The paper structure should introduce your research question and connect it to the wider world, should explore the relevant literature, and have a research hypothesis. Operationalize the concepts you’ve introduced in your question and that contribute to your hypothesis. You need to then add information showing how you test the hypothesis — what is your data set, how was it collected? Who are you studying? What statistical tests are you going to use to test your relationships, and why those tests and not others?
Show your analysis in the appendix — copy the SPSS output into your paper or retype it.
Discuss the meaning of the output — does it support your hypothesis or not? What are the implications of your findings for the research question you first posed?
Your whole paper should follow the hourglass approach – draw your reader in, dig into your data, the pan out again and discuss the relevance.
Follow this citation style! Use in text parenthetical citations like this: (Koning 2017). Make sure you include the date of publication in the citation.
Whenever you reference one of the sources in your bibliographies, you should have an embedded citation.
See citation assignments for how many and what type of citations are required.
Bibliography: EVERY entry in your bibliography must be cited at least once, and every citation must have an entry in your bibliography. Alphabetize your bibliography by last name of first author. DO NOT NUMBER your bibliography entries!