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Seminar I Problem Formulation Poul Thøis Madsen & Corrie Lynn S. McDougall
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Overview of Semester Process Introduction Project Work Courses/Lectures/Seminars Evaluation
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Problem-Organised Project Work
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Skills Learned from Project Work Communication Sensitivity Collaboration Flexibility Management/Leadership Writing Skills/Style Skills
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Types of Problem Formulations To Raise a Question: –Contradiction –Conundrum –Anomaly –Inconsistency –Wonder –Puzzle Formulate a Problem: –Understand –Analyze –Conceptualize –Discuss –Critically Assess –Uncover
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Archetype of a Project 1. Problem Formulation 2. Methodology 3. Definition of Key Concepts 4. Theoretical Framework 5. Empirical Section 6. Analysis 7. Conclusion
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Problem Formulation Overview 1. Introduction to General Subject 2. Narrowing General Subject Specific Area 3. Precisely Defined Problem Statement
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What to INCLUDE… Illustrate your interest in the topic Provide limited empirical information Include two or three sub-questions
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What NOT to include… Do not include how you are planning to conduct your research - no methodology Do not include the theory you plan to use Do not discuss how you will analyze issue
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After Reading the Problem Form.. You should have a clear understanding of: –How did problem came about? –What are the main elements of the problem? –What makes the problem relevant? –Which aspects of the problem the project is most focused upon/interested in?
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Five General Comments 1. What is the problem? 1.Subject or question but is it really a problem? 2. What is the level of analysis? 1.country/region/cultural/historical… 3. Pure description rather than problem-solving 1.Ex. trafficking of women 4. Is the empirical data available? 5. The danger of being too ambitious and not having a clear focus.
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