Revised research proposal

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Non-Academic References
Advertisements

EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH It is a systematic enquiry made public (Stenhouse, 1975) It is the process of arriving at dependable solutions to problems through.
Action Research Not traditional educational research often research tests theory not practical Teacher research in classrooms and/or schools/districts.
Appraisal of Literature. Task 4 The task requires that you:  Obtain a piece of literature from a journal, book or internet source. The literature should.
Research Methods for Business Students
THE ‘UNDERSTANDING LIBRARY IMPACTS’ PROTOCOL: DEMONSTRATING ACADEMIC LIBRARY CONTRIBUTIONS TO STUDENT LEARNING OUTCOMES IN THE AGE OF ACCOUNTABILITY Derek.
Confirmation of Candidature Writing the research proposal Helen Thursby.
Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis (IPA)
Mother and Child Health: Research Methods G.J.Ebrahim Editor Journal of Tropical Pediatrics, Oxford University Press.
Group C Research questions and answers EPARM Stockholm 2014 Moderators: Mirjam Boggasch, Leonella Grasso Caprioli, Tuire Kuusi.
The phases of research Dimitra Hartas. The phases of research Identify a research topic Formulate the research questions (rationale) Review relevant studies.
Diploma in Management The Project Please note: these slides are a summary of the Diploma in Management ”Project Handbook” 2007 University of Leicester.
Chapter 11: Qualitative and Mixed-Method Research Design
1 Where to look? –MGTC24 website has links on how to use search engines How to decide you have good sources? Doing Library Research.
BS 3992 Researching Contemporary Management Issues -an alternative to the Final Year Project Dr Adam Palmer Dr Beverley Hill.
From description to analysis
© (2015, 2012, 2008) by Pearson Education, Inc. All Rights Reserved Chapter 7: Collecting Qualitative Data Educational Research: Planning, Conducting,
Case Studies and Review Week 4 NJ Kang. 5) Studying Cases Case study is a strategy for doing research which involves an empirical investigation of a particular.
Case Study What is case study? An investigation of phenomenon in a bounded context A qualitative approach to answer and explain any problem specifically.
PRACTICED BASED RESEARCH Overview 25 th November 2013.
Fifth Edition Mark Saunders, Philip Lewis and Adrian Thornhill 2009 Research Methods for Business Students.
CHAPTER ONE EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH. THINKING THROUGH REASONING (INDUCTIVELY) Inductive Reasoning : developing generalizations based on observation of a.
Avon Grove School District October 2009
Writing a sound proposal
March 13, 2014 RS and GISc Institute of Space Technology
DATA COLLECTION METHODS IN NURSING RESEARCH
1. Objectives of theory-mining reviews
What is research? Marie Hobson,
Designing Your Study and Selecting a Sample
Leacock, Warrican and Rose (2009)
Planning an Applied Research Project
Fundamental of Scientific Research (Research methods)
Research Methods for Business Students
MGT-491 QUANTITATIVE ANALYSIS AND RESEARCH FOR MANAGEMENT
Introducing the Dissertation
Putting it all together: Writing research proposals and reports
WEEK 1 – RESEARCH PROPOSAL
Literature Review: Conception to Completion
Assessment brief Post graduate route.
Research Methods RESEARCH PROPOSAL.
ELT 329 ACTION RESEARCH Week 4
MSc in Social Research Methods
Qualitative Research.
Critically Reviewing the Literature
Approaches to Qualitative Research
Alignment Dr. Mary Clisbee
© 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
Research proposal MGT-602.
Lecture 1: Course Outline and Introduction
Qualitative Research Proposal Presentation Guide
Qualitative vs. Quantitative research
Learning Module 11 Case Study Research.
Welcome.
Research Methods in Education Session 7
The Relevance of Culture in Evaluation and Assessment
Introduction to Research Methodology
Research Methods Introduction Jarod Locke.
Eloise Forster, Ed.D. Foundation for Educational Administration (FEA)
By the end of this chapter you will be able
Choose your own adventure: standing out with evidence-based practice
Choosing a research approach
The Assessing Cycle Module 1 Assessment Assessment Accountability Data
Chapter 4 Summary.
By the end of this chapter you will be able
CHAPTER 1 Review.
RESEARCH WORKSHOP Faculty of Management Sciences Department Management
Chapter 6 Both qualitative and quantitative processes are necessary to fully answer a conceptual question.
The case study.
Research design and techniques Workshop ICBEDC 2010
Moodle login: Moodle.gsmd.ac.uk Or access the link via the intranet:
Presentation transcript:

