A
Comparative Analysis of Two Research Articles:
Their Results, Discussions and Conclusions.
Swales and Feak (1994) have extensively worked on how
to report data in the results section of a Research Article (RA). These authors
have detailed all the conventions to be followed when writing the discussions
and the conclusions sections of a RA as well. Such sections should show the
writer’s ability to summarize, present a problem and its solution, evaluate the
solution, present the drawbacks of the research, and convince the readers that
his/her conclusions and recommendations are of utmost importance.
Results, Discussions and Conclusions are standard parts of RAs and it is
necessary to understand these distinctive elements in order to accurately
evaluate the research being offered. The various parts of them may be presented
in a slightly different manner or be titled differently; still the essential
parts of the paper will always be the same. The current paper aims at
analysing and contrasting two research articles in different professional
fields. One belongs to the field of medicine and the other one to the field of
education, respectively. Their
results, discussions and conclusions sections will be compared so as to explore
the differences and similarities of those sections in both papers.
In the medicine article written by Smith, Kerr, Fenner, Straker (2014) results,
discussions and conclusions are blended into two main sections (Results and
Discussions). By contrast, in the educational article written by Aydin & Yildiz (2014), results, discussion and
conclusion are exposed separately in three different sections (Results,
Discussion and Conclusion).
According to Swales (1990), the results section should
summarize the given data by means of using texts, tables, and /or figures to
state the results of the study. It is worth noting that while Aydin et al. (2014) makes use of tables and graphs to
represent the results which have been obtained, Smith et al. (2014) uses only
two tables but no graphs or figures. Instead, the data in this section is summarized in a text
format, exposing the results by the use of statistics, especially through
representational percentage. For example, in the educational article, in the
subcategory “The Effects of Task Type on Form-related vs. Meaning-related
Changes” results are presented in a figure which shows that the distribution of
the number of meaning-related and form-related changes in the three tasks were
more meaning-related changes than form-related changes. This distribution was
analysed using descriptive statistics and summarized in tables 1 and 2.
To turn to the use of tables and
figures in the educational article, the standard rules established by the
American Psychological Association (2007) are mostly respected. They are
appropriately numbered and have an individual title which is italicized and
presented with each word capitalized. For instance, “Table 1. Distribution of the
number of MRCs in All Three Tasks”. Moreover, the presented tables are correctly
referenced in the text of the paper. For example, “Learners participated in three different
meaning-focused tasks (Table 1) that were selected to engage them in the
collaboration and negotiation of both meaning and form as they produced texts
in a wiki-based environment”.
However, some similarities in the results section can be highlighted. In both papers
the results section is isolated from the discussion section. In the same way,
the writers of both papers first describe the results and then discuss them. In addition,
we can find that past tenses are widely used to describe the results which have
been achieved.
The discussion section in Smith et al.'s (2014)
article is divided into
ten subsections according to the topics relevant to the research. The first
part presents an
overview in which the key
findings are restated with reference to the initial hypothesis. At the same
time, the authors remind the reader of the overall purpose of the study. In
Smith et al.’s words, “The present study contributes to the evidence base
around experiences of overweight and obese adolescents and their parents in
response to text messages designed to support behaviour change in the
maintenance period of a larger intervention” (Smith et al., 2014, p.13). Conversely, Aydin et al.’s article’s discussion
section is divided into the four same categories which are presented in the
results section. Likewise, the results of the study are discussed in relation to theory and previous
research, in the light of the data which has been obtained. For instance, in the discussion
section of the educational article the results of the study are discussed
according to the obtained data and in relation to theory and previous research.
Both quantitative and qualitative data provided multiple sources of information
regarding the use of wikis in collaborative writing projects and the role of
task type during this process. It is
worthwhile mentioning that when analysing the discussions sections of both RAs,
the one on the medicine field exposes the conclusion within this section
whereas the educational article presents it in an isolated manner.
Concerning the conclusion section, both
articles devote a section of the paper to state and describe the limitations
of the investigation. Not only do both research articles use the conclusion to
tie the paper together but also to emphasize the fact that further
investigation would be of great value for the research. As Smith et al. states,
“Future research should be clear on the engagement or efficacy aims for an intervention,
develop messages to accommodate adolescent preferences in conjunction with an
appropriate theory, and employ appropriate evaluation measures of engagement or
effectiveness” (Smith, et al., 2014, p 21).
Although each research article offers a
different layout, both succeeded in including the main RAs’ standard parts showing
the writers’ ability to summarize the results of their work, presenting the problems, providing solutions
and evaluating them.
However, the fact that they both refer to the drawbacks of their investigations
makes the reader feel the need to continue reading more about the topic.
To sum up, it can be said that
despite both articles come from different fields, authors of both papers intended
to present their problems following RAs’ structures, with an introduction, a
literature review, a method section, a results, a discussion and a conclusion section
in their papers. In this sense, it can be affirmed that both articles belong to
a discourse community. One belongs to the medicine discourse community and the
other to the educational discourse community, correspondingly.
References
American
Psychological Association (2007). Concise
rules of APA style. Washington ,
DC : British Library
Cataloguing-in- Publication Data.
Aydin,
Z. & Yildiz, S. (2014). Using wikis to promote collaborative EFL
writing. Language Learning & Technology 18 (1), 160-180.
Retrieved fromhttp://llt.msu.edu/issues/february
2014/aydinyildiz.pdf
Smith, K., Kerr, D., Fenner, A., & Straker, L.
(2014) Adolescents Just Do Not Know What They Want: A Qualitative Study to
Describe Obese Adolescents’ Experiences of Text Messaging to Support Behaviour
Change Maintenance Post Intervention. Journal
of MedicalInternetResearch, 2014;
16(4):e103. DOI: 10.2196/jmir.3113.
Swales,
J.M (1990). Genre analysis: English in
academic and research settings. (Cambridge
Applied Linguistics Series). Cambridge , UK : Cambridge
University Press.
Swales, J. M., & Feak, C.B. (1994). Academic writing for graduate students: Essential tasks and skills.Ann Arbor , MI : University
of Michigan Press.
Swales, J. M., & Feak, C.B. (1994). Academic writing for graduate students: Essential tasks and skills.
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