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82 KAPPA DELTA PI RECORD u APRIL-JUNE 2012
Graduate students are the best of the best. Like
Olympic athletes, they are in pursuit of the high-
est levels of achievement. They are intelligent,
motivated, driven, educationally accomplished,
and skilled. They also are usually excessively
busy—working fulltime in their education setting
as teachers, principals, or superintendents while
balancing bustling home and professional lives
alongside the demands of graduate-level educa-
tion work.
This juggling act is not to be taken lightly.
In graduate education, retention and completion
pose significant challenges. As many as 50 per-
cent of doctoral and a quarter of master’s (varies
by field of study) students fail to complete their
programs (Denecke and Frasier 2005; Golde 2005;
Council of Graduate Schools 2008). Tokuno
(2008, 30) noted, “Where conflict between on-
going social roles and the need to be a student
arise, obstacles may occur.” Given the work and
life demands education professionals routinely
navigate, it is not surprising that completion
rates are as low as they are, but that they are so
high! To assist educators in managing their pur-
suit of excellence along with their professional
and personal lives, this article outlines “how-to”
guidelines for higher education teachers/faculty
advisors (hereafter referred to as teachers) and
graduate students preparing to engage in thesis
or dissertation work.
Admittedly, this article merely skims the sur-
face on the topics of theoretical grounding and
literature review (Boote and Beile 2005; Kennedy
2007). In “Scholars before Researchers: On the
Centrality of the Dissertation Literature Review
in Research Preparation,” Boote and Beile (2005)
emphasized the foundational role and purpose of
the literature review. Kennedy (2007, 146) simi-
larly presented useful insights specific to “prob-
lems associated with defining a literature range .
. . inclusion and exclusion . . . and how differences
in study quality are addressed.” Students should
not underestimate the importance of “a thorough,
sophisticated review of the literature . . . and the
importance of the literature review in research
preparation” (Boote and Beile 2005, 3). That said,
this article’s “how-to” guide is designed to help
students overcome the overwhelming sense of
burden in their overly committed professional
lives, which too often gets in the way of even
getting started.
Getting Started
Graduateprogramsseektosupportthedevelopment
of education professionals as scholars, researchers,
and practitioners through course work, examina-
tion,andculminatingthesis/dissertation.Thethesis/
dissertation is a formal, scholarly document—a
symbol of quality graduate study and research. Like
marriage, the thesis/dissertation is a commitment,
with a foundation for success built upon liking, if
not loving, one’s chosen area of inquiry, as well as
a stubborn willingness to persist over time.
Selecting a Topic
Ideally, students have been considering and
reviewing literature related to their prospective
area of inquiry throughout their program of
Cynthia Lee A. Pember-
ton is the Associate Dean
of the Graduate School
and Professor of Educa-
tional Leadership at Idaho
State University. Currently
a Fulbright Scholar at the
University of Malta, she has
successfully mentored more
than 30 students through
the thesis/dissertation
process.
A “How-to” Guide for the
Education Thesis/Dissertation
Process
by Cynthia Lee A. Pemberton
Considering each stage of the process makes it a little more accessible and a
little less daunting.
Kappa Delta Pi Record, 48: 82-86, 2012
Copyright © Kappa Delta Pi
ISSN: 0022-8958 print/2163-1611 online
DOI: 10.1080/00228958.2012.680378
“How-to” Guide
KAPPA DELTA PI RECORD u APRIL-JUNE 2012 83
III: Methodology; Chapter IV: Results; Chapter V:
Discussion/Conclusion). Each chapter is subdivided
into various content sections. An overview of chapters
and subsection content follows.
Chapter I: Introduction
A strategy that may be particularly useful to edu-
cation graduate students is to outline a process that
begins at the beginning, meaning with Chapter I.
Chapter I includes an introduction (wherein literature
is used to briefly frame the inquiry), a statement of
the study purpose, followed by research questions or
goals, associated operational definitions, assumptions,
limitations, delimitations, and the significance of the
study. The sequence of teacher-assigned student tasks
might look something like this:
1. Create a document outlining the chapter subsec-
tion headings, set up with appropriate document
margins, pagination, etc. This beginning activity
demonstrates that in a very short time period
(minutes), a concrete document starting point
can be created.
2. Review key pieces of related literature and draft
a purpose statement. Students may be able to
articulate verbally what they think they want
to do before they can succinctly write it as a
purpose statement. Once the purpose is nailed
down, students draft 2–4 research questions or
goals derived from it. These, like the purpose
statement, are bounced back and forth between
teacher and student for feedback, discussion, and
clarification. While this process can take time, it is
foundational to scaffolding the research inquiry.