Revised research proposal 26.11.18

“Design is concerned with turning research questions into projects.” –Chapter 4 'General Design Issues' in Colin Robson's 'Real World Research', (2011), 3rd ed. NB you can obtain copies of this book in the GSMD library

Purpose Impact questions: Who’s it for? Yourself and... Communities of practice? Policy? Social justice? Why now?

Conceptual framework What is your lens? Methodologies E.g. ethnography/ practitioner research/ action research/ grounded theory (etc, etc, etc) And/ or Theories E.g. Phenomenology/ discourse analysis/ gender theory/

Methods Doing the artistic practice/ cycles of practice Recording and reflecting on this practice, focus on process, journey HOW? E.g. Practice journal/ recording practice sessions Social science methods Interviews, observations, questionnaires Your role: “invasive”? Non-invasive?

Sampling strategy Intrinsically bound up with methods (‘research is the art of the possible’ Sue Hallam) Who are you including in your study as participants? Case study? Representative sample of population? How do you get to them? Access, recruitment? Sampling methods: gatekeeper, open advert, ‘snowballing’

A note about validity and reliability Validity: are your methods to answer your RQs plausible? Are your findings plausible? Reliability: are your results replicable? All research has to demonstrate validity, but not all research has to demonstrate reliability If you cannot / are not aiming for your research to be reliable, you must adjust your claims.

Doctoral research originality rigour significance

Originality of study I You will need to refer to other literature/ practice to argue your study is original in: Empirical setting/ context (e.g. these research questions have been asked before in a secondary school context, but never in a Conservatoire....) Research questions (e.g. there is existing research in this setting, but these questions have not been asked) Methodological lens (e.g. these questions have been asked before in this setting, but my use of narrative research aims to show specifically how international students experience one-to-one instrumental tuition in a post-graduate Conservatoire context)

Originality of study II You will need to refer to other literature/ practice to argue your study is original in: Your particular artistic context/ in terms of your own practice (e.g. these research questions have been asked before by pianist-researchers, but not by violinists.) Research questions (e.g. there is existing research on composing in community contexts, but these questions have only been asked of informal collaborative devised work, not of composer written pieces commissioned for public events.) Methodological lens (e.g. these questions have been asked before by music psychologists, but my use of practice research/auto-ethnography aims to document a performer’s perspective on the string quartet rehearsal process.)

Rigour Systematic study (not the same as exhaustive...) Critical evaluation (not just assembling facts, hagiography) Knowledge and application of methods sufficient to carry out the study (beware of using too many methods hoping to answer your RQs from ‘all’ angles) Demonstrate that different parts of your research are coherent/ share a common thread

Significance I Contribution to knowledge for a particular community (e.g. particular discipline, type of person, group of people) Transferable knowledge (can arise from new context/empirical setting which reveals new insights, a new set of research or artistic tools that others can apply to their own work/practice, new theory which can be tested/applied in different contexts) Or Significant insights into artistic processes Impact - Dissemination strategy if it shapes your final submission

Significance II NB: significance is rarely stated *for doctoral research* solely in terms of a new artistic product Please don’t say ‘my work is original because no one has recorded these pieces before....’ Instead, say ‘these recordings offer significant insight into how [your RQ] a performer today might present an alternative performance style of virtuoso nineteenth century etude-caprices’