The Art of the Abstract
' Supervisor, I found Yorick's Abstract. ' |
“Do you hear, let them be well used, for they are the abstract and brief chronicles of the time. After your death you were better have a bad epitaph than their ill report while you live.” --- Shakespeare’s Hamlet.
Nowadays there is more pressure than ever to publish often
and early. Such is the plight of the doctoral student and the early career
academic; such is the life of any career academic.
One of the tricks of the trade that every academic learns is
how to write an effective abstract. Typically this activity was undertaken at
the end of the third year of the Ph.D and was part of the processing of
submitting your work for critical scrutiny.
But really we were abstracting all the way along. The
ability to compose a quick summary of what you have been reading is the
beginning of abstraction. It’s a useful habit to acquire early in one’s
intellectual development.
What you find in the abstract will also be quite similar
basically to the sorts of general questions that you will have been asked when
seeking funding, or applying for a continuation of your research.
So when we are reading anything, we might want to be asking
some questions.
What is this work about?
Why has it been written
What has been discovered?
How did the writer get there?
At first this can be quite bewildering because we are
overwhelmed by the sheer plenitude and richness and depth of the writing. But
God’s Gift to Scholars is the Abstract. This presents a ready-made solution to
these probing questions. As I have pointed out in another post, How doAcademics Read so many Books? The abstract is the short cut for the overloaded,
overworked, underpaid scholar-teacher. My intention was not to be cynical. In
fact, more pragmatically, it is not possible to undertake wider reading and
gain wider familiarity with a body of work without reading lots of abstracts.
Abstracts help researchers to decide on what is most and what is least relevant for their reading.
While it may take three hours or more to comb through an academic paper, it
will take less than ten minutes to skim and scan the contents. But I can survey
the abstract in a matter of seconds.
Therefore, a well-written abstract allows readers to work
out how relevant the research undertaken is to what they are trying to achieve.
If it is highly relevant then there is a second virtue. The abstract becomes a
useful reference point and benchmark for the longer and larger scholarship that
follows.
If am I surveying the wider field, and therefore writing a literature review, the abstract is very
helpful in providing a quick summary of the work that allows me to position it
in relation to other work, either as a specialism, or a theme. The abstract
tells me where the research belongs, as part of a cluster, and also, more
significantly, provides a sense of its individuality or uniqueness. The sense
singularity or originality of the contribution to knowledge is a valued aspect
that the abstract must communicate effectively.
In this sense, abstract are useful signposts, they give me a
sense of direction.
When I was writing my book The Art of Connection, I noted
that one of the Nine Arts of Connection was the Art of the Summary. We are
summarising all the time. Often this evident at the end of a paragraph or the
end of an essay or speech. Summaries therefore have impact. In a very broad
sense, we are already familiar with the art of the summary because we are doing
it all the time in the process of reading and writing. Summaries are signposts
and they help us to recall key points efficiently and effectively.
In the academic world the abstract is usually one paragraph
consisting of about 200 to 300 words. It is situated just under the title of
the paper or it appears at the end. It is very important to realise that this
is not a supplementary introduction.
While the researcher may all along have had a vague idea of the summary of the work
undertaken, the abstract is a precise and efficient of the published text.
The abstract offers a swift appraisal of the research. It is
helpful to think in terms of the model that is generally followed. Typically
there are four components:
1. An Introduction
to the research
2. The Methods,
or Methodology employed.
3. The Results of
the research
4. The Conclusions
reached.
It is useful to remember that the abstract should follow the
key sections of your published research in sequence.
Specifically the abstract needs
- To identify the main subject of the research and its purpose. This may point to the literature review element and provides a wider context for the work.
- To outline the problem investigated and the approach taken. Explain your objectives and hypothesis precisely. Summarise your methodology.
- To present your results. What was it that you found out?
- To offer conclusions. This may involve policy implications.
These are the key words that the abstract-writer and
researcher needs to think about clearly: problem, solution, example,
evaluation/comparison.
Dr Ian McCormick is the author of The Art of Connection: the Social Life of Sentences
(2013) Also available on Kindle, or to download.
Also worth a look: The PhD Roadmap: A Guide to Successful Submission of your Dissertation / Thesis.
It’s really worth spending a lot of time perfecting your
abstract.
Indeed it might be the only part of your work that most scholars in your field ever
read.
Perhaps it’s what you’ll be remembered by.
Dr Ian McCormick is the author of The Art of Connection: the Social Life of Sentences
(2013) Also available on Kindle, or to download.
Also worth a look: The PhD Roadmap: A Guide to Successful Submission of your Dissertation / Thesis.
“Wisdom is the abstract of the past, but beauty is the
promise of the future.”
--- Oliver Wendell Holmes
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