Reference no: EM132399756
RSCH 600 - Research Methodology - University Canada West
Research Project PART 1: RESEARCH TOPIC:
You need to conduct some research (Qualitative/Quantitative or Mixed Methods in nature) related to your own interests or to serve the interests of some organization (employer/client/sponsor). Before you start writing a formal proposal, you (or your employer/client/sponsor) would like to gather some information about the problem as well as understand its importance.
Choose your research topic thoughtfully, as this assignment will be part of your term paper.
Introduction/Background
Provide a brief description of what the proposed research topic is about and how you came to be interested in it, following the elements of a Proposal document.
Statement of the Problem
Detail the problem that you are considering. Write a Statement of the Problem following the elements of a Proposal document. Make sure you address the following questions as well:
• Why is this topic important?
• Why does this research need to be conducted?
Purpose of the Study
Detail the purpose for your study. Write a purpose section following elements of a Proposal document. Make sure you address the following questions as well:
• How are you defining and delimiting the specific area of the research?
• What it is that you hope to learn by conducting this research?
• How might your research contribute to our understanding of the issue, or be useful?
• Discuss the anticipated outcomes and benefits to the researcher, the organization, or society.
• What is the scope of your research? Is the Scope reasonable?
Research Question
Provide focused research questions which will be the subject of your final Research Proposal. Draft the questions following section 4 of The elements of a Proposal document. Also provide a back-up question in case the first one does not pan out.
Hypothesis
If you decide to do Quantitative research, you will have to provide Hypothesis which includes:
• The original claim that your research is making i.e., Null hypothesis.
• Alternative claim i.e., Alternative hypothesis
• Test and verify the phenomenon that you are studying.
Literature Review
The purpose of literature review is to develop skills in finding valid literary resources for your research proposal. You will develop an annotated bibliography by doing searches of the literature on your chosen topic of interest. You will also design a literature map of the sources you have found for your Research Proposal.
This part of your research proposal should be written in paragraphs, report format. All citations and references for this course are to be done in the APA style.
Please note: Cite with in text citations all ideas, concepts, text, and data that are not your own. If you make a statement, back it up with a reference!
1. Research a minimum of 15 relevant literature sources (focus on material available in digital format only for this course). Carefully choose your 15 "keepers" that are clearly related to your study. (Note: you might need to find 30 to "keep" only 15).
2. Write a literature review section that summarizes what you found and evaluate the literature. State how the reviewed research results connected to your proposed study.
3. Critique and analyze the similarities and differences among the articles (e.g. different or the same point of views? different or the same research methods? why? etc.). Identify the gaps in the literature and provide recommendations for what needs to be done to move forward in your research. You will be using the information in this section in the final research proposal as well.
4. Design a literature map of the sources you have found for your Research Proposal. This map should help you organize your source materials in a way that will facilitate the organization and writing of your Literature Review.
In the presentation you are required to explain how you haveselected the appropriate methods for your research, and present draft of a work plan that will enable you to complete the research project successfully -- and on time!
The key components and questions you need to cover in the presentation are:
1. What philosophical lens are you using to design your methodology framework (i.e, Constructivisim, Critical Realism, Positivism)?
2. What methods do you plan to use to answer your research question? Why? What kinds of instruments, variables, materials, or sources will you use (i.e. will you use observations, surveys, interviews, case studies, focus groups, experiments, documents, media, data base searches, etc.)? If you plan to use mixed methods, will they be sequential, concurrent or transformative? Why?
3. List the kinds of data/information that you plan to collect (e.g. testimonials, statistics, business/government reports, other research data, audio/video recordings, etc.). Also, consider two or three alternative ways you could gather data/information for this research.
4. If you plan to use research participants, where will they come from? How will they be sampled? How many participants will you require? Who would most benefit from your research, and why?
5. How will you analyze the data/information you collect? How will you validate your findings/conclusions?
6. What ethical issues will your research project present? What biases might you bring to the research and how will you address that bias?
Attachment:- Research Methodology.rar