1 / 12

Anatomy of an Abstract

Learn how to write a concise and engaging abstract for conferences, symposiums, journal articles, and more. This guide covers the format, content, and key elements of a well-crafted abstract.

jnorton
Télécharger la présentation

Anatomy of an Abstract

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Anatomy of an Abstract Malika Moutawakkil Bell Education & Human Resources Center for Adaptive Optics University of California Santa Cruz

  2. What is an Abstract? • A mini paper • One paragraph • Describes what you are going to discuss, present or write about • Gives reader and overview of the facts • Source of new ideas • Gets reader interested (ie: at a conference)

  3. Anatomy of an Abstract • Introduction • Hypothesis/Goal/Problem • Observations/Experiment/Methods • Results (May not have these by the time you write your abstract) • Discussion and Conclusion

  4. Know Your Audience • Play up the news • Write with a person in mind • What forum? • Scientific conference • School Symposium • Journal article • SACNAS or AMOS

  5. Questions to Ask Yourself • What problem did I solve? • What goal did I reach? • Why does it matter (to industry, science, etc)? • How can my work be applied? • How does my work fit in with the work of others? • Can I support my claims? • Is my result expected or is this a new way of thinking about the subject? • What assumptions did I make?

  6. What Must an Abstract Have? • Adequate information on which to make a judgment. • Brief description • Results, observations and a conclusion. • Possible applications

  7. How to Write It • Sketch out your findings • Separate main findings from supporting findings • Construct the main sentence • Include supporting evidence • Add something interesting • Tie everything together in logical order with good transition.

  8. What an Abstract Doesn’t Include • Description of secondary findings • References • Jargon and unexplained acronyms • Too many words • Lots of detail

  9. Before Submitting Your Abstract • Discuss each draft with your mentor • NO errors or typos • Get your institution’s approval (learn their policy as soon as you start work!!!) • Follow guidelines of who ever is requesting the abstract

  10. Your Assignment Today • Write an abstract about either: • The Camera Obscura Inquiry OR • The Lenses and Refraction Inquiry • Include what we talked about today • Due: Friday AM • We’ll do peer review in class on Friday AM

  11. Thurs. June 3 1st draft Short Course Abstract Due + Peer Review - Peer review, get staff review at end of day Fri. July 7 1st draft of Project Abstract Due - Get staff review by July 11th Mon. June 14 Final Short Course Abstract Due - Save for portfolio Fri. July 14 2nd draft of Project Abstract Due - Get staff review by July 18th Fri. July 21 Final of Project Abstract Due Fri. July 20 Abstract due to SACNAS (if applicable) Abstracts Within Your Internship Sat. June 4 2nd draft Short Course Abstract due - Get staff review at end of day Tues. May 30 Anatomy of an Abstract

  12. You will do GREAT!!!

More Related