What’s the Difference Between a Summary, a Transition, and a Preview in a Capstone Study?
(Note: For the sake of
simplicity, this blog uses the dissertation terms chapter and section. In doctoral studies, the
cognates are section and
subsection.)
At the end of all but the last chapter of a capstone (dissertation or doctoral study) study,
most rubrics require three elements: a summary
of the current chapter and a transition
statement to get readers from the current chapter to the next chapter. Then, at
the start of that next chapter, there is a preview
of its major sections. Because guidance from the various programs says little
about how these three elements differ, they tend to be treated as equivalent to
one another. For example, the summary may just list the topics covered in the
chapter (much like the Table of Contents does); the transition may just list the
next chapter’s main headings (much like the Table of Contents does); and like
the chapter summary, the preview at the start of the following chapter may just
list the next part of the Table of
Contents. Alas, such redundancy is not very helpful for readers. The goal of
this post is to suggest how to distinguish these elements in the narrative.
Think of Your Study as a Story
First, try to see your study—and write about it—as if it
were a story: There’s a beginning (Introduction, Literature Review), a middle (Methodology,
Results), and an end (Discussion, Conclusions, Recommendations). In the summary
of each chapter, recap the main points or essence of the chapter, but do it in
a way that gives your readers a sense of the study’s evolution. A mere list of
topics (what was covered), is not enough. Make sure it’s clear how all the
elements fit together--for example, the relationship among the problem,
purpose, and research question or guiding question. You’ll be writing from a narrow
perspective, that is, the current chapter.
After the chapter summary comes the transition statement, which forms a bridge between the current
chapter and the following chapter. A mere list of topics is not helpful; guidance
on the interrelationships is needed. Describe how the current chapter leads to the
following chapter and how the next chapter advances your story (study). Write
from a broad perspective, that is, your entire study.
While the transition statement serves to bridge chapters, the
chapter preview opens the following chapter.
In the preview, tell your readers what you will cover in just this chapter. Again,
be clear about how all the elements fit together. A list of topics is not
helpful. The goal is to make sure that your reader does not feel lost. Here,
again, you’ll be writing from a narrow perspective, that is, the current
chapter.
None of these three is easy to write. But you might consider
approaching them as a tour guide or baseball announcer.
The Tour Guide
Gettysburg battlefield (image (c) Emilyk | CC by 3.0) |
The Baseball Announcer
Imagine yourself as an announcer, like Harry Caray, famous American baseball broadcaster (Public domain image modified from the original by Delaywaves.) |
Now envision yourself doing the play-by-play announcing for
a baseball game. At the end of each inning, you announce the score and recap what
happened during that inning (like the chapter summary). Then you might say who’s
coming to bat in the next inning and talk a little about what these players are
facing this inning, based on the team’s history against this particular
opponent, and how the game has progressed so far (like the transition statement).
Finally, you run down the names of the three lead-off batters (like the preview).
Whether visiting a historic site, watching a baseball game,
or trying to follow the argument of a complex research study, guidance is
needed to recall what has been seen or read, how that fits in the bigger
picture, and what is coming up next. Summaries, transition statements, and
previews provide critical continuity in capstone studies.
Summaries, transition statements, and previews provide critical continuity in capstone studies.
Dissertation Editor Tim McIndoo, who joined Walden University in 2007, has more than 30 years of editorial experience in the fields of education, medicine, science and technology, and fiction. When it comes to APA style, he says, "I don't write the rules; I just help users follow them."
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Summaries, transition statements, and previews provide critical continuity in capstone studies.
Dissertation Editor Tim McIndoo, who joined Walden University in 2007, has more than 30 years of editorial experience in the fields of education, medicine, science and technology, and fiction. When it comes to APA style, he says, "I don't write the rules; I just help users follow them."
Never miss a new post; Opt-out at any time
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