Transcript Slide 1

Approaching the Research Proposal
Before you can start writing your proposal
you need to clarify exactly what you will be
doing, why, and how.
This is no easy task.
Step 1: Think of an idea
•This is a difficult task and it takes TIME
• Use personal experiences, journal articles you’ve
read, classroom or textbook topics, issues you’ve see
on the news, discussions with others etc.
• Think of how it can be done practically
• Discuss your idea with others
Look at what the research has ALREADY FOUND!
You won’t simply repeat that research but it could give
you ideas for conceptual replication and elaboration.
This will be a preliminary search just to help stimulate
your ideas – you’ll do more searching later….
Step 2: Reformulate your idea into a question that
will guide the rest of your literature search.
• Identify key words or concepts from your idea and
questions.
• Begin to narrow down your ideas into a workable
study – you can’t study everything at once.
• Try combining ideas from multiple areas that would
seem to go together.
Step 3: Go back to the literature for studies similar
to your ideas.
• You’ll be amazed at how much you missed the first
time you searched the literature. Now that you have a
better idea of your topic, you can narrow down your
search for research more relevent to your topic.
• Think about how you can extend what the research
already tells us.
• Search for new keywords and continue the search.
• Look for new combinations of keywords or different
ways of labeling a topic (e.g. aggressive and
aggression and violent and violence).
Introduction
• This is where you will tell people about what the
topic of your research will be and why it’s worth doing
(and why they want to continue reading).
• Start by defining the problem or issue. Define the
key variable so they know what you’re talking about.
• Then discuss what the research in the area has
already found. This is the literature review to educate
the reader (including a critical review and progression
of ideas in the field).
•It is focused on issues relevant to your topic and to
the factors in your study.
• This should ultimately justify your predictions and
flow logically – what’s missing, what’s wrong and
how will your study add to current knowledge?
Remember:
You must convince the reader that…
•Your research is a good idea, practical and worth
doing
•You have read the literature on your topic
•You are aware of major issues surrounding your topic
of research
Predictions
• Introduction should lead to your hypothesis or
hypotheses.
•Be specific about what you expect to find with
regards to you variables.
Method
• Still has same 3 main sections:
Participants
Who would you include
What would be key characteristics
How would selection be done
Materials
What are the tools that would be used
Explain as you would a completed study
Method
Procedure
• How you would conduct the research
• Step by step
• Order of events
• Controls
Results
• Talk about proposed analyses
• How would you treat raw data?
• What statistics would you use?
• ANOVA? Regressions? Chi Square?
• what are key variables (e.g. IV, DV, predictor, criterion)
• what are levels of variables, categories etc.
• what are relevant groups (e.g. treatment/control)
• what is the model used (e.g. full factorial, partial factorial)
• What comparisons would you need to make?
• Post Hocs/strength of effect etc. if necessary.
• Plot expected outcomes if necessary
Discussion
• Explain potential implications
• link to research
• Methodological / design issues (without sounding
self defeating)
• Future research directions
References
• APA style for all sources cited
Common Mistakes
INTRODUCTION
•Failure to provide context/research around which the
research question developed in the intro
• Failure to cite important / relevant research
• Failure to stay focused
• Lack of clarity and flow
• Failure to present coherent, logical arguments
• Weak organization
• Ambiguous, confusing language (again, CLARITY)
• Dwelling on unimportant issues
• Unrealistic
Common Mistakes
METHOD
• Lack of foresight/planning for participants
• APA violations
• Tools not explained
• Procedure can’t be replicated (CLARITY)
• Mixing procedures and materials
• Ambiguous explanations
• Lack of planning
Common Mistakes
RESULTS
• Lack of description of treatment of data
• Wrong statistics
• Ambiguous reference to statistics
Common Mistakes
DISCUSSION
• Not explaining findings
• Implications not linked to theory / research
• Implications not specific to expected findings
• Lack of clarity
• Poor discussion of methodological considerations
• Future research directions unclear