How do I write the conclusions section of my dissertation without repeating everything I've already said in my analysis section?? Any help would be much appreciated!
In summary / To conclude, there is a strong body of belief that x leads to Y and this is supported by research undertaken by Z et al. However, my readings suggest a stronger position for the more recent suggestions based on B's recent papers, (quote your reference) and for her proposal that ....................
Ta, have done a little bit which is in a similar format to that but it's meant to be around 500 words long and can stretch it only to 200 before rambling on!
Try to mention all the reading you did, grouped according to their position on the subject. Give a personal weighting to the most important -' V, whose paper (quote it) has clearly contributed significantly to understanding in this field......N's 2000 paper on (whatever) opened up new avenues of thinking.....'
Ok, my reading is quite narrow as I've only found a handful of key texts that are relevant to the age group I'm studying. Also, because the research included fieldwork; I'm finding that when I'm trying to conclude on both reading and fieldwork I'm just repeating what I've already said in the analysis, am so fed up of dissertartion lol!
No expert but: conclusions are more of a synopsis of what has been deduced before aren't they ? More bullet points, although not necessarily written as such.
Thanks all, had a look in a dissertation in the library today and it makes it seem so simple so I copied their sub headings to use as guidance, dissertation nearly finished!