I-Search Paper Format Guide
An I-Search paper is a personal research paper about a topic that is important to the writer. An I-Search paper is usually less formal than a traditional research paper; it tells the story of the writer's personal search for information, as well as what the writer learned about the topic.
Many I-Search papers use the structure illustrated in the framework below:
| Framework Directions and Explanations
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Grab your readers' attention. Your readers are more likely to care about your topic if you begin with an attention-getting opener. Help them understand why it was important for you to find out more about the topic. Tell what you knew. Briefly describe what you knew about your topic before you started your research. Tell what you wanted to learn and why. Explain why the topic is important to you, and let readers know what motivated your search. State your steps. Turn your research question into a statement that is based on your research. Retrace your steps. Tell readers about your sources - how you found them and why you used them. |
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Discuss your results and give support. Describe the findings of your research. Write at least one paragraph for each major research result. Support your findings with quotations, paraphrases, and summaries of information from sources. | ||
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Reflect on your search. Describe what you learned and how your research experience might have changed you and your future. Also, remind readers of your thesis. | ||
Source: This Writer's Model has been formatted according to the standards of the MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers, Fifth Edition | Copyright © by Holt, Rinehart and Winston. All rights renewed.

