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Writing a Research Proposal
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Today Definition and purpose of the proposal Structure of a proposal The process of writing
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The research proposal Definition: A document that presents a case for an idea and the action one proposes with respect to it Krathwohl, D.R. (1988) (3rd ed.) How to prepare a research proposal. Guidelines for funding and dissertations in the social and behavioural sciences. Syracuse, New York: Syracuse University Press.
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The research proposal Purpose: To justify what you plan to do, in order to gain approval for it To identify the tasks and the resources required
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Structure of a research proposal Title Introduction The problem and its context Literature review Methodology Data Timetable and resources References Appendices
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Introduction –Content and purpose of research –Justification or rationale for research (why investigating the problem is important) –Current state of knowledge, and how the research relates to prior work done, or adds new knowledge
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The problem and its context Problem definition Hypothesis or questions Delimitations Definitions of terms Assumptions Significance
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To explain, describe, explore To support a position Why is this worth doing What will it achieve
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Literature review What is the state of the science on this problem? Are there gaps in the literature? How will your study fill those gaps? Synthesize recent literature (within the past 5 years)
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Literature review Contributes to your overall justification of your research Must be more than a summary of what you read in the area Informs your reader where your work fits in with other’s work
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Literature Review (Gathering information) Computers are one of the researcher’s most powerful tool. –Online library catalogues. –Working papers –Journals –Bibliographies –Database and research-related information. Record keeping of the information collected –Print outs –Reference cards –PDA/PC
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Methodology ● The Method section is very important because it tells your reader how you plan to tackle your research problem. It will provide your work plan and describe the activities necessary for the completion of your project. ● The guiding principle for writing the Method section is that it should contain sufficient detail and information so that the reader can determine whether the methodology is sound.
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Data Collection Analysis
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Timetable and resources Plan your project as you would any other project List of References
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The process of writing
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Important information for writing Structure your work in advance (know that you want to say before writing). Each sentence should contain one idea and follow logically from previous ideas: chain of ideas. Write in a way that is easy to read. Use simple language. Check spelling and grammar. Do not cut and paste from articles.
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NEATNESS Follow APA guidelines
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