Linking paragraphs by providing a good flow between them

Linking paragraphs by providing a good flow between them

Consider how you link your paragraphs together and how you arrive at conclusions. Academic writing is about a phenomenon you are presenting to the reader and requires a narrative that takes the reader along a well-articulated path, which is founded in specific academic writing principles.  Academic writing is not about a data dump of stuff because you are in a hurry. You have to explain to the reader that you know why you say this.  Do you say it because you heard this is trendy nowadays? Try to defend your argument by providing a logical flow of the argument.
REMEMBER: You are not with the reader to explain to the reader what you mean when the reader has questions. Therefore, you need to provide the reader with all the information the reader needs, backed by authoritative sources properly cited.
    • Related Articles

    • Linking Paragraphs in writing

      Consider how you link your paragraphs together and how you arrive at conclusions. Academic writing is about a phenomenon you are presenting to the reader and requires a narrative that takes the reader along a well-articulated path, which is founded ...
    • Is it advisable to have two paragraph headings directly after each other?

      Ii is not advisable to have two paragraph headings that follow directly after each other. Try not to have two paragraph headings following one another directly. Rather use the space between them to provide context to the reader, and use the ...
    • Sentence Linking making sense

      You should link your sentences together. For example, this section focuses on the findings and the next section contains recommendations based on these findings. Tell me what I am going to read next! You need to provide context to the reader; you do ...
    • Flow of Argument in a sentence

      Try to defend your argument. Why do you say things? Because you heard they are trendy nowadays. Is this your opinion or is this supported by other sources? How do you know this is relevant to your project? Did you do research, i.e.: literature ...
    • Using 'in addition', 'however', 'although', 'still', and 'but' in a sentence

      Try to be very selective when using phrases such as: 'in addition', 'however', 'although', 'still', and 'but', etc. Good writing skills would exclude these phrases as far as possible, i.e.: The stakeholder matrix shows how the stakeholders need to be ...