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Pharos university Faculty of Allied Medical SCIENCE Guided study MLGS-201

Pharos university Faculty of Allied Medical SCIENCE Guided study MLGS-201. Prof. Dr. Shehata El- Sewedy , Dean Dr. Tarek El Sewedy Dr. Hewida Fadel. Lecture. Writing research proposals. Intended Learning Outcomes. The students will be able to:

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Pharos university Faculty of Allied Medical SCIENCE Guided study MLGS-201

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  1. Pharos universityFaculty of Allied Medical SCIENCEGuided studyMLGS-201 Prof. Dr. Shehata El-Sewedy, Dean Dr. Tarek El Sewedy Dr. HewidaFadel

  2. Lecture Writing research proposals

  3. Intended Learning Outcomes The students will be able to: • Write a research proposal in proper manner. • Demonstrate the research proposal clearly.

  4. Lecture contents • What is a research project • Criteria of a research proposal • Writing a research proposal

  5. What is a research proposal? • The research proposal is a piece of document which states: 1. What the proposed research is about. 2. What it is trying to find out or achieve. 3. How you will go about doing that. 4. It is also an argument which needs to demonstrate rationality.

  6. What is a research proposal?, cont • 5. So argue to convince the editors or evaluation committee of the merits of your proposal, don’t just describe. • 6. It needs to be a ‘stand alone’ document – it might be read by people who have not discussed the work with the researchers. • 7. Therefore, anticipate questions and answer them.

  7. How to Write a Research Proposal A research proposal is intended to convince others that you have a worthwhile research project and that you have the competence and the work-plan to complete it. a research proposal should contain all the key elements involved in the research process and include sufficient information for the readers to evaluate the proposed study.

  8. Proposal as a means of communication • The proposal is a communication to those who give evaluate and disburse budget. Therefore the proposal must be: clear and comprehensive.

  9. Proposal as a contract • A completed proposal approved by a research or funding committee constitutes an agreement. • Research design can not be changed when the approval is done.

  10. Evaluation of a proposal • When evaluating a proposal the readers will have 3 main questions that should be answers by YES: • 1. Is the research worth doing? • 2. Is the research design coherent? • 3. Can the researcher carry out it

  11. Criteria of a proposal • The proposal should have sufficient information to convince your readers that you have: • An important research idea. • A good grasp of the relevant literature and the major issues. • An applicable methodology that sounds.

  12. Criteria of a proposal, cont • Proposal should be terminology free as possible • Use few abbreviations and acronyms • Don’t assume previous knowledge • Avoid spelling errors • Be concise and make your sentences • understandable on first reading

  13. Good Writing!!!!! How important?? The acceptance of your research proposal depends not only on the quality of your proposed project, but also on the quality of your proposal writing. A good research project may run the risk of rejection simply because the proposal is poorly written.

  14. Writing a research proposal • In general we consider: 1. Explain the approach you have adopted. 2. Make absolutely clear that a particular design is appropriate to your purpose and research questions. 3. Describe what you will do from the start to the finish of your research. If there is a need for flexibility, state what and why.

  15. Build a framework. Present a conceptual framework that helps to explain and clarify your proposed design. • Articulate the parts. Take special care at each step to write brief but explicit explanations of how the parts fit together– purpose with questions, framework with questions, questions with sampling and methods. • Plan for trustworthiness. Readers will invariably ask, “Why should I believe you?”

  16. Are your personal biases a threat? If not, why not? If they are, how will you deal with them? • Illustrate analyses. Discuss your plans for analysis, giving practical examples where possible. • Plan for records. Explain how you will manage the data or a paper trail. • Don’t anticipate findings. Be careful about using language that appears to anticipate a finding.

  17. Outline of the research proposal • Table of contents • Abstract/Summary • 1. Introduction ‐ Background to the research ‐ Statement of value and rationale for the research study ‐ Literature review ‐ Conceptual framework

  18. Research questions and research objectives • Research methods ‐ Study type and data collection procedures ‐ Sampling strategy and sample size ‐ Plan for data collection ‐ Plan for data analysis ‐ Plan for dealing with threats to trustworthiness ‐ Ethical considerations

  19. Suggested readings • EffiongEyo. Surviving Chemistry One Concept at a Time: Guided Study Book. CreateSpace. 2011.

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