Depression: how treatment has changed over time

Develop your claims and evidences depending on your findings.

Your academic argument should include the following elements: a main claim, reasons, evidence, acknowledgments, and responses. Important! Your main claim will be a response to your research question.

Revise the Research Question: look at the post on how to do that on the announcements page. Developing a claim: Come up with a one-sentence answer to the research question from the conclusion of your Literature Review, which will be the main claim in your academic argument. Conclusion (include section heading): Synthesize (do not summarize!) the main information, explanations, debates and argument that your paper has offered. Restate, in different words to avoid repetition, your original research question and main claim. What is the significance of the work you have done, the research you’ve uncovered, the questions you’ve asked, and the arguments you have made?

Begin this section with your own original research question along with its justification (may be a revised version of your concluding paragraph from your Literature Review essay), which should emerge out of the scholarly sources in the lit review section, especially those areas or questions that you believe have not yet been adequately answered. The overall purpose of the FRA is to support your main interpretive claim, the answer to your original research question.

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