The entire study is framed based on its purpose.
3. Using the purpose statement and research ques-
tions, words/terms are highlighted that need
to be operationally defined. Although there are
instances where terms are appropriately defined
“for the purpose of this study,” as much as pos-
sible students should cite definitional reference
sources.
4. The introduction text, with appropriate literature
citations, is drafted next. The framework for this
text is guided using a funnel model, with broad
areas of literature identified, brought together
and funneled to a focal point—the purpose of
the study.
5. Students next address the “so what” question and
outline the inquiry’s relevance or significance
study—systematically exploring aspects of their
potential topic through course assignments and
projects. Teachers can and do play a key role
here, counseling students to consider potential
topics in terms of (a) sustaining their interest;
(b) their range of competence to conduct and
complete the research; (c) manageability—neither
too wide nor too narrow; (d) contribution to the
field—fill a gap in the literature, or substantiate
or refute prior research; (e) obtainable data; and
(f) providing an opportunity to demonstrate
independent mastery of subject-matter content.
Breaking It Down
Starting the thesis/dissertation process can be
daunting. The totality and enormity of research in-
quiry frequently seems to overwhelm students. One
waytohelpthemcopeistomapouttheincremental
elements that comprise the process, making evident
that it can be engaged and completed in pieces or
stages. Minutes or hours here and there, over time,
can and do result in a quality finished product.
With this in mind, begin by breaking down the
thesis/dissertation into its component parts; that is,
preliminarypages,chapters,references,andappendi-
ces. From there, outline where “we’ll” begin. Notice
the emphasis on we; the student and teacher are in
thistogether.AliandKohun(2006,27)describedthe
senseofisolationgraduatestudentsoftenexperience
atthiscriticalstage,whichmakestheteacher-student
connectionespeciallyimportanttothesuccessofthe
thesis/dissertation process:
This stage is characterized by the students
working alone with their advisor in the absence
of extensive daily social interaction and commu-
nication with their peers or with other faculty. . . .
In most cases, there is no specific agenda to follow
and there are no marks by which the students
measure their progress. The issue is further com-
plicated because each student works alone on his/
her research project. This prevents the students
from obtaining vital support that could be gained
from communicating with other students.
One Piece at a Time
Typically, thesis/dissertation work is organized and
presented in sections, with the main document
text residing in a series of chapters (i.e., Chapter I:
Introduction;ChapterII:LiteratureReview;Chapter
WWW.KDP.ORG
84 KAPPA DELTA PI RECORD u APRIL-JUNE 2012
as it pertains to potential stakeholders. This
step involves identifying to whom the findings
might matter and why, ranging from students to
teachers, principals, superintendents, districts,
state departments of education, legislators, and
the profession or empirical body of knowledge.
If the student cannot articulate to whom, in
what ways, and why the study matters, there
isn’t much reason to pursue the inquiry.
6. Finally, students are directed to review the defi-
nitions of assumptions, limitations, and delimi-
tations. It is useful to require students to actually
state these definitions and their source citations.
From this foundation, the student rereads her/
his purpose statement and research questions,
and drafts the associated assumptions, limita-
tions, and delimitations. This section typically
remains in draft form at least until after Chapter
III is drafted.
Chapter II: Literature Review
The literature review provides the theoretical
framework and research-based grounding for the
study (Boote and Beile 2005; Kennedy 2007). It can
be anywhere from 40 to 100 pages or more in length,
hence its daunting nature. Typically, the literature
review continues to grow as the study progresses and,
although an exhaustive literature review is probably
not possible in today’s age of exponential informa-
tion growth, it must be “substantive, thorough,
sophisticated” and comprehensive in nature and
scope (Boote and Beile 2005, 3).
It is useful for students to begin each chapter
with the purpose statement. This allows chapters
to stand alone in terms of informing the reader
about the inquiry purpose. From there, the areas of
literature that will be reviewed are identified. Writing
101 comes to mind: tell what you will tell them, tell
them, and then tell what you told them.
In determining what major areas of literature
are needed to support and ground the study, stu-
dents may be asked to consider a 3–4 legged stool,
with each area of literature providing context and
support to the study purpose—the seat of the stool.
Often when students struggle, it is because they are
attempting to support their study with literature
too narrowly defined—toppling their stool. Once
identified and sufficiently outlined, a funnel ap-
proach to writing within each area works well (i.e.,
starting broad and then honing in to focus on the
literature’s connection to the purpose of the study).
As with Chapter I, it can be immensely helpful
for students to focus on the incremental comple-
tion of each literature section—building the litera-
ture review piece by piece, subsection by subsection.
