I. Introduction
and Theoretical Framework
“The
introduction 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 readers can understand how it is related
to other research” (Wilkinson, 1991, p. 96).
In an introduction, the writer should
v
create
reader interest in the topic,
v
lay the
broad foundation for the problem that leads to the study,
v
place the
study within the larger context of the scholarly literature, and
v
Reach out
to a specific audience. (Creswell, 1994, p. 42)
If a researcher is working within a particular
theoretical framework/line of inquiry,
The
theory or line of inquiry should be introduced and discussed early, preferably
in the introduction or literature review. Remember that the theory/line of
inquiry selected will inform the statement of the problem, rationale for the
study, questions and hypotheses, selection of instruments, and choice of
methods. Ultimately, findings will be discussed in terms of how they relate to
the theory/line of inquiry that under girds the study.
Theories, theoretical frameworks, and lines of inquiry
may be differently handled in quantitative and qualitative endeavors.
v
“In
quantitative studies, one uses theory deductively and places it toward the
beginning of the plan for a study. The objective is to test or verify theory.
One thus begins the study advancing a theory, collects data to test it, and
reflects on whether the theory was confirmed or disconfirmed by the results in
the study. The theory becomes a framework for the entire study, an organizing
model for the research questions or hypotheses for the data collection
procedure” (Creswell, 1994, pp. 87-88).
v
In
qualitative inquiry, the use of theory and of a line of inquiry depends on the
nature of the investigation. In studies aiming at “grounded theory,” for
example, theory and theoretical tenets emerge from findings. Much qualitative
inquiry, however, also aims to test or verify theory, hence in these cases the
theoretical framework, as in quantitative efforts, should be identified and
discussed early on.
II.
Statement of the Problem
v
“The
problem statement describes the context for the study and it also identifies
the general analysis approach” (Wiersma, 1995, p. 404).
v
“A
problem might be defined as the issue that exists in the literature, theory, or
practice that leads to a need for the study” (Creswell, 1994, p. 50).
v
It is
important in a proposal that the problem stand out—that the reader can easily
recognize it. Sometimes, obscure and poorly formulated problems are masked in
an extended discussion. In such cases, reviewers and/or committee members will
have difficulty recognizing the problem.
v
A problem
statement should be presented within a context, and that context should be
provided and briefly explained, including a discussion of the conceptual or
theoretical framework in which it is embedded. Clearly and succinctly
identify and explain the problem within the framework of the theory or line of
inquiry that under girds the study. This is of major importance in nearly all
proposals and requires careful attention. It is a key element that associations
such as AERA and APA look for in proposals. It is essential in all quantitative
research and much qualitative research.
v
State the
problem in terms intelligible to someone who is generally sophisticated but who
is relatively uninformed in the area of your investigation.
v
Effective
problem statements answer the question “Why does this research need to be
conducted.” If a researcher is unable to answer this question clearly and
succinctly, and without resorting to hyper speaking (i.e., focusing on problems
of macro or global proportions that certainly will not be informed or
alleviated by the study), then the statement of the problem will come off as
ambiguous and diffuse.
v
For
conference proposals, the statement of the problem is generally incorporated
into the introduction; academic proposals for theses or dissertations should
have this as a separate section.
III.
Purpose of the Study
v
“The
purpose statement should provide a specific and accurate synopsis of the
overall purpose of the study” (Locke, Spirduso, & Silverman, 1987, p. 5).
If the purpose is not clear to the writer, it cannot be clear to the reader.
v
B.Briefly
defines and delimits the specific area of the research. You will revisit this
in greater detail in a later section.
v
Foreshadow
the hypotheses to be tested or the questions to be raised, as well as the
significance of the study. These will require specific elaboration in
subsequent sections.
v
The
purpose statement can also incorporate the rationale for the study. Some
committees prefer that the purpose and rationale be provided in separate
sections, however.
v
Key
points to keep in mind when preparing a purpose statement.
·
Try to
incorporate a sentence that begins with “The purpose of this study is . . .”
This will clarify your own mind as to the purpose and it will inform the reader directly and explicitly.
This will clarify your own mind as to the purpose and it will inform the reader directly and explicitly.
·
2.
