The Introduction
Topic Area
A good title will clue the reader into the topic
but it can not tell the whole story.
Follow the title with a strong introduction.
The introduction provides a brief overview that tells a
fairly well informed (but perhaps non-specialist) reader
what the proposal is about.
It might be as short as a single page,
but it should be very clearly written, and
it should let one assess whether the research is relevant to
their own.
With luck it will hook the reader's interest.
What is your proposal about? Setting the topical area
is a start but you need more, and quickly.
Get specific about what your research will address.
Question
Once the topic is established,
come right to the point. What are you doing?
What specific issue or question will your work address?
Very briefly (this is still the introduction) say how
you will approach the work.
What will we learn from your work?
Significance
Why is this work important?
Show why this is it important to answer this question.
What are the implications of doing it?
How does it link to other knowledge?
How does it stand to inform policy making?
This should show how this project is significant to our body of knowledge.
Why is it important to our understanding of the world?
It should establish why I would want to read on.
It should also tell me why I would want to support,
or fund, the project.
Literature Review
State of our knowledge
The purpose of the literature review is to situate your research in
the context of what is already known about a topic. It need not be
exhaustive, it needs to show how your work will benefit the whole.
It should provide the theoretical basis for your work,
show what has been done in the area by others,
and set the stage for your work.
In a literature review you should give the reader enough ties to
the literature that they feel confident that you have found, read,
and assimilated the literature in the field. It should probably move from
the more general to the more focused studies, but need not be exhaustive,
only relevant.
Outstanding questions
This is where you present the holes in the knowledge that need to be plugged
and by so doing, situate your work.
It is the place where you establish that your work will fit in and
be significant to the discipline.
This can be made easier if there is literature that comes out and says
"Hey, this is a topic that needs to be treated! What is the answer to
this question?" and you will sometimes see this type of piece in the
literature.
Perhaps there is a reason to read old AAG presidential addresses.
Research Questions in Detail
Your work to date
Tell what you have done so far. It might report preliminary
studies that you have conducted to establish the feasibility of your
research. It should give a sense that you are in a position to
add to the body of knowledge.
Methodology
Overview of approach
This section should make clear to the reader
the way that you intend to approach the research question
and the techniques and logic that you will use to address it.
Data Collection
This might include the field site description,
a description of the instruments you will use,
and particularly the data that you anticipate collecting.
You may need to comment on site and resource accessibility
in the time frame and budget that you have available,
to demonstrate feasibility,
but the emphasis in this section should be to fully describe
specifically what data you will be using in your study.
Part of the purpose of doing this is to detect flaws in the
plan before they become problems in the research.
Data Analysis
This should explain in some detail how you will manipulate the data
that you assembled to get at the information that you will use to
answer your question.
It will include the statistical or other techniques
and the tools that you will use in processing the data.
It probably should also include an indication of the range of
outcomes that you could reasonably expect from your observations.
Interpretation
In this section you should indicate
how the anticipated outcomes will be interpreted to
answer the research question.
It is extremely beneficial to anticipate the range of outcomes
from your analysis, and for each know what it will mean
in terms of the answer to your question.
Expected Results
This section should give a good indication of
what you expect to get out of the research.
It should join the data analysis and possible outcomes to the theory
and questions that you have raised.
It will be a good place to summarize the significance of the work.
It is often useful from the very beginning of formulating your work
to write one page for this section to focus your reasoning as
you build the rest of the proposal.
Bibliography
This is the list of the relevant works.
Some advisors like exhaustive lists.
I think that the Graduate Division specifies that you call it "Bibliography".
Others like to see only the literature which you actually cite.
Most fall in between: there is no reason to cite irrelevant literature
but it may be useful to keep track of it
even if only to say that it was examined and found to be irrelevant.
Use a standard format. Order the references alphabetically,
and use "flag" paragraphs as per the University's Guidelines.
No comments:
Post a Comment