Title: Writing a Research Proposal
1Writing a Research Proposal
- By
- Dr. Pearl Wattanakul
- Department of Teaching English to Speakers
- of Other Languages
- Payap University
- Workshop on Research Writing in ESL/EFL at Room
1203, - Yonok University
2- What is research?
- Research is the systematic approach to
obtaining and confirming new and reliable
knowledge
3The Process of Research
- The process is initiated with question or problem
- The next step is to formulate goals or objectives
to deal with the problem - The third step in the process is research design
- The fourth step that is generating research
results - Add, the last step is interpret results and draw
conclusions
4Research Proposal Structure
- Title
- Type of Research
- Research field
- Researcher
- Rationale/Significance or Statement of the
problem - Research Question / Hypothesis
- Purposes / Objectives of the Study
- Significance of the Study
- Scope and Limitations
- Definitions of Term
5Research Proposal Structure (cont.)
- Literature Review
- Research Methodology
- a) Research Design and Plan
- b) Population and Samples
- c) Instruments
- d) Data collection/ Procedure
- e) Data Analysis
- Schedule /Time line
- References
6Classification of Research by Purpose
- Basic research It is conducted for the purpose
of theory development and refinement. - 2) Applied research It is conducted for the
purpose of applying, or testing, theory and
evaluating its usefulness in solving problems. -
7- 3) Evaluation research It aims at facilitating
decision making regarding the relative worth of
two or more alternative actions. - Evaluation involves questions such as the
following - Is this program worth what it cost?
- Is the new experimental reading curriculum better
than the former curriculum?
8- 4) Research and Development (RD) It aims at
developing effective products to meet specific
needs such as teacher training materials, or
management system. - 5) Action research aims at solving problems
through the application of scientific method.
9Classification of Research by Method
- Historical Research It is conducted to study,
understanding, and explaining past events in
order to arrive at conclusion concerning causes,
effects or trend of past occurrences that may
help to explain present events and anticipate
future events. - Exp Participation of Women in Higher Education
in 1900-2009
10- 2) Descriptive research It is conducted to test
hypothesis or answer questions concerning the
current status of the subject of the study. - Exp A survey of teachers to determine how and to
what degree they believe anxiety affects
achievement.
11- 3) Correlational research It attempts to
determine whether, and to what degree, a
relationship exists between two or more
quantifiable variables. It aims at establishing a
relationship (or lack of it) or to use
relationships in making predictions. - Exp A study to determine the relationship
between scores on an anxiety scale and scores on
an achievement measure.
12- 4) Causal-Comparative research It is conducted
to examine the difference, or effect which is
determined to occur or not occur. The cause is
not manipulated it has already occurred. The
cause-effect relationships are at best tenuous
and tentative. - Exp A study to compare the achievement of group
of students classified as high-anxious and a
group classified as low-anxious.
13- 5) Experimental research It truly establishes
cause-effect relationships. The researcher
manipulates at least one independent variable and
observes the effect on one or more dependent
variables. - Exp A study to compare the achievement of
- two groups- one group taught in an anxiety
- producing environment and one group taught
- in an anxiety-reducing environment
14Steps in Conducting Research
- Research Problem
- 1) Selection of a problem
- What is to be researched?
- Why does this research need to be
conducted? - a) Identify a general problem area that is
related to your area of expertise and of
particular interest of you. - b) Read different research studies and
focus your research very specifically. - b) Narrow down the general problem area to
a specific, researchable problem. - c) Get the most meaningful problem derived
from theory.
15- 2)Characteristics of a good research problem
- a) It is researchable.
- b) It has theoretical or practical
- significance.
- c) It is a well-written statement which
indicates the variables of interest to the
researcher and the specific relationship between
those variables which is to be investigated.
16- 3) Include a title on your proposal
- a) Have the most important words appear
- toward the beginning of your title
- b) Limit the use of ambiguous or
- confusing words.
- c) Breaking your title up into a title and
- subtitle when you have too many
- words.
- d) Include key words that will help you in
the - future find your work.