Clearly identify and define the central concepts or ideas of the study. Some
committee Chairs prefer a separate section to this end. When defining terms,
make a judicious choice between using descriptive or operational definitions.
·
3.
Identify the specific method of inquiry to be used.
·
4.
Identify the unit of analysis in the study.
IV. Review of the Literature
v
“The
review of the literature provides the background and context for the research
problem. It should establish the need for the research and indicate that the
writer is knowledgeable about the area” (Wiersma, 1995, p. 406).
v
.The
literature review accomplishes several important things.
·
1. It
shares with the reader the results of other studies that are closely related to
the study being reported (Fraenkel & Wallen, 1990).
·
2. It
relates a study to the larger, ongoing dialogue in the literature about a
topic, filling in gaps and extending prior studies (Marshall & Rossman,
1989).
·
3. It
provides a framework for establishing the importance of the study, as well as a
benchmark for comparing the results of a study with other findings.
·
4. It
“frames” the problem earlier identified.
v
Demonstrate
to the reader that you have a comprehensive grasp of the field and are aware of
important recent substantive and methodological developments.
v
Delineate
the “jumping-off place” for your study. How will your study refine, revise, or
extend what is now known?
v
Avoid
statements that imply that little has been done in the area or that what has
been done is too extensive to permit easy summary. Statements of this sort are
usually taken as indications that the writer is not really familiar with the
literature.
v
In a
proposal, the literature review is generally brief and to the point. Be
judicious in your choice of exemplars—the literature selected should be
pertinent and relevant (APA, 2001). Select and reference only the more
appropriate citations. Make key points clearly and succinctly.
v
Committees
may want a section outlining your search strategy—the procedures you
used and sources you investigated (e.g., databases, journals, test banks,
experts in the field) to compile your literature review. Check with your Chair.
V. Questions
and/or Hypotheses
v
Questions
are relevant to normative or census type research (How many of them are there?
Is there a relationship between them?). They are most often used in qualitative
inquiry, although their use in quantitative inquiry is becoming more prominent.
Hypotheses are relevant to theoretical research and are typically used
only in quantitative inquiry. When a writer states hypotheses, the reader is
entitled to have an exposition of the theory that lead to them (and of the
assumptions underlying the theory). Just as conclusions must be grounded in the
data, hypotheses must be grounded in the theoretical framework.
v
A research
question poses a relationship between two or more variables but phrases the
relationship as a question; a hypothesis represents a declarative
statement of the relations between two or more variables (Kerlinger, 1979;
Krathwohl, 1988).
v
Deciding
whether to use questions or hypotheses depends on factors such as the purpose
of the study, the nature of the design and methodology, and the audience of the
research (at times even the taste and preference of committee members,
particularly the Chair).
v
The
practice of using hypotheses was derived from using the scientific method in
social science inquiry. They have philosophical advantages in statistical
testing, as researchers should be and tend to be conservative and cautious in
their statements of conclusions (Armstrong, 1974).
v
Hypotheses
can be couched in four kinds of statements.
·
Literary
null—a “no difference” form in terms of theoretical constructs. For
example, “There is no relationship between support services and academic
persistence of nontraditional-aged college women.” Or, “There is no difference
in school achievement for high and low self-regulated students.”
·
Operational
null—a “no difference” form in terms of the operation required to test the
hypothesis. For example, “There is no relationship between the number of hours
nontraditional-aged college women use the student union and their persistence
at the college after their freshman year.” Or, “There is no difference between
the mean grade point averages achieved by students in the upper and lower
quartiles of the distribution of the Self-regulated Inventory.” The
operational null is generally the preferred form of hypothesis-writing.
·
Literary
alternative—a form that states the hypothesis you will accept if the null
hypothesis is rejected, stated in terms of theoretical constructs. In other
words, this is usually what you hope the results will show. For example, “The
more that nontraditional-aged women use support services, the more they will
persist academically.” Or, “High self-regulated students will achieve more in
their classes than low self-regulated students.”