Concluding each major section with a summary
that ties the literature back to the purpose and sig-
nificance of the study makes clear to the reader why
the literature just read is important and relevant.
Chapter III: Methodology
The methodology material varies in length and
often evolves as the study progresses (e.g., findings
from a pilot study may inform the finalization of
the instrumentation). Again, the chapter begins by
restating the purpose of the study and then lists
the methodological contents; that is, sampling/
participants, instrumentation, procedures, design,
and expected analysis. Consistent with the strategy
embodied throughout this article, teachers may
find it useful to task students with completing
Chapter III in sections. Typical Chapter III assign-
ment prompts might look like this:
1. Participants/Sampling. Who are the par-
ticipants? Describe them (include any relevant
definitionsthatmayhelpmakeclearwhomyou
mean).Howwilltheyberecruited/selected,and
howmanywilltherebe?Itisimportanttodeter-
minewhethertheparticipantsarerespondents,
subjects, etc.; and then to use the correct term
consistently. It is also important to be explicit
about the population the sample will be drawn
from, the size of the sample, and the type of
sampling strategy to be employed (inclusive of
supporting reference citations).
At this point, having students go back to
review and consider their stated limitations
and delimitations can present a meaningful
“ah ha” opportunity. When students reread
the definitions of these terms, and then think
about how their participants/sampling deci-
sions inform limitations and delimitations,
it serves to help them realize and internalize
their role and responsibility as architects of the
inquiry they propose to engage.
2. Instrumentation/Measurement. What
instruments will be used? How will they
be developed? Describe the development
“How-to” Guide
KAPPA DELTA PI RECORD u APRIL-JUNE 2012 85
WWW.KDP.ORG
process and cite applicable reference sources
regarding the types of interviews, surveys,
etc. Survey items/questions need to be related
to the purpose of the study and the research
goals/questions. Additionally, in this section
students need to address issues of instrument
reliability and validity. Existing instruments
probably have this information already, and
students need to cite it. If instrumentation is
being developed for the study, information
specific to the development process needs to
be included. State something along the lines
of “the instrument was developed based on”:
(a) the literature review (in particular, in in-
stances where the researcher may be adapting
instrumentation used in other studies for use
in her/his study, those instruments and their
relationship to the study need to be described,
as well as rationale provided regarding the
mannerof adaptationand planned use);(b) the
researcher’s knowledge and expertise; (c) expert
review; and (d) pilot testing. When employed,
pilot testing must be thoroughly described in
terms of participants, instrumentation, and
procedures.
3. Procedures. What will you do, when, how,
and in what order. In this section, students: (a)
briefly review the sampling strategy and instru-
mentdevelopment(ifappropriate);(b)describe
how the study will be conducted (e.g., surveys,
interviews, testing, observations), being sure
to include detailed information about the set-
ting, length of time, and associated informa-
tion materials (e.g., informed consent form,
survey instruments); and (c) describe how the
data will be collected and stored. Ideally, the
procedures should be so clear and sequential,
much like following a recipe, that someone
else could come along, read them, and do the
study without having to ask the researcher for
directions.
Students invariably leave out important
information and steps when drafting proce-
dures. In an effort to make clear the depth and
breadth of detail required, asking students to
recall baking cookies can be helpful. Many
students can recite, in order, the ingredients
needed, specific amounts, cooking tem-
peratures, and times for their favorite cookie
recipe, and quickly provide the detail needed for
someone else to follow their directions and end
up with basically the same cookie. This analogy
often precipitates an “ah ha” moment in terms
of the methodological detail and clarity required.
4. Design/Analysis. What methodological ap-
proach will the study employ? Will you use
qualitative, quantitative, or mixed methods, and
correspondingly, what analyses are anticipated
(Johnson and Onwuegbuzie 2004). For many
students, despite considerable research and
statistics course work, confidence in terms of
knowing what analyses to do, when, and why
is often lacking. Again, a sequential piece-work
strategy is useful. For each research question,
students may be tasked to consider: (a) the type
and scale of data that will be collected, for ex-
ample, quantitative (nominal, ordinal, interval,
ratio) or qualitative (narrative); (b) what the
dependent and independent variables will be, if
appropriate; and (c) what analysis is appropriate
for responses to each question. Much like using
the right tool for the right job, it is critical that
students understand and use the analysis that
is appropriate for the questions asked and data
generated.
Chapter IV: Results/Findings
Presentation of the findings varies based on the
type of study. Sequence and structure are helpful
student supports. In most instances, what works well
is organizing this chapter beginning with response
rate and demographic data, followed by findings
corresponding to each research question. This chap-
ter often includes tables and sometimes graphs and
figures. The meaning or interpretation of the findings
is not part of this chapter, and students often need
to be reminded to stay focused on “just the facts.”
