Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on Evaluating Periodicals’ Approach to Topics. Have the paper e-mailed to you 24/7/365.
Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 9 page paper assessing several articles on topics within criminology. In this “Information Age,” the researcher who would produce high-quality work must know the relative value of the information s/he consults in the course of that research. The purpose here is to examine eight published articles from a variety of sources, categorizing the articles according to the type of publication in which they appear and to the authority of their authors. The paper examines articles from scholarly journals, trade magazines and the popular press, as well as provides annotation for three journal articles. Bibliography lists 9 sources.
Page Count:
9 pages (~225 words per page)
File: CC6_KScrimArtType.rtf
Buy This Term Paper »
 
Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
"Information Age," the researcher who would produce high-quality work must know the relative value of the information s/he consults in the course of that research. The purpose here is
to examine eight published articles from a variety of sources, categorizing the articles according to the type of publication in which they appear and to the authority of their authors.
I. Distinguishing Periodicals Articles Used Scholarly Journal Finarelli, Joseph (1999, April). High-speed police chases and section 1983: Why a definitive
liability standard may not matter. Defense Counsel Journal, 66(2), p. 238. Trade Magazine Tabin, Barrie (1998, June 1). Supreme Court
affirms limits on local liability for high speed chases. Nations Cities Weekly, 21(22), p. 1. Popular Magazine Melton, Mary (2003, February).
If It Speeds, It Leads. Los Angeles Magazine, 48(2), p. 50. Comparisons Authorship Finarelli (1999) was not a full-fledged attorney at
the time this article was published. Rather, he was a third-year law student (i.e., nearly finished) who had won honorable mention for this article in the 1998 IADC Legal
Writing Contest. The text of the article published in Defense Counsel Journal and retrieved from Gale Groups InfoTrac OneFile database makes no indication of whether articles appearing in the
journal are peer-reviewed, but the reader can be certain that Finarellis (1999) article is legitimate, factual and accurate. That certainty arises from the fact that it won an honorable
mention in the IADC Legal Writing Contest and that experts in the field closely scrutinized all entries. Nations Cities Weekly gives no
...