Term paper, second draft

Due: Nov 19th, 2021

Write a second draft of your term paper.

Purpose

The purpose here is:

  1. Have an opportunity for feedback and suggestions.

  2. Making sure you stay on schedule to finish a term paper without a big rush at the end of the semester.

  3. Peer review to give each other feedback and share ideas.

Assignment

Write a first draft of your term paper. Use LaTeX and make a PDF. Upload your PDF to Canvas.

Requirements

Please try to make your second draft a complete paper, or close to it. But it’s okay if it’s not fully polished. Here is what is required:

  • Please read the feedback on the first draft of your term paper. Please read the advice at the bottom of this web page.
  1. Your paper should have a title and identifiable topic/theme. It should include your name as the author.

  2. Create sections in your paper using \section{...}, for example \section{Introduction}, \section{Main Theorem}, etc.

  3. Your paper should be complete, or close to it.

    It’s okay if some details or proof steps are incomplete or missing. It’s okay if there are some rough spots that still need final editing and polishing. But at this point all, or nearly all, of the content should be in place.

  4. See “How to Bibliography”.

  5. Formatting your bibliography:

  6. Use LaTeX to produce a PDF with reasonable formatting, similar to homework.

    • Readability: Please use reasonable margins (at least 1 inch), a 12-point option such as \documentclass[12pt]{amsart}, and \linespread{2.4} to produce something like double-spaced lines.

    • LaTeX Environments: Please use LaTeX environments such as \begin{theorem}...\end{theorem}, proof, etc. See for example Overleaf’s tutorial on theorems and proofs.

Advice

Finally, some advice (not required). A normal part of the writing process is to realize that your plans and goals were too ambitious. If you start to feel that you have taken on too large of a writing task, some options that you might consider include:

  • Focus on a special case of your main result. For example, instead of \(n\) dimensions, just deal with the \(1\) or \(2\) dimensional case. (Better yet, start with the “trivial”/”easy” cases, and then focus on the first non-trivial case.) You might just briefly discuss the more general case, or just state it, or even just give a citation to it; or maybe not get into it at all.

  • Omit some technical or difficult things. Don’t skip over the main points of proofs, or the important things that are the reason your topic is interesting. Keep those important steps. But there might be other steps that can be cut while still conveying all the important points.

  • Pick a running example. This can be used to illustrate or demonstrate some results, or some steps, when the general case is too difficult. This might require two or more examples.

  • You can expect something from your reader. Don’t feel that you have to explain every single thing to the reader. You can expect them to know something. To play it safe, you can “recall” specific facts that you need.

A final piece of advice is

  • Don’t get bogged down in introductory or trivial things. It can make a very good paper to include some introduction, context, history, etc., and also to explain a simple or trivial case, in order to illustrate by contrast what makes other cases difficult or non-trivial. Proving your main theorem in this case can help the reader appreciate the non-trivial cases.

    However, don’t get bogged down in this. If the main point of your paper is the non-trivial case, then keep that in mind, treat the easier case as just setup for the main point, and get to the main point.