Abstracts & Proposals

What is an abstract?

An abstract is a response to a call for papers. Abstracts function as both a summary of your paper and an advertisement of your work. In addition, they are an opportunity for you to determine your priorities or the main points you want to get across with the paper. Abstracts persuade the conference committee to accept your paper. You have to convince the committee that your research is unique and makes a valuable contribution to your field. Because conference review committees read your abstract and not your paper, it functions independently of the original paper.

What is a proposal?

A conference proposal responds to a call for presentations. Instead of summarizing a paper that has been written, a proposal gives the committee your idea for a presentation. Like an abstract, a proposal should be persuasive as well as informative. It needs to persuade the review committe that your presentation will benefit and interest attendees. Proposals should give information on the subject, purpose, and scope of your presentation. They are an opportunity for you to plan out what you want to say. Proposals should include details on what type of presentation your are planning, be it a panel discusssion, PowerPoint presentation, or activity.

Tips for writers

As you write an abstract or proposal, remember to

Courtesy of the Utah Valley State College Writing Center

Prompts 1-5    Prompts 6-10    Prompts 11-15    Prompts 16-19    Abstracts and Proposals