Tips on Abstract Writing
Tips on Abstract Writing for First-Time Conference Presenters
- Title
- Abstract - This is a brief (no more than 200 words) summary/overview of the project, which should include:
- rationale – why is your research necessary?
- research question – what problem are you trying to solve with this research?
- methodology – what process do you use to try to answer the research question?
- conclusion – what is the outcome of your research?
- implications – what is the potential impact of your research?
If you’re responding to a specific CFP (call for papers/call for proposals), make sure your abstract includes specific references to the theme of the conference/area that are mentioned in the CFP.
Tips for Writing a Conference Paper
The general outline for a research project (not always in this order) is:
- Introduction
- Statement of problem – explain what it is that you’re researching
- Purpose of research – say what you intend to find out from this research
- Rationale – why this particular research is necessary (how it is different from other research that has been done) and what it will add to the body of knowledge in the field
- Literature Review
- Talk about the research that has already been done on this topic, summarizing it
- Begin with a very short history of the problem and how there is a need for the sensor you are proposing, and overview of what the sensor is/how it’s used
- Organize this by the kind of research and what’s been learned from it, not just as a random set of paragraphs discussing one source each
- At the end, connect this back to your research question/hypothesis so readers can see how you got there from the existing information and how what you’re doing is new
- Talk about the research that has already been done on this topic, summarizing it
- Methods
- Describe what your analysis will do and how you will do it, specifically
- Justify the methodology
- Why are you choosing this approach?
- You may want to draw on and/or reference significant theoretical approaches you’re using
- How will the methodology help you determine the answer to your research question?
- Data Collection, Analysis, and Evaluation
- How will you gather data/what data will result from this?
- How will you analyze the data?
- Why are these methods the best ones for your goals?
- Discussion
- Significance of problem – explain (again, but in different words) why it is important to find a solution to the problem
- Discuss the limitations of the existing research and explain (again, but in different words) the implications of your research: how it is going to affect future research (scholarly and/or policy implications), its influence on other fields (theoretical and/or policy implications), and potential for direct use (practice implications)
- This can include a brief discussion of what the next step in researching this area will be after your research is completed
- Be sure to address why anyone should care about this research
Created by Jessica E. Birch, Ph.D.
Ethnic Studies and Women’s, Gender, & Sexuality Studies
School of Cultural & Critical Studies
For Abstract Writing Workshop
October 27, 2017
BTSU 306
Updated: 11/14/2023 09:52AM