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Events This Week
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A Message from
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Welcome to your fourth week and your return to the First Floor of the Library! For the most part, everyone seems to be getting into the swing of things and finding comfort in the routine of the course. As it starts to get busy and you begin working on your rough drafts of your research proposal, I want to suggest that you break the week down as much as possible to keep from getting overwhelmed - try to just focus on one assignment at a time and then move to the next one. I know how busy many of you are. I also know that this class is very demanding and requires a new way of thinking and reading for many given educational research is not often taught at the undergraduate level. I try my best to only provide you with tasks to provide you with opportunities for practice and feedback. If everything you did were attached to a large portion of your final grade then you would be completely stressed out and paranoid about making the smallest mistakes (some of you probably are even without the high percentage points). Providing for opportunities for practice and feedback lessens the feeling of high stakes attached to everything you do and provides the instructor with an opportunity to see what areas students are comprehending and what areas need to be discussed again. Without providing an opportunity for you to complete assignments and turn them in for feedback, I am unable to do this. I do not believe any of the lesson activities each week are simply busy work (this really should be no surprise coming from an instructor :-). Each activity is carefully constructed to provide you with the opportunity to apply some of the skills and knowledge from the chapter to see how well you understood the content. These knowledge and skills will then be applied again to larger assignments such as your Research Proposal. The quizzes for the first two chapters are being reviewed and I will have posted the answers this evening so you should be able to go to your quiz and view your answers along with the correct answers. Let me know if you have any questions on this. I have already received and reviewed quite a number of the assignments from last week and I am very pleased with what I have been receiving. Most seem to be getting the idea of identifying empirical articles for use in the research proposal, identifying elements in problem statements, and in applying APA in your documents. Each of these will be critical when working on your rough draft of Section I this week. For those who have not received feedback yet, I hope to have feedback to you early this week in relation to your application of APA in your assignments due today so that you can correct errors and apply them appropriately to your Section I draft. I also will be reading and commenting on your research proposal ideas today and tomorrow so you can use any comments or ideas I may be able to add to your idea as you work on Section I this week. If you have any questions related to my response to your research topic then feel free to email me. If you would like to see the results of the Quality Ratings Survey everyone filled out then you can view the results by going to the quizzes section and then next to the survey you should see a pie chart. If you click on the pie chart it will take you to a link where you can "generate the report". Once complete you will see how the statistics on how everyone rated each part of the article. This way you can see how varied the opinions there were and also if you went more with others or were out their on your own when you gave your rating. We are moving along in this course and this week you should be devoting some of your time to working on your first draft of Section I of your research proposal. While this is a draft upon which you will receive feedback, please remember that drafts are calculated into your grades and submission is required. In addition, while I expect I will make many comments and provide plenty of feedback on areas for improvement, I do expect that what you turn in is a complete draft of Section I and that APA has been applied throughout the paper (please see Lesson 4 this week for clarification of what I mean by a complete draft). If it is incomplete or it is obvious you did not even bother with APA then it will be returned without feedback and without points. I will send feedback on all week 3 assignments by Friday and will update the week 3 checklist to reflect the status of these assignments. A new code was added this week to the checklist. You will be given an "R" if you turned in the assignment but it needs to be revised and resubmitted for credit. You will receive full credit ( an X on the checklist) upon resubmission if corrections were made and it was originally turned in on time. If you have any questions on this feel free to email me. It appears a few of you are a little confused about your access to the various weeks of instruction as well as where to look for the assignments due each week. First, if you would like to review previous weeks of this course, all content is available to you by going to the events calendar (the schedule page). Each week is listed and links to the 3 main pages for that week. Second, if you want a concise list of the assignments due each week, then the best place to find this is on page 3 of each week's content. This circulation desk check-in should provide you with what you need. One focus this week is on analysis and synthesis of empirical research This is one of the most difficult things for those new to research. Some have trouble identifying empirical research. Others have trouble analyzing and then synthesizing all that they are reading. These are certainly tasks that require maturation and that you will get better at the more you do it. Hopefully, this week will start you on that journey. We will review some of the content of Chapter 4 while we integrate it with information learned in Chapter 10 of the Creswell text. While there is much information presented this week I have tried to limit the assignments that are due to give you time to work on Section I. Therefore, some assignments given are ongoing for the next 2 weeks. Please note the checkout counter to be sure you complete tasks that are due this week. APA Tidbit The APA tidbit this week is one of the changes for within-text citations new in the 5th edition of the APA manual. Within-text citations use the author-date method; that is the surname of the author (do not include suffixes such as Jr.) and the year of publication inserted in the text at the appropriate point. If the name of the author appears as part of the narrative, cite only the year of publication in parentheses. An example would be Gardner (1983) describes three biases of American culture that impact thinking regarding the nature of intelligence. There is the westist attitude in which Americans put certain western cultural values on a pedestal. A number of writers (Wiggins, 1993; Sternberg, 1985a; Miele, 1995), however, disagree about the importance of the westist attitude in relation to intelligence. The change in the 5th edition is that within a paragraph, you need not include the year in subsequent references to a document as long as the document cannot be confused with others cited in the paragraph. For example, no date is included the second time the same Gardner document is mentioned. Gardner (1983) describes three biases of American culture that impact thinking regarding the nature of intelligence. There is the westist attitude in which Americans put certain western cultural values on a pedestal. A number of writers (Wiggins, 1993; Sternberg, 1985a; Miele, 1995), however, disagree about the importance of the westist attitude in relation to intelligence. The second bias described by Gardner is testist. This change not only makes it easier for a writer, but reduces the clutter of many parentheses filled with names and dates in a narrative that break the reader's concentration. Our goals this week are to:
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Don't Forget Your
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Each week this section will provide you with any necessary material that will be essential for you completing assignments.
Task #1: Task #2: Task #3:
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Contact the
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Need Help? Have a question but can't find the answer? Here are some options:
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| Updated on February 5, 2007 | Copyright 2003 by L. K. Curda |