State your Propositions boldly.

State your Propositions boldly. Begin with a one-sentence summary of each Proposition. State them as positive statements. Use third person only. 6. Propositions are proposed solutions to the issue posed in your research question. You might want to list your Research Question next to your Propositions on a separate piece of paper and reflect on how they are related. Make sure they are aligned with the Research Question before you begin discussing them. 7. Discuss each Proposition individually. Discussion and Propositions are joined into one section, but the Propositions are discussed one at a time. Use your Propositions as sub-headings for this section of your paper. 8. The Discussion stage is intended for your personal reflection and analysis, not for further review of the literature. Draw from the literature that has already been reviewed but do not introduce new literature at this point. Refer back to your Literature Review by mentioning authors’ names without introducing new topics. Extensive quotation of authors goes back into the Literature Review. 9. Conclusion should be narrative, not a summary, with little if any referencing. Connect the Conclusion back to the Introduction. Explain how and why your paper is making a contribution to scholarly understanding of leadership. 10. Reference List is single spaced, with italics for journal titles and book titles. Follow the APA format carefully.

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