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Week 5: June 14

Events This Week
At the Library

 

 

 

A Message from
the Head Librarian

Welcome to your first week on the Second Floor of the Library!  You are moving on up at the Research Library.  You have your first draft of Section I complete. You are continuing work on Section II this week and next.  We have also covered the material for Section III of your Proposal. 

Some are overwhelmed which is understandable. Things come early in this class because of the need for most everyone to receive feedback. Some have asked for longer periods of time to complete assignments and I am always willing to grant extensions due to extenuating circumstances so it is absolutely fine with me if you ask for an extension. However, remember that each assignment usually builds and it is useful for you to receive feedback on one prior to attempting the next. For example, if you received an extension on the “statement of the problem” assignment a few weeks ago but went ahead and completed Section I this week, then you did not get the benefits of receiving feedback on APA as well as statement of the problem elements prior to completing your Section I, which was a large part of the reasoning behind the assignment (to give you practice and feedback before completing section I). So the benefits of assignments are usually only received if I am able to give feedback before the next assignment comes along.

I know it seems that things are moving fast in this class. It takes a bit of time for me to go through each person's Section I draft and give feedback and it really only helps if you have time to use that feedback when working on future sections so I try to get Section I in early in the semester. Also, it usually helps to have this Section in early because it gets everyone to narrow down and commit to a topic. Not committing to a topic early on can create even greater stress if you are continually changing your mind and having to redo time consuming searches for empirical research. I am looking forward to reading everyone's drafts this week. Almost everyone did a good job identifying empirical research literature. I usually have more people struggle with this so I was pleased to find many have jumped this hurdle.

Some are still struggling with some of the more subtle nuances of APA format. With regards to relevance, APA format is the most frequently requested format for theses, research reports, and other written forms of research so it is the one we teach across the foundations and research courses. Someone in the feedback last week suggested they might pay someone to put their documents in APA format (just to make me happy). This is a common (yet often costly) practice for those completing theses and dissertations. I considered the same thing as a student and quickly found that I still had to provide all the information the typesetter would need to put the reference in the correct form and once I did that I was halfway there so I found it easier to just go ahead and do it myself. Of course, money was tight then so the money I did not have to spend on that was another source of motivation. I hope that the APA checklist along with page numbers that I provided in the Section I feedback/rubric sheet last week will guide you in the most common applications of APA in a paper such as this and can also help you focus on specific aspects of the manual given it is rather big. Of course if you want to pay someone to do it this is certainly your choice:-) However, I am confident that everyone who is admitted in to a graduate degree program has the ability to learn to do this.

A major focus on Section IV is the research approach and design you choose and this brings us to a whole new floor of the Library. Our conversations will begin to focus less on research literature and more on what some might consider the technical aspects of conducting research.  This includes making decisions about who your participants will be and how you will select them as well as choosing what research design and measures you will use to collect the data.  Finally you will make decisions regarding how you will analyze the data you gather and interpret it via quantitative or qualitative means.

Library Lessons in weeks 3 and 4 focused on Sections II and III of The Research Proposal you will be submitting as your final exhibit in this course. If you will recall, last week we focused on identifying primary and empirical research to support your research problem and critiquing (analyzing) individual research articles.  To this point in the course, you should have identified at least 4 empirical articles appropriate for your research topic and will hopefully receive confirmation that these are indeed empirical from your instructor this week if you have not already.  You should have also taken your first stab at abstracting and critiquing an empirical article and judged its utility for your Research Proposal.  You will be turning this in to me this week and I hope to have feedback to you on this first attempt by the following week.  Once I have a handle on how well everyone grasped the ideas of abstracting and critiquing empirical articles, I will decide whether to assign an additional exercise related to this or to let you loose to work on your literature review utilizing these skills.  Whether I assign it or not I would like to strongly suggest that you follow the same process you used last week for abstracting and critiquing for every empirical article you identify for inclusion in your Research Proposal.  While it might seem like a lot of work, it will pay off for you in the end when you can sit down and easily begin to write your literature review that will include both analysis and synthesis of the empirical literature.

By 5 PM today everyone should have turned in your draft of Section I of your Research Proposal.  I hope to work on reading those this week so you have some feedback prior to turning in your rough draft of Section II in a few weeks.

APA Tidbit

This week we tackle some of the speed bumps encountered using reference citations in text (labeled with-in text references by Creswell).  These are cites in your written narrative that usually take one of two forms.

  1. According to the first investigation by Creswell (1998), three factors influence...
  2. It has been proposed (Creswell, 1998; Deekins, 1999) that three factors...

The speed bumps most frequent in the writing of graduate students are

  1. When a work has three, four, or five authors listed, cite all authors the first time the citation is used in your narrative.  After the first time, you list only the surname of the first author followed by et al. for every subsequent use (e.g., Algozzine et al., 1998).
  1. When a work has six or more authors, list only the surname of the first author followed by et al. for the first and every subsequent use.
  1. If the reference name is long and cumbersome but has a familiar or understandable abbreviation (e.g., National Center for Educational Statistics abbreviated to NCES), use the abbreviation in the second and subsequent uses.  The first cite would include the entire name while the second and subsequent cites would use the abbreviation.

First cite: The largest school districts have 85% of these problems (National Center for Educational Statistics [NCES], 2000).

Second and subsequent cites: Approximately 42% of the current teachers will retire by the year 2010 (NCES, 2001).

For all the seamy details, refer to sections 3.94, 3.95, and 3.96 on pages 207- 210 in the APA Publication Manual (5th edition).

Our goals this week are to:

  • Consider the setting of your proposed study and the access you will have to solicit participants
  • Describe different approaches used to obtain a sample of participants for research
  • Identify different types of data collected in quantitative studies
  • Begin the process of locating and selecting instruments for data collection and assessing their reliability and validity
  • Describe the processes used for organizing quantitative data for analysis
  • Discuss steps in testing hypotheses or answering research questions
  • Identify ways in which analyzed data is reported

 

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Updated on May 17, 2006 Copyright 2003 by L. K. Curda