Paper details
¢ A title page that includes the title of the report, your name, and the date on which you are submitting the paper.
¢ A clear introduction describing the topic you chose and the way you have decided to analyze it. The first sentence of your introduction should answer the question: what am I trying to show?
¢ A summary of your essential ideas or arguments. Try to limit yourself to 3 main points. You should separate each point by having different sections/paragraphs. Feel free to make subsections where needed.
¢ A conclusion in which you restate the question you are analyzing, summarize the main points you developed and present the results you drew from that analysis.
¢ A reference section (or bibliography) where you list the references used.
¢ You may add an appendix for graphs, data or mathematical derivations.
Customer`s project will be continued. The next steps are below (with approximate time of beginning).
3. Draft
You should submit a draft version of your paper containing all the main ideas/points that you are going to develop. If your first draft is good, you will only have to make minor revisions before turning it in as your final report and will not need to include new material.
The first draft should contain the same elements as the Outline, but each main idea/point should be fully developed and articulated. Your paper should be coherent and your logic should be transparent. Particular emphasis should be put on the structure of the paper.
4. Final Report
You should submit a final, polished version of your paper, taking into account the remarks and comments made on previous assignments. You should not need to add new material at this stage, although you are allowed to if you have discovered elements that would substantially alter the logic or the conclusions of your paper.
Turn in all parts of the assignment please staple everything (topic, outline, draft, and final version) together, with the final report on top. Remember to keep one copy of the report for your records.
The report must be double-spaced, and 1250 1500 words in length. It must include in-text citations and a works cited page using the updated 2009 M.L.A. documentation style. Use at least six to eight varied sources (books, journal articles from databases, approved web sites). At least one of your sources must be an academic economic publication. Copies of all cited sources must be attached to your paper.