Chapter V: Discussion/Conclusion
As with other chapters, breaking this chapter
into its component parts—discussion, conclusions,
recommendations/implications for action, and areas
of further inquiry—can make it seem less daunting.
Staying true to the mantra of incremental sequence
and structure, assigned tasks for this chapter include:
(a) creating an outline for the Chapter V discussion
subsection using the same subsections presented in
Chapter IV—response rate and demographics fol-
86 KAPPA DELTA PI RECORD u APRIL-JUNE 2012
lowed by specific findings for each research ques-
tion; (b) rereading Chapter II and then relating
and discussing the findings to the literature; (c)
reviewing Chapter I regarding the significance of
the study, and then addressing or responding to
the significance, telling in what ways and to whom
their findings matter and why; and (d) following
the discussion with chapter subsections labeled
Conclusions, Recommendations and Implications
for Action, and Areas of Further Inquiry.
References, Appendices, and
Preliminary Pages
Reference lists must be complete and accurate,
a seemingly simple goal that is often difficult to
achieve. Creating the reference list as citations are
used is a helpful strategy, because it is difficult and
time-consuming to go back later and track down
source citation information. Adherence to all as-
pects of style format (e.g., APA) is also critical. Only
those references actually cited in the text can be
included in the reference list. This point may seem
obvious, but unless specifically directed to do so,
students often “forget” to engage a two-directional
process of verifying references (i.e., searching to be
sure every citation found in the document body
appears in the reference list—and vice versa).
Examples of material placed in appendices
are cover letters, statements of informed consent,
and instruments. Appendices should appear and
be lettered in the order they are referred to in the
document. The preliminary pages typically include
the Photocopy and Use Authorization Page, Title
Page, Copyright Page, Committee Approval Page,
Human Subjects Committee Approval Page, Dedi-
cation, Acknowledgments, Table of Contents, List
of Figures, List of Tables, and the Abstract. For the
most part, preparing these pages is relatively rote.
During periods of constricted time and creative en-
ergy, students can prepare these elements as a way
of maintaining writing progress and momentum.
Concluding Thoughts
While much could be said about selecting or recruit-
ing thesis/dissertation committee members in terms
of their roles and responsibilities, interpersonal
dynamics, and other factors, suffice it to say that
potential members need to know what they are
getting into and what is expected of them. An e-
mail invitation, sent jointly from the student and
teacher, inclusive of the study purpose and the stu-
dent’s anticipated timeline, is a quick and effective
way to initiate committee formation.
Thesis/dissertation proposal and defense pre-
sentations/examinations can be grueling interroga-
tion events, or they can be collegial exhibitions and
celebrations of educational research-based achieve-
ment and excellence. The guidelines outlined in
this article are designed to facilitate and precipitate
the latter. During the presentation, students should
expect questions. Typically, proposal questions
focus on issues of methodology, and it is critical
that students are clear about what they propose
doing and why. In contrast, defense questions often
focus on findings/results and discussion, as well as
attempts to help the student stretch in terms of
emergent recommendations and implications for
further inquiry.
At this point, despite diligent preparation,
most students experience elevated levels of anxi-
ety, if not terror, in anticipation of their presen-
tations and examination. The teacher’s role here
is critical, simple, clear, and direct—that is, to
remind students that this is their study and that
no one knows more about it than they do. Most
often, as the presentation and defense evolve from
an examination to an interesting, challenging,
thought-provoking dialogue, the line between
teacher and student blurs, a threshold is crossed,
and colleagues emerge.
References
Ali, A., and F. Kohun, F. 2006. Dealing with isolation feelings in IS
doctoral programs. International Journal of Doctoral Studies 1(1):
21–33.
Boote, D. N., and P. Beile. 2005. Scholars before researchers: On the
centrality of the dissertation literature review in research prepara-
tion. Educational Researcher 34(6): 3–15.
Council of Graduate Schools. 2008. Ph.D. completion and attrition:
Analysis of baseline demographic data from the Ph.D. comple-
tion project, Executive summary. Washington, DC: CGS. Avail-
able at: www.phdcompletion.org/information/Executive_
Summary_Demographics_Book_II.pdf.
Denecke, D. D., and H. S. Frasier. 2005. Ph.D. completion project:
Preliminary results from baseline data. Council of Graduate
Schools Communicator 38(9): 1–2, 7–8.
Golde, C. M. 2005. The role of the department and discipline in doc-
toral student attrition: Lessons from four departments. Journal of
Higher Education 76(6): 669–700.
