Writing for Research and Analysis is a course for anyone who wants to write research papers, analytical essays, reports or articles. It focusses on how one moves from forms of evidence, information and data to a structured piece of writing that makes one or more arguments. These can be writing pieces for different audiences – an academic article or working paper, analytical reports, policy briefs, long-form essays as well as empirically-informed journalistic pieces – that share the same goal: to synthesise and present arguments using qualitative or quantitative information.
The course focusses on building argument maps as structures that outline a piece of writing, and how to organise information, think of flow, tone and register using this technique. It is important to note that this is a course on how to structure such writing. It does not focus on the writing itself in terms of clarity, tone or style.
Who this is for
- Young researchers working in academia or in the social sector
- PhD scholars and Master’s students
- Practitioners employed in think-tanks, research institutes, and the development sector, dealing with evidence synthesis, writing and analysis
- Journalists/Writers specialising in public writing
This course will enable participants to:
- Learn techniques on how to structure information and data into arguments, particularly building Argument Maps as forms of writing outlines
- Appreciate different styles of structuring arguments for different types of writing
- Understand different types of writing available to convey arguments in
- Understand how to structure an argument differently across different forms of writing