Difference between revisions of "BTH740 Research Essay 20113"

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(Requirements For the Final Essay)
 
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* Writing
 
* Writing
 
* Presentation
 
* Presentation
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== Survey and Critique ==
 
== Survey and Critique ==
This is the abductive stage of forming a hypothesis.
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This is the [http://www.butte.edu/departments/cas/tipsheets/thinking/reasoning.html abductive] stage of forming a hypothesis.
 
   
 
   
 
There is no single logical procedure to implement here.  We identify points of interest and guess at what might be the case for the observations that we are making.
 
There is no single logical procedure to implement here.  We identify points of interest and guess at what might be the case for the observations that we are making.
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* Open-ended searches by the team members
 
* Open-ended searches by the team members
 
* Selections of interest to the team members
 
* Selections of interest to the team members
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* Identifying emotional reactions
 
* Discussion amongst team members to identify conditions that might be sufficient and economical in explaining an observation or a set of similar observations
 
* Discussion amongst team members to identify conditions that might be sufficient and economical in explaining an observation or a set of similar observations
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== Thesis Statement==
 
== Thesis Statement==
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* timeline:
 
* timeline:
 
** thesis statement - due November 1
 
** thesis statement - due November 1
** preliminary research - due November 8
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** preliminary research - due November 15
** recording details - due November 15
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** recording details - due November 22
** writing - due November 29
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** writing - due December 1
** publication - due December 6
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** publication - due December 8
  
 
=== Narrowing the Focus ===
 
=== Narrowing the Focus ===
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== Research ==
 
== Research ==
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=== Preparatory Readings ===
 
=== Preparatory Readings ===
 
purpose: rephrase the thesis statement
 
purpose: rephrase the thesis statement
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* prioritized note record
 
* prioritized note record
 
* outline of the argument
 
* outline of the argument
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== Writing ==
 
== Writing ==
<!--
 
 
=== Outline ===
 
=== Outline ===
 
purpose: organize the flow
 
purpose: organize the flow
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** clarify your points
 
** clarify your points
 
** read out loud - use your auditory system - fix the jumps
 
** read out loud - use your auditory system - fix the jumps
-->
+
 
  
 
== Presentation/Publication ==
 
== Presentation/Publication ==
<!--
 
 
* source: Parberry, Ian (2000) How to Present a Paper in Theoretical Computer Science: A Speaker's Guide for Students, Dept. Comp. Sc., Univ North Texas. Denton, Texas.
 
* source: Parberry, Ian (2000) How to Present a Paper in Theoretical Computer Science: A Speaker's Guide for Students, Dept. Comp. Sc., Univ North Texas. Denton, Texas.
 
=== What to Say How to Say it ===
 
=== What to Say How to Say it ===
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** selfish - draws attention to the questioner - indirectly compliment them
 
** selfish - draws attention to the questioner - indirectly compliment them
 
** malicious - expect to have your ego bruised - be prepared, be polite, and avoid lengthy exchanges - offer a one-to-one discussion afterwards
 
** malicious - expect to have your ego bruised - be prepared, be polite, and avoid lengthy exchanges - offer a one-to-one discussion afterwards
-->
 
  
 
== Resources ==
 
== Resources ==

Latest revision as of 10:35, 30 November 2011


BTH740 | Weekly Schedule | Research Projects | Research Essay | Student Resources

How To Write a Research Essay

Five Stages of Research

  • Survey and Critique
  • Thesis Statement
  • Research
  • Writing
  • Presentation


Survey and Critique

This is the abductive stage of forming a hypothesis.

There is no single logical procedure to implement here. We identify points of interest and guess at what might be the case for the observations that we are making.

Try

  • Open-ended searches by the team members
  • Selections of interest to the team members
  • Identifying emotional reactions
  • Discussion amongst team members to identify conditions that might be sufficient and economical in explaining an observation or a set of similar observations


Thesis Statement

Requirements For the Final Essay

set by the instructor - what you need to know before starting to prepare the thesis statement

  • number of sources
    • primary >= 2
    • secondary >= 4
    • tertiary - summarize
  • length 1600-2400 words
  • late penalties 20%
  • timeline:
    • thesis statement - due November 1
    • preliminary research - due November 15
    • recording details - due November 22
    • writing - due December 1
    • publication - due December 8

Narrowing the Focus

select the topic

  • sources
    • encyclopedias
    • textbooks
    • dictionaries
    • videos
  • process
    • jot down ideas
    • discuss ideas
    • circle one that are of interest
    • select one from a short-list
    • select another as the alternative

Searching for Sources

create working bibliography

  • questions to answer
    • are there sufficient sources
    • is each one relevant to the focus
    • are the sources diverse
    • are the sources quality sources
    • are there twice as many sources as required
  • process
    • read
      • abstracts
      • conclusions
      • reviews
    • balance
      • books
      • articles
      • electronic
      • audio-visual
      • old
      • new
    • list publication details accurately

Defining the Purpose

  • single sentence plus keywords
  • discuss the thesis
    • discuss with two peers
    • refine the focus
    • define the scope
  • pose the research question
    • sufficient sources
    • narrow enough topic
    • avoid
      • bibliographical
      • narrative
      • descriptive
      • unfounded assumptions
    • how successful not why successful
  • formulate one precise sentence
  • task is to answer the question <- sole purpose
  • make short list of sub-tasks
  • identify keywords

Submission

  • thesis statement
  • keywords
  • bibliography

Research

Preparatory Readings

purpose: rephrase the thesis statement

  • develop a fuller understanding of the topic
  • read some of the shorter sources
  • keep the research question in mind
  • rephrase your thesis

