Title: A Primer On Your Dissertation Proposal
1A Primer On Your Dissertation Proposal
- Fayetteville State University
- School of Education
- Department of Educational Leadership
- Joseph F. Johnson, Professor
2A Primer On Your Dissertation Proposal
- The purpose of the proposal is to convince your
committee that there is a tractable research
question which is worth pursuing. - An equally important purpose is to convince the
committee that you are in a position to do a good
job pursuing the research question.
3A Primer On Your Dissertation Proposal
- The proposal should demonstrate that you
- have defined and delimited an interesting
research question - can explain the importance of the question to
someone not intimately familiar with it - can formulate testable hypotheses and
- have a detail plan for testing the most promising
hypotheses.
4A Primer On Your Dissertation Proposal
- You do not have to read everything that was ever
written about anything that might conceivably be
relevant to a full understanding of the subject
you are interested in addressing before you write
the proposal. - However, you are expected to chase the paper
and be familiar with the material that is germane
to your subject.
5A Primer On Your Dissertation Proposal
- The proposal should contain a review of the
literature in the context of what is known and
can be documented about the research question. - There should be a discussion of the lasting
contributions and shortcomings of previous
research.
6A Primer On Your Dissertation Proposal
- Do not attempt to define the research question
explain its importance formulate hypotheses
nor write a detailed plan before you write the
proposal. It will be obvious that you are trying
to get ahead of yourself and can result in
extending the completion of a quality study.
7A Primer On Your Dissertation Proposal
- Do not write the dissertation before you write
the proposal or prospectus. If you do , you will
be treating your hypotheses like conclusions, and
your proposal will read like a defense of those
propositions. This is the role of a dissertation
defense scheduled after testing, writing,
reviewing, revising, retesting and rewriting.
This will be obvious and will impede the
successful completion of the research study.
8A Primer On Your Dissertation Proposal
- Again, do not get ahead of yourself.
- Any attempt to write the dissertation and
dissertation proposal as if they are the same can
result in prolonging the process and/or failure
at this point.
9A Primer On Your Dissertation Proposal
- A dissertation proposal is supposed to describe
what you propose to do. - A dissertation proposal is supposed to discuss
why you propose to do it. - A dissertation proposal is supposed to explain
how you propose to do it.
10A Primer On Your Dissertation Proposal
- Your dissertation proposal should answer the
following questions - What problem are you going to pursue?
- Why is it a problem?
- Why is it important to address?
- Where are you going to look for answers?
- Why are you going there?
11A Primer On Your Dissertation Proposal
- Postscript 1 It is not enough to say what you
believe to be true. You need to be clear and
explicit about what you elevate to writing how
you make presumptions and cite appropriate
authorities. - Postscript 2 Always focus on proposing and
completing a quality, defensible dissertation,
not graduation. The latter is merely a
well-deserved by-product of the former.
12A Primer On Your Dissertation Proposal
- Postscript 3 It is always helpful to think of
the proposal in relations to the first three
chapters of the completed study. The proposal
must be written in the future tense, outlining
what you are proposing to do the future. - Postscript 4 The final dissertation is always
written in the past tense in which Chapter I will
have only minor changes.
13A Primer On Your Dissertation Proposal
- Postscript 5 Chapter II will change to include
additional citations to reflect unexpected
results from the data analysis. - Postscript 6 If well-designed, Chapter III in
the final form should be similar to the proposal.
Except for tense and minor changes, it should
reflect exactly what happened (not what was
predicted to happen).
14A Primer On Your Dissertation Proposal
- Fayetteville State University
- School of Education
- Department of Educational Leadership
- Joseph F. Johnson, Professor