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Writing the Research Proposal

Writing the Research Proposal. Assessment 9. Where we’ve been…. The classifications, styles and methods of research Research Process Design considerations. What we’re doing today…. Writing the research proposal. Why use a standard format?. Ease of communication

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Writing the Research Proposal

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  1. Writing the Research Proposal Assessment 9

  2. Where we’ve been… • The classifications, styles and methods of research • Research Process • Design considerations

  3. What we’re doing today… Writing the research proposal

  4. Why use a standard format? • Ease of communication • mirrors research community

  5. The Title • Concise and descriptive • What’s the difference? Propaganda on the Internet? v. The Progress of Terror: White Supremacists and Islamic Extremists Propaganda on the Internet

  6. The Rationale • Explains how your study fits into the field/relates to its subtopics • Gives insight into the thought process that led you to want to do the study and your objectives • DON’T just answer the questions. “My study is important because…” “We should care because…”

  7. The Preliminary Literature Review • Provides the researcher and the reviewer an understanding of how your research fits into the field of study. • Context— • background • relevance • insight

  8. More on the Lit. Review • How to synthesize – • Create an outline first with headings (you did something like this with Assessment 8) • Fit the details from your sources into the various headings • For each heading, look at the relationships/differences between the details • Organize and summarize your discussion of the sources in a meaningful way

  9. Even more on the Lit. Review • Selecting the sources to include • balance – print and electronic, primary and secondary • relevant, scholarly, authoritative (use the website evaluation to determine) • can’t/shouldn’t include everything • Lit. Review sources should only be those that contribute to the background of your topic or help you establish the context of your study.

  10. Still more on the Lit. Review • What to do/not to do • Don’t simply summarize your sources in order. “The first source I read was X and it said blah…” • Use appropriate writing style • Double space • Proper format of source by author’s last name in text—See Section 10 of Prentice Hall for help.

  11. Research Design • Classification – look back at notes (Assessments 1 and 5) • basic, applied, or practical • qualitative? quantitative? (if quantitative, include hypothesis… look at notes from Assessment 6) • Note: we are not asking for particular styles, but their higher-level classifications

  12. Research Design Continued • Instruments – detailed description of the instruments you will use based on the classifications you identified. • As you decide on the instruments you use, remember to keep in mind variables, validity, and reliability of the factors affecting your research (review Assessments 5 and 6)

  13. More on Design • Duration and Time line • Triangulation • Projected Cost • Potential Problems/Ethical Issues (we’ll learn more about this in next assessment)

  14. References and Format • Follow MLA style. (See Prentice Hall Guide or MLA Handbook) • Again, you are to include all your sources… a minimum of 10. • 6 of the sources will be those used in the Literature Review

  15. Assessment 9 • Draft the Literature Review • “Draft” doesn’t mean 1st draft… you should turn in the review as polished as you can make it.

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