·
Operational
alternative—Similar to the literary alternative except that the operations
are specified. For example, “The more that nontraditional-aged college women
use the student union, the more they will persist at the college after their
freshman year.” Or, “Students in the upper quartile of the Self-regulated
Inventory distribution achieve significantly higher grade point averages than
do students in the lower quartile.”
v
In
general, the null hypothesis is used if theory/literature does not suggest a
hypothesized relationship between the variables under investigation; the
alternative is generally reserved for situations in which theory/research
suggests a relationship or directional interplay.
v
Be
prepared to interpret any possible outcomes with respect to the questions or
hypotheses. It will be helpful if you visualize in your mind=s
eye the tables (or other summary devices) that you expect to result from your
research (Guba, 1961).
v
Questions
and hypotheses are testable propositions deduced and directly derived from
theory (except in grounded theory studies and similar types of qualitative
inquiry).
v
Make a
clear and careful distinction between the dependent and independent variables
and be certain they are clear to the reader. Be excruciatingly consistent in
your use of terms. If appropriate, use the same pattern of wording and word
order in all hypotheses.
VI.
The Design--Methods and Procedures
v
“The
methods or procedures section is really the heart of the research proposal. The
activities should be described with as much detail as possible, and the
continuity between them should be apparent” (Wiersma, 1995, p. 409).
v
Indicate
the methodological steps you will take to answer every question or to test
every hypothesis illustrated in the Questions/Hypotheses section.
v
All
research is plagued by the presence of confounding variables (the noise
that covers up the information you would like to have). Confounding variables
should be minimized by various kinds of controls or be estimated and
taken into account by randomization processes (Guba, 1961). In the design
section, indicate
§
the
variables you propose to control and how you propose to control them,
experimentally or statistically, and
§
the
variables you propose to randomize and the nature of the randomizing unit
(students, grades, schools, etc.).
v
Be aware
of possible sources of error to which your design exposes you. You will not
produce a perfect, error free design (no one can). However, you should
anticipate possible sources of error and attempt to overcome them or take them
into account in your analysis. Moreover, you should disclose to the reader the
sources you have identified and what efforts you have made to account for them.
VII. Sampling
v
The key
reason for being concerned with sampling is that of validity—the extent
to which the interpretations of the results of the study follow from the study
itself and the extent to which results may be generalized to other situations
with other people (Shavelson, 1988).
v
Sampling
is critical to external validity—the extent to which findings of a study
can be generalized to people or situations other than those observed in the
study. To generalize validly the findings from a sample to some defined
population requires that the sample has been drawn from that population
according to one of several probability sampling plans. By a probability
sample is meant that the probability of inclusion in the sample of any
element in the population must be given a priori. All probability
samples involve the idea of random sampling at some stage (Shavelson,
1988). In experimentation, two distinct steps are involved.
·
Random
selection—participants to be included in the sample have been chosen at
random from the same population. Define the population and indicate the
sampling plan in detail.
·
Random
assignment—participants for the sample have been assigned at random to one
of the experimental conditions.
v
Another reason
for being concerned with sampling is that of internal validity—the
extent to which the outcomes of a study result from the variables that were
manipulated, measured, or selected rather than from other variables not
systematically treated. Without probability sampling, error estimates cannot be
constructed (Shavelson, 1988).
v
Perhaps
the key word in sampling is representative. One must ask oneself, “How
representative is the sample of the survey population (the group from which the
sample is selected) and how representative is the survey population of the
target population (the larger group to which we wish to generalize)
v
When a
sample is drawn out of convenience (a no probability sample), rationale and
limitations must be clearly provided.
v
If
available, outline the characteristics of the sample (by gender,
race/ethnicity, socioeconomic status, or other relevant group membership).
v
Detail
procedures to follow to obtain informed consent and ensure anonymity and/or
confidentiality.
VIII. Instrumentation
v
Outline
the instruments you propose to use (surveys, scales, interview protocols,
observation grids). If instruments have previously been used, identify previous
studies and findings related to reliability and validity. If instruments have
not previously been used, outline procedures you will follow to develop and
test their reliability and validity. In the latter case, a pilot study is
nearly essential.
v
Because
selection of instruments in most cases provides the operational definition of
constructs, this is a crucial step in the proposal. For example, it is at this
step that a literary conception such as “self-efficacy is related to school
achievement” becomes “scores on the Mathematics Self-Efficacy Scale are related
to Grade Point Average.” Strictly speaking, results of your study will be
directly relevant only to the instrumental or operational statements (Guba,
1961).
v
Include
an appendix with a copy of the instruments to be used or the interview protocol
to be followed. Also include sample items in the description of the instrument.
v
For a
mailed survey, identify steps to be taken in administering and following up the
survey to obtain a high response rate.
