Reference no: EM132241913
WRITE A RESEARCH PROPOSAL
The details are mentioned below. How the proposal be written. You can write research proposal on banking or IT but the work must be very thorough and complete.
1. Introduction
The task/requirement is detailed in point 5 on page 4 onwards.
Please take careful note of the flowing points:
- The focus of this assignment is:
o The identification and supporting justification of a potential area of research.
o The design of an approach to researching that area.
o A justification of the design of the approach selected.
- The word count is up to 3,500 words. It is your own choice as to how many words to use within this limit. This should not be should not be exceeded - see point 3 on page 3.
- The word count does not include the title page, any Table of Contents page, the list of references. You are not obliged to but may if you wish include an executive summary and/or an abstract. If you choose to do so it will not count towards to the total word count but should not contain any new information not already contained within the main body of work.
- The upper limit of the word count of 3,500 words
- You MUST state an accurate word count (excluding the title page, any Table of Contents page, and the list of references) on the front page of your submission.
• Note that ALL words/numbers, excluding the title page, a Table of Contents page, and the list of references, will count towards to the total word count. Foot notes, illustrations, charts, diagrams, pictures, tables may be included in the main body of your text but they will all count towards the total word count.
• You are not allowed to use appendices. You should only show the list of references at the end of your work.
• Any work received after the submission deadline will receive a recorded mark of zero.
• You must ensure that you cite references consistently. You should state on your title page the referencing system you have opted to use, even if it is Harvard.
Tasks and requirements
Required
There is one requirement in this section, as specified in the Task further below. The focus is the proposal and design of a potential research study.
Context
This coursework assignment focuses on your own personal or professional area of interest. The area of interest is likely to be work-related but the choice of another area of focus, perhaps of a more personal nature, is not excluded. Whichever area of focus you choose it should be justified in your coursework assignment. If you decide to select an area not work-related ensure that the area is of substance and is not ‘light-weight'. As reflected in the Task detailed below, you are required to select, justify and formulate a research proposal for your selected area of focus.
Thus far in this module's materials you have been introduced to and considered the methodological underpinning of a number of aspects of the nature and logistics of, amongst others:
- The nature of research: ‘what research is'.
- Research objectives, hypotheses, and questions.
- Research paradigms.
- Literature reviews.
- Research designs.
- The nature of and approaches to qualitative research.
- The nature of and approaches to quantitative research
- The nature of and approaches to mixed methods research.
In developing your research proposal you will draw upon, as appropriate, all or some, of the aspects introduced and considered in this module's materials. You will also undertake your own further consideration of other supporting literature appropriate to your task, showing wider independent research and learning. This is a fundamental expectation at Masters Level studies.
Task
There is one task. This is for you to construct a research proposal which captures and articulates a research design for your chosen area of interest/focus. This task comprises a number of components.
It would be worth noting that there is a possibility for you to link your coursework assignment to your final project's business plan/consultancy report relating to this module. However, do note that the assessment brief for this particular coursework is specific and may not necessarily suit your ultimate business plan/report. This coursework is more academic and assesses the theoretical frameworks of research methods whereas the business plan/consultancy report within the final project is more practical in nature. As a consequence, this coursework assignment may not naturally lend itself as a pre-cursor to the project.
Guidance for undertaking and completing the Task, and required components
Your proposal will be assessed by the Strategic Financial Project (SFP) module team against each of the points detailed below. You are advised to ensure that it addresses each of those points further below. Please be reminded that the nature of this coursework assignment is academic and may not lend itself to linking easily to the final project which is focused more on a strategic business plan/consultancy report. You may, for example, explore a specific organizational phenomenon as the basis of your research proposal. This may be built upon within your final project's business plan/consultancy report, especially where you may wish to cite some of the benefits within the literature of that phenomenon as part of a suggested strategy to implement in your workplace context. It might then also be appropriate to actually explore it within your workplace context via part of the appropriate methods you discuss within your research proposal. This is, of course, something quite specific. Our advice would be not to try to make your research proposal fit what you want to use it for as part of the project, but rather ensure you satisfy the criteria/areas detailed below which should be covered in producing your research proposal. Use this assignment to explore a topic of interest to you, in the first instance.
