Research proposal 4presentation
 Research is:
 “…the systematic process of collecting
and analyzing information (data) in order to
increase our understanding of the
phenomenon about which we are concerned
or interested.”
Randomly selecting books from the
library is not research, nor is surfing the
Internet. On the contrary, research requires
organization, resourcefulness, reflection, sy
nthesis, and above all, time
 Research Proposal is the part of the
paper that provides readers with the
background information for the
research reported in the paper. Its
purpose is to establish a framework
for the research so that reader can
understand how it is related to the
other research (Wilkinson, 1991).
 The issues involved and are able to provide
more than a broad description of the topic
which they are planning to research.
 Writing a proposal on a topic forces you to
do intensive research and critical thinking
about your proposed research topic.
 The proposal is not a fixed blueprint. the
research will inevitably alter or even unseat
one's initial expectations
 1-Title
◦ select a research area and the title of research
paper.
◦ Often, titles are stated in terms of a functional
relationship, because such titles clearly indicate
the independent and dependent variables.
 A good title should:
◦ Indicate the type of study you will conduct.
◦ Address the main problem you are planning to
investigate.
◦ Be concise, short, and descriptive.
◦
◦ Convey to the reader the main focus of
your research.
◦ Use the correct terms in the title; it is very
important to use the correct term so that
your title becomes more meaningful.
◦ Try to limit your title to a single sentence
and exclude any words that are not
essential to the overall understanding of
the title.
 Note: Write the title beginning each word
with capital letter and center-align it.
 The main purpose of the introduction is to
provide the necessary background or context
for your research problem.
In an introduction, you should:
 Create the reader interest in the topic.
 Lay the broad foundation for the problem
that leads to the study.
 Add necessary data to build on your
research.
 Add a reliable footnote(s) that supports the
data..
 The lead sentence: pay special attention to
your first sentence
 To avoid from:
 Long historical backgrounds, broadness
and subjective judgments/ researcher bias
(it must be objective and neutral)
 Purpose of research in the quantitative
research problem stated at the beginning to
guide the research process. But in the
qualitative research statement of purpose
may be preceded by field work to learn
context of the research, propose guide
study.
 Although their use in quantitative
inquiry is becoming more prominent.
When a researcher states hypothesis.
The reader is entitled to have an ex
position of the theory that lead to them.
 A research question poses a relationship
between two or more variables but phrase
the relationship as a question. A hypothesis
represent declarative statement of the
relations between two or more variables
(Kerlinger, 1979; Krathwohl, 1988).
 The review of literature provides the
background and context for the research
problem. It should establish the need for
research and indicate that writer is
knowledge able about the area
(Weiersma, 1995).
 It shares with the reader the results of other
studies that are closely related to the study
being reported (Fraenkel & Wallen, 1990).
 In quantitative research review conducted
early in the study to identify related
research , potential hypothesis and
methodological approaches.
 In qualitative research, review may lead to
guide hypothesis. It links study to underline
assumptions and theories; if not needed for
a research plan, may be conducted after
study onset.
 The methods/procedures section is really the
heart of the research proposal. The activity
should be described with as much details as
possible., the continuity between them
should be apparent” (Wersama, 1995).
 All methodological steps would be indicated.
Research design may include both
quantitative and qualitative methods; that two
approaches are not totally independent of
each other.
 Maintaining description of procedures being
used is critical if other researchers are to
judge process and results latter.
 Outline the general plan for collecting the
data. This may include survey
administration procedures, interview or
observation procedures. Include an explicit
statement covering the field controls to be
employed. If appropriate, discuss how you
obtained your finding.
 Provide a general outline of the time
schedule you expect to follow.
 In quantitative research data consists of
results from tests, questionnaire and other
paper, pencil instruments.
 In the qualitative, data consists of notes
from observations, interview, examination
of artifacts.
 Collection require substantial interaction
between researcher and participant.
 Specify the procedures you will use and label
them accurately)
E.g., ANOVA, CHI, ethnography, case
study, grounded theory.
 Communicate your precise intentions and
reasons for these intentions to the reader.
