Choosing a research question that is too broad
A question like 'How does social media affect mental health?' cannot be answered rigorously in one paper. Narrow your question to a specific population, context, or mechanism so your method and findings can actually address it.
Writing a literature review that summarizes instead of synthesizes
Listing what each source says, one by one, does not demonstrate scholarly thinking. Group sources by theme, tension, or gap, and use them to build the case for why your question matters.
Mixing findings with interpretation
Your findings or results section should report what you observed or analyzed without editorializing. Save your interpretation for the discussion section. Blending the two makes it harder for readers to evaluate your reasoning.
Reading the paper aloud during the presentation
The POD is a defense, not a recitation. Panels expect you to speak about your research conversationally and respond to questions. If you rely on reading, you will struggle when the Q&A begins.
Waiting too long to start drafting
Because there is no exam date to anchor your schedule, it is easy to underestimate how long writing and revision take. Students who start drafting in the fall consistently produce stronger papers than those who begin in February.