Record Research Data

purpose: create the research note record

  • maintain a well-balanced variety of source materials
  • question what you read and record continuously
  • read the prioritized sources carefully and in detail
  • analyze and select ideas and data related to your thesis
  • record all relevant information as research notes
    • for
    • against
  • review other sources for context, support and opposition
  • process
    • types of notes
      • direct quotations
      • personal insights
      • paraphrases
      • summarizations
    • method of documentation
      • note
      • page number
      • source number
    • major questions to keep in mind
      • does the note pertain to the thesis question
      • should I reconsider the focus
        • should I broaden the focus
        • should I narrow the focus further

Assemble and Prioritize

purpose: create a flowing argument

  • assemble the notes into major groups
  • arrange the notes within each group in order
  • distinguish deductive, inductive, and abductive conclusions

Submission

  • edited thesis statement
  • prioritized note record
  • outline of the argument

Writing

Outline

purpose: organize the flow

  • structure
    • introduction
    • body
      • arguments
    • conclusion
  • process
    • retain results that pertain to the thesis
    • create a skeleton
    • use point form

Rough Draft

purpose: compose the argument in ascending order of importance/interest

  • preface
    • title
    • abstract
    • keywords
  • introduction
    • context
    • purpose
    • interpretations
    • thesis statement
  • body
    • each point is one paragraph
  • conclusion
    • sum up supporting points
    • no new information
    • one to three paragraphs
  • references
    • works cited

Edit

purpose: create final draft

  • check instructor's requirements
    • format
    • layout
    • 1st person or third person
    • style
      • MLA (see Purdue OWL)
        • Margins 1" all around excluding page numbers
        • Times New Roman 12 point
        • no justification, no hyphenation, double space, two spaces after a period
        • no title page for a research paper
        • sentence case your title no bold no period
        • page numbering in upper right hand corner preceded by your last name
        • secure your pages with a paper clip no plastic folders
        • citations (Author pageNumber)
        • works cited LastName, FirstName. Title. City:Publisher, Year.
        • sites cited LastName, FirstName. Title. City:Publisher, Year. <http://www.xxx.org/xxx/>. Date of Access.
        • interviews LastName, FirstName. Type of Interview. Date.
        • list works cited in alphabetical order at the end of the paper starting on a new page
      • APA (see Purdue OWL)
        • citations (Author, Year, p.PageNumber)
        • works cited LastName, FirstName. (Year). Title. City:Publisher.
      • Chicago
      • CBE
      • ACM
  • expression
    • argument flow
    • paragraphing
      • circle the topic sentence in each
    • clarify your points
    • read out loud - use your auditory system - fix the jumps


Presentation/Publication

  • source: Parberry, Ian (2000) How to Present a Paper in Theoretical Computer Science: A Speaker's Guide for Students, Dept. Comp. Sc., Univ North Texas. Denton, Texas.

What to Say How to Say it

  • communicate key ideas
    • emphasize key ideas
    • skip standard, obvious, or complicated
  • don't get bogged down in details
    • you have been thinking deeply for months
    • audience has not - is the paper worth reading?
    • details are out of place - leave them in the paper
  • structure your talk
    • break into distinct parts
  • use a top-down approach
    • introduction
      • informal description - impressions are important
      • define the problem
      • motivate the audience
        • explain why it is so important
      • introduce terminology
      • discuss earlier work
      • emphasize contributions of your paper
        • this may be the only points audience will remember
      • provide a road-map to the talk
    • body
      • abstract the major results or contributions
      • explain the significance of the results
      • sketch a proof of the crucial results
        • gloss over the technical details
    • technicalities
      • present a key result
        • give the flavour of the rest of the technical details in a short period of time
      • present it carefully
        • fill in small gaps
        • mention points that may not be in the paper itself
    • conclusion
      • hindsight is clear than foresight
        • make observation that would have been confusing earlier
        • regain the attention of non-experts in the audience
      • state open problems
        • identify problems that arise from your paper
        • mention weaknesses of your paper
        • indicate that your talk is over

Delivery - Getting through to your Audience

  • use repetition
    • "tell them what you're going to tell them. Tell them. Tell them what you told them
  • remind, don't assume
    • if your paper assumes a standard result, state it as a reminder
  • don't over-run
    • conference presentations last 15 to 30 minutes with 5 minutes for questions
    • if short on time, cut the technicalities section
  • maintain eye contact
    • spread your attention, don't concentrate on one person
  • control your voice
    • avoid fashion, hype, information-free utterances
  • control your motion
    • avoid hyperactivity
    • use natural gestures
  • take care of your appearance
    • avoid ostentatiousness
  • minimize language difficulties
  • try not to get anxious
    • prepare adequately beforehand
    • do not pay undue attention to the reaction of the most important person in the audience - their reactions may be the result of something that is totally unrelated to your presentation
    • to calm panic, pause, close your eyes, and take a few deep breaths
    • it is the quality of your research that matters

Visual and Aural Aids

  • make legible slides
  • don't put too much on a slide - remember short-term memory
  • don't use too many slide- reserve 2 minutes per slide
  • use colour effectively - avoid rainbows - yellow is almost invisible
  • pictures and tables
    • pictures are worth a thousand words

Question Time

  • expect three types of questions
    • genuine request for knowledge
    • selfish - draws attention to the questioner - indirectly compliment them
    • malicious - expect to have your ego bruised - be prepared, be polite, and avoid lengthy exchanges - offer a one-to-one discussion afterwards

Resources