Three research paper examples that saved my life (and maybe will save yours too).

Angelika

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Mar 1, 2026
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When I started my Master's in history, I had no idea what a "real" research paper looked like. Like, I knew the format—abstract, intro, lit review, etc.—but I didn't know what good actually looked like. My professor finally took pity on me and sent me some examples, and honestly, they taught me more than any textbook.

Here are three types of examples I've collected and why they helped:

1. The "A" paper from a former student.
My professor kept a folder of excellent past papers (with permission) and let us read them. This was the most helpful thing ever. I could see exactly how long the intro should be, how they integrated sources, how they structured their argument. Not to copy, but to understand the shape of a good paper. If your department has this, ASK FOR IT.

2. A published article in my field.
I found a short article (not a book, too long) in a top journal for my subfield. I printed it out and literally annotated it. "Here's where they state their thesis. Here's where they address counterarguments. Here's how they transition." Seeing it in print made it real.

3. A "failed" example.
This sounds weird, but my professor also showed us a paper that got a C. And explained WHY. The thesis was too broad. The sources were weak. The conclusion just summarized. Seeing the mistakes helped me avoid them.

If you're struggling with structure, find examples. Real ones. Ask your prof, ask older students, look in journals. A model is worth a thousand explanations.

Anyone else have go-to examples they'd recommend?
 
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