This helps you and reader evaluate the
choices you made and procedures you
followed.
 Indicate briefly any analytic tools available
and expected to use (e.g. SPSS)
 A limitation identifies potential weaknesses
of the study. Think about the
analysis, nature of self report, instruments
and sample. Threats to internal validity that
may have been impossible to
avoid/minimize-explain.
 A delimitation addresses how a study will
be narrowed in scope, that is how it is
bounded. This is the place to explain the
things that you are not doing and why you
have chosen not to do population you are
not studying.
 It indicates how the present research
will refine, revise, or extend existing
knowledge in the area under
investigation.
 The need for the proposed activity is clearly
established, preferably with data.
 The most important ideas are highlighted and
repeated in several places.
 The objectives of the project are given in
detail.
 There is a detailed schedule of activities for
the project, or at least sample portions of
such a complete project schedule.
 .
 The budget and the proposal narrative are
consistent.
 The uses of money are clearly indicated in the
proposal narrative as well as in the budget.
 All of the major matters indicated in the
proposal guidelines are clearly addressed in
the proposal.
 The agreement of all project staff and
consultants to participate in the project was
acquired and is so indicated in the proposal.
 Appendices have been used appropriately for
detailed and lengthy materials which the
reviewers may not want to read but are useful
as evidence of careful planning, previous
experience, etc.
 Collaboration with all interested groups in
planning of the proposed project is evident in
the proposal
 The writing style is clear and concise. It
speaks to the reader, helping the reader
understand the problems and proposal.
Summarizing statements and headings are
used to lead the reader.
 The research report is the written product
that results from researching a topic
 A research report is a typed report of 6 to
12 pages in length dealing with a topic
covered as part of the course content. Your
research report consists of research that
you do on the topic as well as your
interpretation of this information.
 Step 1: Choose a topic
 Step 2: Formulate a thesis statement
(main idea)
 Step 3: Research for your paper
 Step 4: Record your sources
 Step 5: Create an outline
 Step 6: Write the introduction
 Step 7: Write your body paragraphs
 Step 8: Write the conclusion
 Step 9: Finalize your documentation
 Step 10: Title
Don't forget to proofread
 Step 11: Revision
 Step 12: Final draft

 1. Thesis
 2. Journal article or paper
 3. Dissertation
 Abstract
 Preliminary page
 Preparation of Manuscript
 Main body of the report
 Results
 Appendices
RESEARCH PROPOSAL RESEARCH REPORT
Research Proposal is
intended to convince
others that you have
worthwhile research
project.
A Research proposal is
the out line of
proposed research
which is going to be
conduct
Research Report is
detailed information
about already conducted
research.
The general purpose of a
report is to identify a
specific problem, explain
it and recommend action
that will lead to a
solution.
RESEARCH PROPOSAL RESEARCH REPORT
 Research proposal is
prepared before the
actual research begins.
 The general purpose of
a proposal is the
identify a particular
need, explain it and
recommend how this
need can best be met.
 research report can be
considered the
culmination of
research proposal
 The experimental
results and
methodology assume
significance in this
case.
 Research proposal indicates how research will
refine, revise, or extend existing knowledge in
the area under investigation. It reflects a clear
statement of commitment to continue the project
after external findings ends.
 A research report is the culmination of all the
effort, sweat and toiling that a research student
undergoes during actual research process. Once
the research has been completed, a formal
submission is required which takes place in the
form of a research report.
 This is a document that reflects the potential
of the researcher and should contain all the
information and facts in a standardized
format that enables any casual onlooker to
get
 It contains the
title, abstract, introduction, experimental
details, results, discussion, conclusions, and
finally references used by the researcher.
everything easily out of the report.
 http://members.tripod.com/~lklivingston/essay/
 http://www.geocities.com/soho/Atrium/1437/
 http://www.english.bham.ac.uk/staff/tom/teachi
ng/howto/essay.htm
 http://www.aresearchguide.com/styleguides.html
 www.adelaide.edu.au/writingcentre.
 www.disweb.rmit.edu.au
 Educational Research, 4th Edition. L.R
GAY, Maxwell Macmillian International Edition.