Your research proposal should include the following components which will be assessed on a scale of 10:
1. An account of the background to and rationale for your research proposal which should:
a) Explain the nature of your research topic, expressing your research topic in the form of a problem which needs solving, a question that needs answering or something which you find exciting and has aroused your curiosity and you wish to find out more about.
b) Provide a brief description of the background/context and state why your research is worth the effort of undertaking research into.
Note:
i. If your focus relates to an organisational area, emphasise the significance of the research to the organisation.
ii. If it is not an organisational scenario, you should still provide a background and perspective. Illustratively, if your area of focus relates to, say, an impact on society such as medical research, or education, or robotics, you should set a societal background/perspective, and emphasise the significance of the research accordingly.
2. A literature review, which should:
a) Draw on relevant literature to show why your study is important, and
b) Articulate the relevance and significance of existing research literature in the chosen field.
Note:
This component (2) should link back to component 1 immediately above as well as component 3 immediately below.
3. Statement(s) of your research aims and objectives, and associated hypotheses or questions.Note:
These statement(s) should leave the person reading and assessing your research proposal in no doubt as to precisely what it is your research seeks to achieve. The statement(s) should be informed by your considerations in components 1 and 2 immediately above.
4. The selection of an appropriate research philosophy, supported by discussion and justification of your selection.
Note:
Within your justification you should ensure that you explain why alternative philosophies are inappropriate.
5. The selection of an appropriate research design, with an accompanying description, supported by a justification of that research design. In this part of the proposal you should set out and justify:
a) your approach: whether deductive and/or inductive;
b) your type of study: whether exploratory or descriptive or explanatory
c) your strategy, justifying your selection in the context of how it is suited to enabling you to answer your particular research questions and meet your research objectives; here you should refer specifically to the case(s) and/or setting(s) and/or population(s) that will be the focus for data collection;
d) the nature of the data - primary and/or secondary - you intend to collect;
e) how you intend to, if necessary, successfully negotiate access to data from institutions and/or organisations and/or individuals;
f) your sampling strategy, where relevant/appropriate;
g) techniques, be they qualitative or quantitative or mixed, you intend to use to collect and analyse your data.
Within this component (5) and specifically in relation to item 5g) in the context of item 5d), if you intend to use secondary or primary data or both types, use your knowledge about the nature and characteristics of such data to not only identify appropriate techniques for analysis but to also justify why those techniques are appropriate and others are not appropriate.
6. Identification and consideration of any ethical issues that might arise in the course of the research and how you intend to address them.
7. A relevant reference list. This should link to any references drawn upon in components 1 through to 6 immediately above. (There are no specific marks available for this list but it must link to references drawn upon in your considerations. The marking scheme relating to points 1 through to 6 includes marks for identification and appropriate consideration of relevant and appropriate references. That said, where a relevant reference list is not provided marks will be reduced by 10 percentage points i.e. 10 marks.)
8. Relating to structure, clarity and communication of content, up to 10% of the marks are available for the thrust, flow, integration and cohesion of the research proposal, and will be awarded by the marker on the basis of academic judgement.
Other Important notes:
A. There is no formal guidance relating to the word count for individual sections of your proposal. Any one proposal may vary from another. You must decide how to allocate the 3,500 words yourself. You may wish to use the weightings of each criteria/point/section to help you organise this.
B. As specified earlier, no appendices are allowed. You should only show the list of references at the end of your work. Footnotes, illustrations, charts, diagrams, pictures, tables are all included within the within the word count and should be included in the main body of your text. Only the title page, any Table of Contents page, and the list of references, and any executive summary and any abstract are excluded from the word count.
C. You are not obliged to but may if you wish include an executive summary and/or an abstract.
As stated immediately above, if you choose to include an executive summary and/or an abstract it will not count towards to the total word count but should not contain any new information not already contained within the main body of work.
Attachment:- Guidelines.rar