Johnson, R. B., and A. J. Onwuegbuzie. 2004. Mixed methods
research: A research paradigm whose time has come. Educational
Researcher 33(7): 14–26.
Kennedy, M. M. 2007. Defining a literature. Educational Researcher
36(3): 139–47.
Tokuno, K. A. 2008. Theories relating to the transition into graduate
study. In Graduate students in transition: Assisting students through
the first year, ed. K. A. Tokuno, 27–46. Columbia, SC: National
Resource Center for the First-Year Experience and Students in
Transition, University of South Carolina.
“How-to” Guide

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A Quot How-To Quot Guide For The Education Thesis Dissertation Process.

  • 1. 82 KAPPA DELTA PI RECORD u APRIL-JUNE 2012 Graduate students are the best of the best. Like Olympic athletes, they are in pursuit of the high- est levels of achievement. They are intelligent, motivated, driven, educationally accomplished, and skilled. They also are usually excessively busy—working fulltime in their education setting as teachers, principals, or superintendents while balancing bustling home and professional lives alongside the demands of graduate-level educa- tion work. This juggling act is not to be taken lightly. In graduate education, retention and completion pose significant challenges. As many as 50 per- cent of doctoral and a quarter of master’s (varies by field of study) students fail to complete their programs (Denecke and Frasier 2005; Golde 2005; Council of Graduate Schools 2008). Tokuno (2008, 30) noted, “Where conflict between on- going social roles and the need to be a student arise, obstacles may occur.” Given the work and life demands education professionals routinely navigate, it is not surprising that completion rates are as low as they are, but that they are so high! To assist educators in managing their pur- suit of excellence along with their professional and personal lives, this article outlines “how-to” guidelines for higher education teachers/faculty advisors (hereafter referred to as teachers) and graduate students preparing to engage in thesis or dissertation work. Admittedly, this article merely skims the sur- face on the topics of theoretical grounding and literature review (Boote and Beile 2005; Kennedy 2007). In “Scholars before Researchers: On the Centrality of the Dissertation Literature Review in Research Preparation,” Boote and Beile (2005) emphasized the foundational role and purpose of the literature review. Kennedy (2007, 146) simi- larly presented useful insights specific to “prob- lems associated with defining a literature range . . . inclusion and exclusion . . . and how differences in study quality are addressed.” Students should not underestimate the importance of “a thorough, sophisticated review of the literature . . . and the importance of the literature review in research preparation” (Boote and Beile 2005, 3). That said, this article’s “how-to” guide is designed to help students overcome the overwhelming sense of burden in their overly committed professional lives, which too often gets in the way of even getting started. Getting Started Graduateprogramsseektosupportthedevelopment of education professionals as scholars, researchers, and practitioners through course work, examina- tion,andculminatingthesis/dissertation.Thethesis/ dissertation is a formal, scholarly document—a symbol of quality graduate study and research. Like marriage, the thesis/dissertation is a commitment, with a foundation for success built upon liking, if not loving, one’s chosen area of inquiry, as well as a stubborn willingness to persist over time. Selecting a Topic Ideally, students have been considering and reviewing literature related to their prospective area of inquiry throughout their program of Cynthia Lee A. Pember- ton is the Associate Dean of the Graduate School and Professor of Educa- tional Leadership at Idaho State University. Currently a Fulbright Scholar at the University of Malta, she has successfully mentored more than 30 students through the thesis/dissertation process. A “How-to” Guide for the Education Thesis/Dissertation Process by Cynthia Lee A. Pemberton Considering each stage of the process makes it a little more accessible and a little less daunting. Kappa Delta Pi Record, 48: 82-86, 2012 Copyright © Kappa Delta Pi ISSN: 0022-8958 print/2163-1611 online DOI: 10.1080/00228958.2012.680378 “How-to” Guide
  • 2. KAPPA DELTA PI RECORD u APRIL-JUNE 2012 83 III: Methodology; Chapter IV: Results; Chapter V: Discussion/Conclusion). Each chapter is subdivided into various content sections. An overview of chapters and subsection content follows. Chapter I: Introduction A strategy that may be particularly useful to edu- cation graduate students is to outline a process that begins at the beginning, meaning with Chapter I. Chapter I includes an introduction (wherein literature is used to briefly frame the inquiry), a statement of the study purpose, followed by research questions or goals, associated operational definitions, assumptions, limitations, delimitations, and the significance of the study. The sequence of teacher-assigned student tasks might look something like this: 1. Create a document outlining the chapter subsec- tion headings, set up with appropriate document margins, pagination, etc. This beginning activity demonstrates that in a very short time period (minutes), a concrete document starting point can be created. 2. Review key pieces of related literature and draft a purpose statement. Students may be able to articulate verbally what they think they want to do before they can succinctly write it as a purpose statement. Once the purpose is nailed down, students draft 2–4 research questions or goals derived from it. These, like the purpose statement, are bounced back and forth between teacher and student for feedback, discussion, and clarification. While this process can take time, it is foundational to scaffolding the research inquiry. The entire study is framed based on its purpose. 