which are meant to clarify the information presented.
The Conclusions
section in the research paper on education is preceded by limitations which
explain the negative points or difficulties that had to be faced during
the research, the author has included information about certain changes that
had to be implemented. Barrs (2012) makes use of tentative language to express
certain degree of probability in her findings which is more academic in the
educational field. The Conclusions section in Barss’s (2012) article
starts by stating the relevance of the research and the importance of
developing this kind of study which is highlighted throughout the whole paper.
This is presented as a positive experience which is seen as a way of solving
the question introduced at the beginning of the article: How to make learners
practice the language outside the classroom. On the other research paper, the
Conclusions section is preceded not only by limitations but also by strengths.
The conclusions are presented in the present tense and the author shows
certainty about the statements.
On the whole, it can be asserted that even though there
seems to be no direct relationship between the fields of education and medicine,
there are certain similarities between both articles. RPs tend to comply with
certain rules no matter which field they relate to. The reader is provided with
the necessary information about the situations described on both papers. They
contain clear explanations of the background applying both the clarity principle and the reality principle, which help the reader
understand the problem. Finally, they provide a possible solution which is also
evaluated by the authors. All in all, it
may be assumed that objectivity is present in both papers. However, Di
Angelantonio tends to be less moderate than Barr when he draws his conclusions,
this may be due to the fact that his research has been conducted on the
scientific field where the data can be described as more precise than the one
in the education field.
References
American
Psychological Association (2007). Concise
rules of APA style. Washington, DC:
British Library Cataloguing-in –Publication Data.
Barrs, K. (2012).
Fostering computer-mediated L2 interaction beyond the classroom. Language and Learning & Technology, 16(1),
10
Di Angelantonio, E., Chowdhury,
R., Sarwar, N., Aspelund, T., Danesh, J., & Gudnason, V. (2010).Chronic
kidney disease and risk of major cardiovascular disease and non-vascular mortality: prospective
populationbased cohort study. British Medical Journal, 341:c4986.
doi: 10.1136/bmj.c4986
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