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Title of Your Essay
Your First and Last Name
Post University
Course Code: Name of Course (e.g. ENG 122: English Composition II)
Instructor Name
Due Date
Title of Your Essay
Start the first paragraph here, which should introduce your reader to the subject you are writing about. Do not label this paragraph as “Introduction.” Instead, simply write your paper’s title as a level 1 heading: bold, centered, with title case.
Leadership Theory
Spend time planning your paper. A good practice is to brainstorm and research ideas and decide how to express the main idea or thesis and what to include. Once you have a rough idea of what you want to discuss or argue, create an outline or to help you organize your paper and the evidence you plan to present in each body paragraph.
Advantages of Theory
Remember to use and cite scholarly sources to support your work Additional Tips: Always begin with a topic sentence in your own words.
Disadvantages of Theory
Remember to use and cite scholarly sources to support your work Additional Tips: In addition to being well-written, each paragraph should include an in-text citation to all information and evidence that is summarized, paraphrased, or quoted from outside sources.
Application to Current Position
Remember to use and cite scholarly sources to support your work Additional Tips: In addition to being well-written, each paragraph should include an in-text citation to all information and evidence that is summarized, paraphrased, or quoted from outside sources.
Conclusion
You only need to label the conclusion with a heading as shown here if you have a lengthy paper and have included headings for each section. Otherwise, you can simply begin your conclusion as your final paragraph in your paper. The conclusion should do more than summarize what you’ve stated already—it should also include the importance or significance of the topic under discussion.
References
Author, A. A. (Year). Title of article.
Title of Periodical, volume #(issue #), pp–pp.
Author, A. (Year). Title of book. Publisher.
Author, A. A., & Author, B. B. (Year). Title of book. Publisher.
Author, A. (Year). Title of work. In A. Editor & B. Editor (Eds.), Title of anthology. Publisher.
(Original work published date)
Director, A. (Director). (Year). Title of film [Description, e.g. Motion picture]. Production Company.
**For help formatting your reference page, please see our
Formatting Your References List page. Be sure that each source you’ve used has both an in-text citation and a references list citation.