1. Amato,
C. J. (2002). The world's easiest guide to using the APA:
A user friendly manual for formatting research papers according
to the American Psychological Association style guide. (3rd
ed.). Corona, CA: Stargazer Publishing.
Location: Reference WZ345 A488w 2002
About the book: A user-friendly tutorial with information needed
to use the APA style guide while writing a thesis.
2. Ballenger, B. P. (2001). The curious researcher: A guide
to writing research papers (3rd ed.) Boston, MA: Allyn and
Bacon.
Location: LB 2369 B191c 2001
About the book: In addition to a full explanation of the technical
aspects of the research paper, this book shows the writer
that good research and lively writing are not mutually exclusive.
3. Barrett, E. (1995, October). Hints
for writing successful NIH grants.
About the website: Created by a professor from the University
of Miami School of Medicine, the site goes through the grant application
process section by section.
4. Booth,
W.C. et al. (2003).
The Craft of research. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago
Press.
Location : Q180.55 M4 B725c 2003
5. Browner,
W. S. (1999). Publishing and presenting clinical research.
Baltimore, MD:
Lippincott Williams and Wilkins.
Location : WZ345 B884p 1999
About the book: A practical approach to
organizing, publishing, and presenting the results of your research
using practical examples and checklists.
6. Byrne, D. W. (1998). Publishing your medical research paper:
What they don't teach you in medical school. Baltimore,
MD: Williams and Wilkins.
Location: WZ345 B995p 1998
About the book: Tips on how to plan, collect data, write, edit,
and revise your medical research paper.
7. Cone, J.D. and Foster, S.L. (1993). Dissertations and theses
from start to finish: Psychology and related fields. Washington,
D.C.: APA.
Location: 3 Day Reserve BF76.5 C747d 1993
About the book: A step by step guide to help graduate students
in psychology and related fields manage the thesis and dissertation
process from beginning to end.
8. Day, R. A. (1998). How to write and publish a scientific
paper (5th ed.). Phoenix, AZ: Oryx Press.
Location : Reference T11 D274h 1998
About the book: A guide to assist scientists and science students
to prepare manuscripts that will have a high probability of being
accepted for publication and of being completely understood when
published.
9. Garrard, J. (1999). Health sciences literature review made
easy; the matrix method.
Gaithersburg, MD: Aspen.
Location : 1 Day Reserve W20.5 G238h 1999
About the book: A reference tool to aid students, researchers,
and clinicians in conducting a search of the literature using
electronic databases, organizing journal articles, choosing
topics to abstract, and creating abstracts of the articles.
10. Garson, G. D. (2002). Guide to writing empirical papers,
theses, and dissertations. New York, NY: Marcel Dekker.
Location: WZ345 G243g 2002
About the book: This volume provides the student with an
enriched
11. Glatthorn, A. A. (1998). Writing the winning dissertation:
A step-by-step guide. Thousand Oaks, CA: Corwin Press.
Location: LB2369 G549w 1998
About the book: A practical guide to take you through the planning,
writing, and presentation of your dissertation or thesis.
12. Huth, E. J. (1999). Writing and publishing in medicine
(3rd ed.). Baltimore, MD: Williams and Wilkins.
Location: Reference WZ345 H979w 1999
About the book: The reader is guided from initial composition
to publication including reporting on clinical trials, observational
studies and reports and lab research.
13. Lang, T. A. and Secic, M. (1997). How to report statistics
in medicine: Annotated guidelines for authors, editors, and reviewers.
Philadelphia, PA: American College of Physicians.
Location : WZ 345 L271h 1997
About the book: Guidelines for presenting statistical results
in biomedical journals.
14. Levine, S.J. (1999, September 16).
Guide for writing a funding proposal.
About the website: A guide in chart
format to the creation of a funding proposal.
15. Li, X. (1996). Electronic styles: A handbook for citing
electronic information (2nd. ed.) Medford, NJ.: Information Today.
Location : Reference WZ345 L5 1996
About the book: Includes citation formats in both APA and MLA
style and features many examples of World Wide Web resources.
16. Mauch, J. E., & Birch, J. W. (1998). Guide to the
successful thesis and dissertation: A handbook for students and
faculty. New York, NY: M. Dekker.
Location: LB2369 M447g 1998
About the book: A handbook for students and faculty reflecting
the most recent trends in thesis/dissertation preparation and
research.
17. Ogden, T. E. (2002). Research proposals: A guide to success
(3rd ed.). New York, NY:
Academic Press.
Location : W20.5 O2 2002
About the book: A unique guide to the preparation
of research proposals from the perspective of the grant reviewer.
18. Reif-Lehrer, L. (1996). The grant application writer's
handbook. Boston, MA: Jones and Bartlett Publishers.
Location : 3 Day Reserve W20.5 R272g 1995
About the book: A guide on how to plan and develop a good proposal,
states what reviewers look for in applications and discusses changes
at NIH and NSF.
19. Rubens, P. (2001). Science and technical writing: A manual
of style (2nd. ed.) New York, NY: Routledge.
Location : WZ345 S416 2001
About the book: A guide to the grammar, punctuation, spelling,
abbreviations, and terminology used in scientific and technical
writing.
20. School of Public Health. New York Medical College. (2003).
Guidelines for preparing
the master's thesis.
21. Wilkinson, A. M. (1991). The scientist's handbook for
writing papers and dissertations. Englewood Cliffs,
NJ: Prentice Hall.
Location : WZ345 W686 1991
About the book: How to use scientific method and incorporate scientific
terminology while writing a scientific paper.
22. Zeiger, M. (2000). Essentials of writing biomedical research
papers (2nd ed.). New York, NY: McGraw Hill.
Location : WZ345 Z46e 2000
About the book: Guidelines on word choice, sentence and paragraph
structure and how to construct each section of a research paper.