How to Write a Discussion Section: APA, MLA, and IEEE (2026)

The discussion section is where your research findings become an argument. While APA, MLA, and IEEE papers all include a discussion, each style tradition has different expectations about structure, tone, and what the section should accomplish. This guide breaks down the requirements for each.


What All Discussion Sections Share

Regardless of citation style, a strong discussion section does the same core things: interprets results rather than just repeating them, connects findings to existing literature, acknowledges limitations honestly, and draws conclusions that are proportionate to what the data actually shows. The style guide governs formatting and citation mechanics — the logic and structure are driven by the discipline.

Discussion Section in APA Format

APA is used primarily in social sciences, psychology, education, and nursing. Its discussion section has a well-defined structure that mirrors the introduction in reverse:

PartContent
Opening paragraphRestate the main finding without repeating numbers; connect directly to the research question
Interpretation of resultsExplain why results occurred; compare with prior studies using author-date citations (Smith, 2022)
Unexpected findingsAddress results that contradicted hypotheses; offer plausible explanations
LimitationsState clearly and without apology; scope the conclusion accordingly
ImplicationsPractical or theoretical contributions of the findings
Future directionsOpen questions the study raises
ClosingConnects back to the opening research problem; no new information

APA discussion sections use continuous prose, Level 1 heading («Discussion»), and Level 2 subheadings for subsections if needed. No bullet lists in the main text unless the content clearly warrants it.

Discussion Section in MLA Format

MLA is standard in humanities: literature, languages, history, and cultural studies. The «discussion» in MLA papers rarely appears as a labeled section — instead, analysis and interpretation are woven throughout the body of the argument. When a paper does have an identifiable discussion or conclusion section:

FeatureMLA expectation
Section labelOften «Conclusion» rather than «Discussion»; may be unlabeled
Citation formatParenthetical author-page: (Smith 45)
ToneArgumentative and interpretive; less emphasis on empirical limitations
StructureReturns to the central claim or thesis; synthesizes evidence rather than listing findings
SubheadingsUsed in longer papers but less common than in APA or IEEE

In MLA, the discussion equivalent focuses on what the textual evidence means and how it supports or complicates the thesis — not on statistical results or methodological limitations.

Discussion Section in IEEE Format

IEEE papers follow IMRAD structure (Introduction, Methods, Results, and Discussion), but the discussion is often embedded within a Results and Discussion section rather than standing alone. Key differences from APA:

FeatureIEEE expectation
Quantitative emphasisStrong focus on numerical comparisons with baselines and prior work
Citation formatNumbered brackets: «as shown in [3]»
LimitationsAddressed but often briefer than in APA; focused on technical constraints
Future workOften a separate short section or the final paragraph of the discussion
ToneTechnical, precise, third person preferred («The proposed method achieves…»)

Side-by-Side Comparison

FeatureAPAMLAIEEE
Section label«Discussion» (Level 1 heading)«Conclusion» or unlabeled«Discussion» or «Results and Discussion»
Citation format(Author, year)(Author page)[number]
Limitations subsectionExpected and detailedRarely explicitBrief, technical focus
Primary disciplineSocial sciences, healthHumanitiesEngineering, CS, applied sciences
ToneObjective, third/first personArgumentative, first person commonTechnical, third person preferred
Future workLast paragraph of discussionImplied through open questionsOften a separate section

Common Mistakes Across All Styles

  • Repeating results instead of interpreting them — the discussion explains the why, not the what
  • Introducing new data or citations not referenced earlier — the discussion synthesizes; it does not expand the literature review
  • Overgeneralizing conclusions — keep claims proportionate to your sample, method, and findings
  • Ignoring contradictory results — unaddressed anomalies undermine credibility in all three styles
  • Ending abruptly without a closing statement — every discussion needs a sentence that returns to the original research question

For citation formatting in APA, IEEE, or any other style, see the guides in the Normas APA resource center.

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