3. Using the purpose statement and research ques- tions, words/terms are highlighted that need to be operationally defined. Although there are instances where terms are appropriately defined “for the purpose of this study,” as much as pos- sible students should cite definitional reference sources. 4. The introduction text, with appropriate literature citations, is drafted next. The framework for this text is guided using a funnel model, with broad areas of literature identified, brought together and funneled to a focal point—the purpose of the study. 5. Students next address the “so what” question and outline the inquiry’s relevance or significance study—systematically exploring aspects of their potential topic through course assignments and projects. Teachers can and do play a key role here, counseling students to consider potential topics in terms of (a) sustaining their interest; (b) their range of competence to conduct and complete the research; (c) manageability—neither too wide nor too narrow; (d) contribution to the field—fill a gap in the literature, or substantiate or refute prior research; (e) obtainable data; and (f) providing an opportunity to demonstrate independent mastery of subject-matter content. Breaking It Down Starting the thesis/dissertation process can be daunting. The totality and enormity of research in- quiry frequently seems to overwhelm students. One waytohelpthemcopeistomapouttheincremental elements that comprise the process, making evident that it can be engaged and completed in pieces or stages. Minutes or hours here and there, over time, can and do result in a quality finished product. With this in mind, begin by breaking down the thesis/dissertation into its component parts; that is, preliminarypages,chapters,references,andappendi- ces. From there, outline where “we’ll” begin. Notice the emphasis on we; the student and teacher are in thistogether.AliandKohun(2006,27)describedthe senseofisolationgraduatestudentsoftenexperience atthiscriticalstage,whichmakestheteacher-student connectionespeciallyimportanttothesuccessofthe thesis/dissertation process: This stage is characterized by the students working alone with their advisor in the absence of extensive daily social interaction and commu- nication with their peers or with other faculty. . . . In most cases, there is no specific agenda to follow and there are no marks by which the students measure their progress. The issue is further com- plicated because each student works alone on his/ her research project. This prevents the students from obtaining vital support that could be gained from communicating with other students. One Piece at a Time Typically, thesis/dissertation work is organized and presented in sections, with the main document text residing in a series of chapters (i.e., Chapter I: Introduction;ChapterII:LiteratureReview;Chapter WWW.KDP.ORG
  • 3. 84 KAPPA DELTA PI RECORD u APRIL-JUNE 2012 as it pertains to potential stakeholders. This step involves identifying to whom the findings might matter and why, ranging from students to teachers, principals, superintendents, districts, state departments of education, legislators, and the profession or empirical body of knowledge. If the student cannot articulate to whom, in what ways, and why the study matters, there isn’t much reason to pursue the inquiry. 6. Finally, students are directed to review the defi- nitions of assumptions, limitations, and delimi- tations. It is useful to require students to actually state these definitions and their source citations. From this foundation, the student rereads her/ his purpose statement and research questions, and drafts the associated assumptions, limita- tions, and delimitations. This section typically remains in draft form at least until after Chapter III is drafted. Chapter II: Literature Review The literature review provides the theoretical framework and research-based grounding for the study (Boote and Beile 2005; Kennedy 2007). It can be anywhere from 40 to 100 pages or more in length, hence its daunting nature. Typically, the literature review continues to grow as the study progresses and, although an exhaustive literature review is probably not possible in today’s age of exponential informa- tion growth, it must be “substantive, thorough, sophisticated” and comprehensive in nature and scope (Boote and Beile 2005, 3). It is useful for students to begin each chapter with the purpose statement. This allows chapters to stand alone in terms of informing the reader about the inquiry purpose. From there, the areas of literature that will be reviewed are identified. Writing 101 comes to mind: tell what you will tell them, tell them, and then tell what you told them. In determining what major areas of literature are needed to support and ground the study, stu- dents may be asked to consider a 3–4 legged stool, with each area of literature providing context and support to the study purpose—the seat of the stool. Often when students struggle, it is because they are attempting to support their study with literature too narrowly defined—toppling their stool. Once identified and sufficiently outlined, a funnel ap- proach to writing within each area works well (i.e., starting broad and then honing in to focus on the literature’s connection to the purpose of the study). As with Chapter I, it can be immensely helpful for students to focus on the incremental comple- tion of each literature section—building the litera- ture review piece by piece, subsection by subsection. Concluding each major section with a summary