XIX Data
Collection
v
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 entré.
v
Provide a
general outline of the time schedule you expect to follow.
X. Data
Analysis
v
Specify
the procedures you will use, and label them accurately (e.g., ANOVA, MANCOVA,
HLM, ethnography, case study, grounded theory). If coding procedures are to be
used, describe in reasonable detail. If you triangulated, carefully explain how
you went about it. Communicate your precise intentions and reasons for these
intentions to the reader. This helps you and the reader evaluate the choices
you made and procedures you followed.
v
Indicate
briefly any analytic tools you will have available and expect to use (e.g., Ethnography,
NUDIST, AQUAD, SAS, SPSS, SYSTAT).
v
Provide a
well thought-out rationale for your decision to use the design, methodology,
and analyses you have selected.
XI.Limitations
and Delimitations
v
A limitation
identifies potential weaknesses of the study. Think about your analysis, the
nature of self-report, your instruments, and the sample. Think about threats to
internal validity that may have been impossible to avoid or minimize—explain.
v
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 them—the literature you will not review (and why not), the
population you are not studying (and why not), the methodological procedures
you will not use (and why you will not use them). Limit your delimitations to
the things that a reader might reasonably expect you to do but that you, for
clearly explained reasons, have decided not to do.
XII.Significance
of the Study
v
Indicate
how your research will refine, revise, or extend existing knowledge in the area
under investigation. Note that such refinements, revisions, or extensions may
have either substantive, theoretical, or methodological significance. Think pragmatically
(i.e., cash value).
v
Most
studies have two potential audiences: practitioners and professional peers.
Statements relating the research to both groups are in order.
v
This can
be a difficult section to write. Think about implications—how results of
the study may affect scholarly research, theory, practice, educational
interventions, curricula, counseling, policy.
v
When
thinking about the significance of your study, ask yourself the following
questions.
·
What will
results mean to the theoretical framework that framed the study?
·
What
suggestions for subsequent research arise from the findings?
·
What will
the results mean to the practicing educator
·
Will
results influence programs, methods, and/or interventions?
·
Will
results contribute to the solution of educational problems?
·
Will
results influence educational policy decisions?
·
What will
be improved or changed as a result of the proposed research?
·
How will
results of the study be implemented, and what innovations will come about?
XXIII.
References
v
Follow APA
(2001) guidelines regarding use of references in text and in the reference
list. Of course, your committee or discipline may require Chicago or MLA.
v
Only
references cited in the text are included in the reference list; however,
exceptions can be found to this rule. For example, committees may require
evidence that you are familiar with a broader spectrum of literature than that
immediately relevant to your research. In such instances, the reference list
may be called a bibliography.
v
Some
committees require that reference lists and/or bibliographies be “annotated,”
which is to say that each entry be accompanied by a brief description, or an
abstract. Check with your committee Chair before the fact.
Appendixes
The need for
complete documentation generally dictates the inclusion of appropriate
appendixes in proposals (although this is generally not the case as regards
conference proposals).
The following
materials are appropriate for an appendix. Consult with your committee Chair.
v
Verbatim
instructions to participants.
v
Original
scales or questionnaires. If an instrument is copyrighted, permission in
writing to reproduce the instrument from the copyright holder or proof of
purchase of the instrument.
v
Interview
protocols.
v
Sample of
informed consent forms.
v
Cover
letters sent to appropriate stakeholders.
v
Official
letters of permission to conduct research.
References
v
American
Psychological Association (APA). (2001). Publication manual of the American
Psychological Association (Fourth edition). Washington, DC:
Author.
v
Armstrong,
R. L. (1974). Hypotheses: Why? When? How? Phi Delta Kappan, 54, 213-214.
v
Shavelson,
R. J. (1988). Statistical reasoning for the behavioral sciences
v
(second edition).
Boston: Allyn
and Bacon.
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