THANKS


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Research proposal 4presentation

  • 2.  Research is:  “…the systematic process of collecting and analyzing information (data) in order to increase our understanding of the phenomenon about which we are concerned or interested.”
  • 3. Randomly selecting books from the library is not research, nor is surfing the Internet. On the contrary, research requires organization, resourcefulness, reflection, sy nthesis, and above all, time
  • 4.  Research Proposal is the part of the paper that provides readers with the background information for the research reported in the paper. Its purpose is to establish a framework for the research so that reader can understand how it is related to the other research (Wilkinson, 1991).
  • 5.  The issues involved and are able to provide more than a broad description of the topic which they are planning to research.  Writing a proposal on a topic forces you to do intensive research and critical thinking about your proposed research topic.  The proposal is not a fixed blueprint. the research will inevitably alter or even unseat one's initial expectations
  • 6.  1-Title ◦ select a research area and the title of research paper. ◦ Often, titles are stated in terms of a functional relationship, because such titles clearly indicate the independent and dependent variables.  A good title should: ◦ Indicate the type of study you will conduct. ◦ Address the main problem you are planning to investigate. ◦ Be concise, short, and descriptive. ◦
  • 7. ◦ Convey to the reader the main focus of your research. ◦ Use the correct terms in the title; it is very important to use the correct term so that your title becomes more meaningful. ◦ Try to limit your title to a single sentence and exclude any words that are not essential to the overall understanding of the title.  Note: Write the title beginning each word with capital letter and center-align it.
  • 8.  The main purpose of the introduction is to provide the necessary background or context for your research problem. In an introduction, you should:  Create the reader interest in the topic.  Lay the broad foundation for the problem that leads to the study.  Add necessary data to build on your research.  Add a reliable footnote(s) that supports the data..
  • 9.  The lead sentence: pay special attention to your first sentence  To avoid from:  Long historical backgrounds, broadness and subjective judgments/ researcher bias (it must be objective and neutral)
  • 10.  Purpose of research in the quantitative research problem stated at the beginning to guide the research process. But in the qualitative research statement of purpose may be preceded by field work to learn context of the research, propose guide study.
  • 11.  Although their use in quantitative inquiry is becoming more prominent. When a researcher states hypothesis. The reader is entitled to have an ex position of the theory that lead to them.
  • 12.  A research question poses a relationship between two or more variables but phrase the relationship as a question. A hypothesis represent declarative statement of the relations between two or more variables (Kerlinger, 1979; Krathwohl, 1988).
  • 13.  The review of literature provides the background and context for the research problem. It should establish the need for research and indicate that writer is knowledge able about the area (Weiersma, 1995).  It shares with the reader the results of other studies that are closely related to the study being reported (Fraenkel & Wallen, 1990).
  • 14.  In quantitative research review conducted early in the study to identify related research , potential hypothesis and methodological approaches.  In qualitative research, review may lead to guide hypothesis. It links study to underline assumptions and theories; if not needed for a research plan, may be conducted after study onset.
  • 15.  The methods/procedures section is really the heart of the research proposal. The activity should be described with as much details as possible., the continuity between them should be apparent” (Wersama, 1995).  All methodological steps would be indicated. Research design may include both quantitative and qualitative methods; that two approaches are not totally independent of each other.
  • 16.  Maintaining description of procedures being used is critical if other researchers are to judge process and results latter.
  • 17.  Outline the general plan for collecting the data. This may include survey administration procedures, interview or observation procedures. Include an explicit statement covering the field controls to be employed. If appropriate, discuss how you obtained your finding.  Provide a general outline of the time schedule you expect to follow.
  • 18.  In quantitative research data consists of results from tests, questionnaire and other paper, pencil instruments.  In the qualitative, data consists of notes from observations, interview, examination of artifacts.  Collection require substantial interaction between researcher and participant.
