Question
Now, how do you write this? 1. Pick a journal (say 10 pages) that is about career development or the career you want to have
Now, how do you write this?
1. Pick a journal (say 10 pages) that is about career development or the career you want to have when you graduate from Holmes.
2. To get an idea of what the topic is about, "look at the abstract"! Read it very carefully.
3. WARNING! Don't start writing until you are fully aware of what the journal article is about.
4. Read through the article and extract and write a summary of the main points of the article. Write them on a separate piece of paper.
5. Make certain that supporting facts to the main points are also summarized. If you see words you do not understand just use your dictionary!
6. Read through the article AGAIN - you should really understand the article now.
7. Go back to # 4 above and expand the summary of the main points that you have written - and any facts that were used to support them. BUT, this is a summary of the author's arguments, thoughts and views - NOT YOURS!
8. Remember! Use short and simple sentences such as: "The author thinks that there are strong career opportunities in XXXX." " He also thinks that there are not many opportunities in the banking industry." So, in summary short sentences not more than 10 words to a sentence!
9. OK, now you should understand what the article is about as you have summarized the main points and have created some paragraphs about the main points.
So, you can NOW start to express your main thoughts using this structure:
Title - keep it short and interesting, e.g. "Career opportunities in the IT industry in XXX"
Citation, please use Holmes Institute adapted Harvard referencing
Introduction, use it to simply state the main points of the argument. If there are 4 main points then simply speak about these in 4 short sentences - remember less than 10 words per sentence. So, in total it will be about 40 words.
Your opinion, go back to #7 and use that expanded summary to discuss what your opinion is of the author's ideas. This is YOUR opportunity to say what YOU THINK! Write in your own words, maximum of 10 words to a line and maximum of 4 sentences to a paragraph.
Critique, this is your chance to say what you think of what the author said. Is it reasonable or unreasonable? So, you could say, "The author is disappointed about banking employment. (7 words) But he does not offer evidence." (6 words).
Summary statement, keep this short but summarize the articles main points and your critique of them
PROOFREAD, make certain all grammar, spelling, upper & lower cases are correct. Also count the words in your sentences - keep around 10 words per line.
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