Problem, The central issue or question the study seeks to address; the gap in knowledge or practice that motivates the research., Scope, The boundaries of the study, including what is covered and what is excluded (topics, time frame, population, variables), Limitation, Constraints beyond the researcher’s control that may affect the study (e.g., sample size, time, resources)., Significance, The importance or value of the study, explaining how it contributes to knowledge, practice, or society., Introduction, The opening section of a research paper that presents background, context, rationale, and objectives., Synthesis, The process of combining ideas, findings, or perspectives from different sources to form a coherent understanding., Citation, A formal reference to a source used in the research, acknowledging the original author., APA, The American Psychological Association style, a widely used format for citations, references, and paper structure., Plagiarism, Presenting someone else’s work or ideas as your own without proper acknowledgment., Literature Review, A critical summary and analysis of existing research related to the study’s topic., Respondent, An individual who provides data for the study, often through surveys, interviews, or questionnaires., Methodology, The overall approach and procedures used in conducting the research (design, participants, instruments, analysis)., Instrument, The tool used to collect data (e.g., questionnaire, interview guide, test)., Design, The structured plan of the study (e.g., qualitative, quantitative)., Locale, The geographical or institutional setting where the research is conducted., Results, The presentation of data and findings obtained from the research, often in tables, figures, or narrative form., Discussions, The interpretation of results, linking them to the research problem, literature, and implications., Conclusion, The closing section that summarizes findings, highlights contributions, and may suggest recommendations., Reference, The detailed list of all sources cited in the research, usually at the end of the paper., Hypothesis, A testable statement predicting the relationship between variables, guiding the research investigation..
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