that ties the literature back to the purpose and sig- nificance of the study makes clear to the reader why the literature just read is important and relevant. Chapter III: Methodology The methodology material varies in length and often evolves as the study progresses (e.g., findings from a pilot study may inform the finalization of the instrumentation). Again, the chapter begins by restating the purpose of the study and then lists the methodological contents; that is, sampling/ participants, instrumentation, procedures, design, and expected analysis. Consistent with the strategy embodied throughout this article, teachers may find it useful to task students with completing Chapter III in sections. Typical Chapter III assign- ment prompts might look like this: 1. Participants/Sampling. Who are the par- ticipants? Describe them (include any relevant definitionsthatmayhelpmakeclearwhomyou mean).Howwilltheyberecruited/selected,and howmanywilltherebe?Itisimportanttodeter- minewhethertheparticipantsarerespondents, subjects, etc.; and then to use the correct term consistently. It is also important to be explicit about the population the sample will be drawn from, the size of the sample, and the type of sampling strategy to be employed (inclusive of supporting reference citations). At this point, having students go back to review and consider their stated limitations and delimitations can present a meaningful “ah ha” opportunity. When students reread the definitions of these terms, and then think about how their participants/sampling deci- sions inform limitations and delimitations, it serves to help them realize and internalize their role and responsibility as architects of the inquiry they propose to engage. 2. Instrumentation/Measurement. What instruments will be used? How will they be developed? Describe the development “How-to” Guide
  • 4. KAPPA DELTA PI RECORD u APRIL-JUNE 2012 85 WWW.KDP.ORG process and cite applicable reference sources regarding the types of interviews, surveys, etc. Survey items/questions need to be related to the purpose of the study and the research goals/questions. Additionally, in this section students need to address issues of instrument reliability and validity. Existing instruments probably have this information already, and students need to cite it. If instrumentation is being developed for the study, information specific to the development process needs to be included. State something along the lines of “the instrument was developed based on”: (a) the literature review (in particular, in in- stances where the researcher may be adapting instrumentation used in other studies for use in her/his study, those instruments and their relationship to the study need to be described, as well as rationale provided regarding the mannerof adaptationand planned use);(b) the researcher’s knowledge and expertise; (c) expert review; and (d) pilot testing. When employed, pilot testing must be thoroughly described in terms of participants, instrumentation, and procedures. 3. Procedures. What will you do, when, how, and in what order. In this section, students: (a) briefly review the sampling strategy and instru- mentdevelopment(ifappropriate);(b)describe how the study will be conducted (e.g., surveys, interviews, testing, observations), being sure to include detailed information about the set- ting, length of time, and associated informa- tion materials (e.g., informed consent form, survey instruments); and (c) describe how the data will be collected and stored. Ideally, the procedures should be so clear and sequential, much like following a recipe, that someone else could come along, read them, and do the study without having to ask the researcher for directions. Students invariably leave out important information and steps when drafting proce- dures. In an effort to make clear the depth and breadth of detail required, asking students to recall baking cookies can be helpful. Many students can recite, in order, the ingredients needed, specific amounts, cooking tem- peratures, and times for their favorite cookie recipe, and quickly provide the detail needed for someone else to follow their directions and end up with basically the same cookie. This analogy often precipitates an “ah ha” moment in terms of the methodological detail and clarity required. 4. Design/Analysis. What methodological ap- proach will the study employ? Will you use qualitative, quantitative, or mixed methods, and correspondingly, what analyses are anticipated (Johnson and Onwuegbuzie 2004). For many students, despite considerable research and statistics course work, confidence in terms of knowing what analyses to do, when, and why is often lacking. Again, a sequential piece-work strategy is useful. For each research question, students may be tasked to consider: (a) the type and scale of data that will be collected, for ex- ample, quantitative (nominal, ordinal, interval, ratio) or qualitative (narrative); (b) what the dependent and independent variables will be, if appropriate; and (c) what analysis is appropriate for responses to each question. Much like using the right tool for the right job, it is critical that students understand and use the analysis that is appropriate for the questions asked and data generated. Chapter IV: Results/Findings Presentation of the findings varies based on the type of study. Sequence and structure are helpful student supports. In most instances, what works well is organizing this chapter beginning with response rate and demographic data, followed by findings corresponding to each research question. This chap- ter often includes tables and sometimes graphs and figures. The meaning or interpretation of the findings is not part of this chapter, and students often need to be reminded to stay focused on “just the facts.” Chapter V: Discussion/Conclusion As with other chapters, breaking this chapter into its component parts—discussion, conclusions, recommendations/implications for action, and areas of further inquiry—can make it seem less daunting. Staying true to the mantra of incremental sequence and structure, assigned tasks for this chapter include: (a) creating an outline for the Chapter V discussion subsection using the same subsections presented in Chapter IV—response rate and demographics fol-
