Thesis Conclusion Writer
Scope
Use this skill only to write the conclusion part of a thesis or academic paper. The default output is a polished "结论", "研究结论", "结论与展望", or English "Conclusion/Conclusions" section based on the user's supplied thesis.
Do not write a new introduction, literature review, methodology, results chapter, or full discussion chapter. The conclusion should synthesize the study's outcome and take-home message; it should not introduce new data, new literature, new analysis, or unsupported claims.
Required Reference
Before drafting a full conclusion section, read references/conclusion-writing-guide.md. It contains conclusion structures, the generic conclusion model, language rules, contribution-ownership rules, Chinese and English templates, and quality checks derived from the local 8conclusion.txt source.
Input Extraction
Extract and use any information the user provides:
- Complete thesis text, abstract, or chapter excerpts
- Thesis title, discipline, degree level, school format, and target language
- Research problem, aim, gap, theoretical framework, research questions, hypotheses, variables, concepts, or themes
- Method or approach, only as much as needed to identify what the study did
- Key results, findings, supported/unsupported hypotheses, qualitative themes, or case conclusions
- Discussion points, contribution, practical implications, applications, limitations, and future research
- Required conclusion length, heading style, and whether the school expects "研究结论", "创新点", "不足与展望", or "建议"
If the user provides no findings or only a title, do not invent conclusions. Produce a conclusion framework with placeholders and list the exact thesis materials needed.
Conclusion Type Decision
Infer the conclusion format before writing:
- Short conclusion: one to three paragraphs, suitable for article-style papers or when the discussion already contains limitations and implications.
- Thesis conclusion chapter: a longer final section/chapter with research conclusions, contribution, implications, limitations, and future directions.
- Undergraduate Chinese conclusion: concise and concrete, usually including "研究结论", "实践启示/研究意义", and "不足与展望".
- Empirical quantitative conclusion: answer each research question or hypothesis using defensible conclusion statements.
- Qualitative conclusion: synthesize themes, experience patterns, theoretical insight, transferability, and contextual limits.
- Intervention-scheme design conclusion: summarize the designed scheme and its theoretical/practical value; do not claim effectiveness without implementation data.
- Literature-review conclusion: synthesize evidence patterns, main gaps, and future research directions.
Drafting Workflow
- Determine the thesis language and use that language unless the user requests otherwise.
- Identify the conclusion type and school heading requirements.
- Extract the study's main achievement and take-home message from the whole thesis, not only the abstract.
- Select relevant conclusion components: what the paper did, what it achieved, key findings, implications, limitations, applications, contribution, and future directions.
- Convert results into conclusion statements that answer the research questions without repeating detailed statistics or raw data.
- Make the study's own contribution explicit using phrases such as "本研究发现", "本文表明", "This study shows", or "The present thesis demonstrates".
- Keep conclusions proportional to the evidence, sample, method, and design.
- End with a clear closing sentence that states the study's overall value and remaining direction.
Output Standards
For a full conclusion section, include:
- Complete conclusion text with appropriate numbered headings when needed
- Main research conclusions derived from findings
- Explicit take-home message
- Contribution or advancement of knowledge/practice when supported
- Practical application or implication when appropriate
- Limitations and future directions if the target format includes them
- Same language as the thesis unless otherwise requested
Quality requirements:
- Do not fabricate findings, data, citations, applications, or future work.
- Do not copy the abstract; use the thesis as the source and synthesize.
- Do not overstate causality, generalizability, or effectiveness.
- Do not introduce new evidence in the conclusion.
- Do not simply summarize chapter contents; state what the study has established.
- Keep the conclusion explicit enough for readers who skip directly from title or abstract to conclusion.