1 / 15

The Research Report

Title page Abstract Introduction Method Results. Discussion References Footnotes* Tables Appendix* *if necessary. The Research Report. Ten key parts of the manuscript. The Introduction. Three tasks: Identify and introduce research problem.

freshour
Télécharger la présentation

The Research Report

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Title page Abstract Introduction Method Results Discussion References Footnotes* Tables Appendix* *if necessary. The Research Report Ten key parts of the manuscript

  2. The Introduction Three tasks: • Identify and introduce research problem. • Review relevant background theory and research. • Define purpose and approach to research problem.

  3. Task 1: The Problem Questions addressed: • What is the problem or issue? • Why is it important? • How does the current study extend, alter, augment, refute, etc., an aspect of the research issue? • What propositions were tested? 1-2 grafs + 1 graf + 1 graf 3-4 grafs

  4. Task 2: Review • Summary of relevant research and theory • Avoid lists and “abstracting” all works cited. • Use transitions and headings to cue the reader. • Discuss shortcomings and be critical, where appropriate. Not simply an intellectual travelogue. • Craft a coherent and concise analysis that flows logically into the questions addressed in the current research (i.e., Task 3).

  5. Task 3: Approach • What was done in the current study to address the problem identified in Task 1 and elaborated in Task 2? • Key variables (i.e., sets of role expectations). • How variables will behave—Hypotheses and rationale for predictions (flowing logically from Task 2). • Lead-in to Method section.

  6. Housekeeping • Don’t use “Introduction” heading. • Pay attention to how authors structure the introductions of their reports. • Be purposeful in your review. “How does this empirical or review article relate to the problem and how we’re addressing it?” Consult with me, Tim, or your classmates when needed. • Make it all count. Ask yourself, “How does this word, sentence, paragraph, section, perspective, finding, etc., persuade the reader or help her/him understand the nature of the problem, its significance, or the approach of the current study?”

  7. Method Goal: Write enough about what you did and how you did it so that it could be replicated. Conventions: • Label section (Method, not Methods). • Use subsection labels—usually Participants, Materials, Procedure. • Other labels: Measures, Apparatus, Analyses. • Write at threshold of sufficiency.

  8. Participants Report: • Where and how recruitment occurred. • Sample size for all raters and for each set of raters. • Sex, age, race/ethnicity, relationship status, # marriages, # children, age of youngest child, and employment status.

  9. Materials Report: • Measures used (includes demographic questionnaire items). • Attribution: Where did the measure come from, or how was it created? • Sample items for measures/scales. • Response format.

  10. Procedure Report: • What participants did from start to finish. • Where did the assessment occur (setting, circumstances, supervision)? • Instructions? • What were the media (computer, paper and pencil)? • How long did it take?

  11. Method Section Tips • If you did it right, it’s boring, but straightforward. • Participants subsection should give the reader a gross understanding of the sample (err on the side of being over-descriptive). • Materials subsection shouldn’t reproduce the measure, it should characterize and summarize it. • Procedure subsection should be visual. The reader should be able to mentally sketch the scene(s) and progression of events. • Remember, the Method section is the bridge between the Introduction and Results sections.

  12. Results Goal: Describe analyses and findings as they relate to hypotheses. Conventions: • Label section (Results). • Describe analyses. • Report findings in words (1st) and statistics (2nd, usually parenthetically). • Use of tables.

  13. Not Just Numbers Remind reader of context of analyses and findings (i.e., hypotheses and predictions). Describe type of statistical analyses (ANOVA). Use subsection headings to report distinct sets of findings. Tables must be referred to in text. Tell reader how findings relate to hypotheses. Report degrees of freedom, significance levels (p values), means, standard deviations, and sample sizes.

  14. Discussion Goal: Clarify and interpret results: 1) within specific scope of hypotheses and, 2) within a broad theoretical and/or empirical context. Conventions: • Label section (Discussion—not conclusion, summary, etc.). • Don’t report statistics. Statistical findings should be written in English. • Parallel Introduction. • Be reasonably conservative, yet unapologetic.

  15. Structure How did you do? What does it really mean? • Were hypotheses supported by the results? • Restate hypotheses/goals. • Report validation or invalidation in same order as results section. • How do findings relate to previous work (empirical and theoretical)? • Discuss how results fit (or not) with trends of findings and theories of articles in Introduction. If inconsistent, try to explain why or cite similar exceptions. • What was done poorly? What could be done better? • Implications of research? Why might anyone be interested in these findings?

More Related