  • 5. 86 KAPPA DELTA PI RECORD u APRIL-JUNE 2012 lowed by specific findings for each research ques- tion; (b) rereading Chapter II and then relating and discussing the findings to the literature; (c) reviewing Chapter I regarding the significance of the study, and then addressing or responding to the significance, telling in what ways and to whom their findings matter and why; and (d) following the discussion with chapter subsections labeled Conclusions, Recommendations and Implications for Action, and Areas of Further Inquiry. References, Appendices, and Preliminary Pages Reference lists must be complete and accurate, a seemingly simple goal that is often difficult to achieve. Creating the reference list as citations are used is a helpful strategy, because it is difficult and time-consuming to go back later and track down source citation information. Adherence to all as- pects of style format (e.g., APA) is also critical. Only those references actually cited in the text can be included in the reference list. This point may seem obvious, but unless specifically directed to do so, students often “forget” to engage a two-directional process of verifying references (i.e., searching to be sure every citation found in the document body appears in the reference list—and vice versa). Examples of material placed in appendices are cover letters, statements of informed consent, and instruments. Appendices should appear and be lettered in the order they are referred to in the document. The preliminary pages typically include the Photocopy and Use Authorization Page, Title Page, Copyright Page, Committee Approval Page, Human Subjects Committee Approval Page, Dedi- cation, Acknowledgments, Table of Contents, List of Figures, List of Tables, and the Abstract. For the most part, preparing these pages is relatively rote. During periods of constricted time and creative en- ergy, students can prepare these elements as a way of maintaining writing progress and momentum. Concluding Thoughts While much could be said about selecting or recruit- ing thesis/dissertation committee members in terms of their roles and responsibilities, interpersonal dynamics, and other factors, suffice it to say that potential members need to know what they are getting into and what is expected of them. An e- mail invitation, sent jointly from the student and teacher, inclusive of the study purpose and the stu- dent’s anticipated timeline, is a quick and effective way to initiate committee formation. Thesis/dissertation proposal and defense pre- sentations/examinations can be grueling interroga- tion events, or they can be collegial exhibitions and celebrations of educational research-based achieve- ment and excellence. The guidelines outlined in this article are designed to facilitate and precipitate the latter. During the presentation, students should expect questions. Typically, proposal questions focus on issues of methodology, and it is critical that students are clear about what they propose doing and why. In contrast, defense questions often focus on findings/results and discussion, as well as attempts to help the student stretch in terms of emergent recommendations and implications for further inquiry. At this point, despite diligent preparation, most students experience elevated levels of anxi- ety, if not terror, in anticipation of their presen- tations and examination. The teacher’s role here is critical, simple, clear, and direct—that is, to remind students that this is their study and that no one knows more about it than they do. Most often, as the presentation and defense evolve from an examination to an interesting, challenging, thought-provoking dialogue, the line between teacher and student blurs, a threshold is crossed, and colleagues emerge. References Ali, A., and F. Kohun, F. 2006. Dealing with isolation feelings in IS doctoral programs. International Journal of Doctoral Studies 1(1): 21–33. Boote, D. N., and P. Beile. 2005. Scholars before researchers: On the centrality of the dissertation literature review in research prepara- tion. Educational Researcher 34(6): 3–15. Council of Graduate Schools. 2008. Ph.D. completion and attrition: Analysis of baseline demographic data from the Ph.D. comple- tion project, Executive summary. Washington, DC: CGS. Avail- able at: www.phdcompletion.org/information/Executive_ Summary_Demographics_Book_II.pdf. Denecke, D. D., and H. S. Frasier. 2005. Ph.D. completion project: Preliminary results from baseline data. Council of Graduate Schools Communicator 38(9): 1–2, 7–8. Golde, C. M. 2005. The role of the department and discipline in doc- toral student attrition: Lessons from four departments. Journal of Higher Education 76(6): 669–700. Johnson, R. B., and A. J. Onwuegbuzie. 2004. Mixed methods research: A research paradigm whose time has come. Educational Researcher 33(7): 14–26. Kennedy, M. M. 2007. Defining a literature. Educational Researcher 36(3): 139–47. Tokuno, K. A. 2008. Theories relating to the transition into graduate study. In Graduate students in transition: Assisting students through the first year, ed. K. A. Tokuno, 27–46. Columbia, SC: National Resource Center for the First-Year Experience and Students in Transition, University of South Carolina. “How-to” Guide