  • 19.  Specify the procedures you will use and label them accurately) E.g., ANOVA, CHI, ethnography, case study, grounded theory.  Communicate your precise intentions and reasons for these intentions to the reader. This helps you and reader evaluate the choices you made and procedures you followed.  Indicate briefly any analytic tools available and expected to use (e.g. SPSS)
  • 20.  A limitation identifies potential weaknesses of the study. Think about the analysis, nature of self report, instruments and sample. Threats to internal validity that may have been impossible to avoid/minimize-explain.
  • 21.  A delimitation addresses how a study will be narrowed in scope, that is how it is bounded. This is the place to explain the things that you are not doing and why you have chosen not to do population you are not studying.
  • 22.  It indicates how the present research will refine, revise, or extend existing knowledge in the area under investigation.
  • 23.  The need for the proposed activity is clearly established, preferably with data.  The most important ideas are highlighted and repeated in several places.  The objectives of the project are given in detail.  There is a detailed schedule of activities for the project, or at least sample portions of such a complete project schedule.  .
  • 24.  The budget and the proposal narrative are consistent.  The uses of money are clearly indicated in the proposal narrative as well as in the budget.  All of the major matters indicated in the proposal guidelines are clearly addressed in the proposal.  The agreement of all project staff and consultants to participate in the project was acquired and is so indicated in the proposal.
  • 25.  Appendices have been used appropriately for detailed and lengthy materials which the reviewers may not want to read but are useful as evidence of careful planning, previous experience, etc.  Collaboration with all interested groups in planning of the proposed project is evident in the proposal
  • 26.  The writing style is clear and concise. It speaks to the reader, helping the reader understand the problems and proposal. Summarizing statements and headings are used to lead the reader.
  • 27.  The research report is the written product that results from researching a topic  A research report is a typed report of 6 to 12 pages in length dealing with a topic covered as part of the course content. Your research report consists of research that you do on the topic as well as your interpretation of this information.
  • 28.  Step 1: Choose a topic  Step 2: Formulate a thesis statement (main idea)  Step 3: Research for your paper  Step 4: Record your sources  Step 5: Create an outline  Step 6: Write the introduction  Step 7: Write your body paragraphs  Step 8: Write the conclusion  Step 9: Finalize your documentation
  • 29.  Step 10: Title Don't forget to proofread  Step 11: Revision  Step 12: Final draft 
  • 30.  1. Thesis  2. Journal article or paper  3. Dissertation  Abstract  Preliminary page  Preparation of Manuscript  Main body of the report  Results  Appendices
  • 31. RESEARCH PROPOSAL RESEARCH REPORT Research Proposal is intended to convince others that you have worthwhile research project. A Research proposal is the out line of proposed research which is going to be conduct Research Report is detailed information about already conducted research. The general purpose of a report is to identify a specific problem, explain it and recommend action that will lead to a solution.
  • 32. RESEARCH PROPOSAL RESEARCH REPORT  Research proposal is prepared before the actual research begins.  The general purpose of a proposal is the identify a particular need, explain it and recommend how this need can best be met.  research report can be considered the culmination of research proposal  The experimental results and methodology assume significance in this case.
  • 33.  Research proposal indicates how research will refine, revise, or extend existing knowledge in the area under investigation. It reflects a clear statement of commitment to continue the project after external findings ends.  A research report is the culmination of all the effort, sweat and toiling that a research student undergoes during actual research process. Once the research has been completed, a formal submission is required which takes place in the form of a research report.
  • 34.  This is a document that reflects the potential of the researcher and should contain all the information and facts in a standardized format that enables any casual onlooker to get  It contains the title, abstract, introduction, experimental details, results, discussion, conclusions, and finally references used by the researcher. everything easily out of the report.
  • 35.  http://members.tripod.com/~lklivingston/essay/  http://www.geocities.com/soho/Atrium/1437/  http://www.english.bham.ac.uk/staff/tom/teachi ng/howto/essay.htm  http://www.aresearchguide.com/styleguides.html  www.adelaide.edu.au/writingcentre.  www.disweb.rmit.edu.au  Educational Research, 4th Edition. L.R GAY, Maxwell Macmillian International Edition.