» Fri Dec 09, 2011 2:59 pm
I'm a pretty good research paper writer. I just finished up two 30 page, single spaced papers within the last month.
Is it double or single spaced? If double, you really don't have that much work.
Since this is a historical event, your format should go somewhat like this:
1.Introduction, which you write last after fully exploring the subject matter and making connections.
2. Thesis statement within the intro, which you should write first. It should be a concise statement about the facts and significance of the red orchestra on past, present, and future German history, or if that is too broad for the class, then just the impact of the red orchestra on the Nazi regime (was it good, bad, ugly; did it make anything better or worse; was it a victory or fail for Germany---these are kinds of questions to ask when determining significance). If you want, you can pm me your thesis statement once written and I'll look it over, since it is the most important piece of the paper. Every section of the paper should come back to this and reiterate it somehow in the context of the section.
3. From here, organization of research papers is easiest when divided into sections. I would imagine a section to be between 1 and 3 pages depending on how depth you want to explore that facet of the orchestra. It would start with a section on the events leading up to the event, on the trigger that caused it, on the proceedings, on the aftermath, on the implications for the nazi regime, on Hitler's involvement in the event, and perhaps on the implications to German history as a whole. A brief conclusion would then be in order, restating your points and perhaps inserting an interesting tidbit of information that didn't fit anywhere else but that you find to be important.
So basically, you are saying what the red orchestra was, how it came to be, how it unfolded, who had a hand in it and who didn't, and how it impacted other historical events through time.
As for the research itself, your university should have an online, searchable database accessible through your school library website. Sometimes such websites have downloadable clients that allow you to surf the database as if you were connected through a school computer. When browsing documents, skim through, note important pieces and the page numbers/citations you found them on and definitely check out the sources, because that's how you start to discover really obscure information that would have been difficult to search for alone. I don't recommend wikipedia for information, but do check out the sources. Try to stay away from websites and focus on journal articles, they are the most focused and helpful.
Some pointers: MS word has a function for inserting sources and footnotes without having to do it manually, so by the time you finish your paper the works cited page is already complete; you simply have to click on insert bibliography, and then convert it to static text if you need to smooth out formatting. Definitely include headings to your sections, as this most easily resolves issues with coherency and flow. Finally, while you're researching keep of rough outline of your headings and the research you want to use under each one. This makes the writing much easier.
Hope that helped, and I welcome any more further questions.