17- Example The purpose of the study is to
investigate the effect of positive reinforcement
on the quality of English composition. - The variables 1) positive reinforcement
- 2) good quality of
English - composition
- The purpose is to see if positive
reinforcement (the cause) influence the quality
of composition (the effect)
18- Introduction
- a) Statement of the problem should be
accompanied by a presentation of background of
the problem (information required for an
understanding of the problem) including a
justification for the study ( in term of its
contribution to theory or practice).
19- Exp The introduction might begin with a problem
statement. - The purpose of the study is to compare the
effectiveness of teacher assistants and parent
volunteers with respect to the reading
achievement of Prthom 1 students followed by a
discussion concerning (1) the role of teacher
assistants, (2) increased utilization of teacher
assistants by schools, (3) the expenses involved,
and (4) the search for alternatives, such as
parent volunteers. The significance of the
problem would be that if parent volunteers are
equally effective, their use can be substituted
for teacher assistants.
20- Objectives of the research study
- 1. Link to the primary and secondary
- research problem
- 2. Clearly identify, briefly define and
delimit - the specific area, central ideas and
concepts - of the study.
-
21- Review of the Literature
- What has been researched on this topic before?
- It involves the systematic identification,
location, and analysis of documents containing
information related to the research problem. - a) Theoretical paradigm
- b) Research constructs
- c) Relationship between the variables
- In proposal , the literature review is brief and
to the point.
22- Research questions/Hypotheses
- 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)
23- Exp
- Research question
- Is there a relationship between students
self-efficacy and their success in learning L2? - Hypothesis
- There is no relationship between students
self-efficacy and their success in learning L2.
24-
- Research design
- Research Design is a plan for collecting
utilizing data so that desired information can be
obtained with sufficient precision or so that an
hypothesis be tested properly
25Population
- A population refer to all members of any
well-defined class of people, event, or object
who, for research purposes, are designated as
being the focus of an investigation. - Specify who or what is your population.
- If there are different components of population,
clearly indicate it.
26Sample
- Those individuals or event that are selected
from the population to serve as the subject are
known as the sample for a study.
27Sampling Design
- Process of selecting a number of units for a
study in such a way that the units represent the
larger group from which they are selected. - Identify what type of sampling you use, which
sampling technique you employ in the study, - why you apply it to your study, and how the
sample is selected. - Indicate the size of the sample .
28Sampling and representativeness
Sampling Population
Sample
Target Population
Target Population ? Sampling Population ? Sample
29Types of Sampling
- 1) Probability Sampling
- The sample is a proportion (a certain percent) of
the population and such sample is selected from
the population by means of some systematic way in
which every element of the population has a
chance of being included in the sample? - 2) Non- Probability Sampling
- The sample is not a proportion (a certain
percent) of the population and there is no
systematic in selecting the sample. The selection
depends upon the situation.
30Types of Probability Sampling
- Simple random sampling
- Systematic sampling
- Stratified sampling
- Cluster sampling
31Types of Non-Probability Sampling
- 1) Accidental sampling/ Convenience sampling
- 2) Purposive sampling
- a) Quota sampling
- b) Judgment sampling
32Instruments
- Treatment
- Data collection instrument
- Identify the instruments you propose to use.
- If instruments have previously been used,
indicate the previous studies to show reliability
and validity of the instruments. - Identify how to make the instruments valid and
reliable for collecting data.
33Data Collection
- Outline the general plan for collecting data.
- Clearly state whether you are going to use
primary or secondary data.
34Data Analysis
- Specify the procedures you will use and label
them accurately. - a) Preanalysis procedure scoring procedures,
tabulation and coding procedures, nominal scales,
ordinal scales, interval scales, ratio scales. - b) Descriptive statistics graphing data,
mode, median, mean, standard deviation, etc. - c) Inferential statistics standard error, the
null hypothesis, test of significance (t-test,
ANOVA),etc. - d) content analysis, triangulation
35Time line
J F M A M J J A S O N D
1.Research from different sources x
2. Select a problem x
3. Research Design x
4. Research proposal x
5. Construct instruments x x
6. Improve instrument x
7. Collect data x
8. Analyze data x
9. Write research report x x
36References
37- Thank you
- for
- your attention.