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Beginning Your Choral Research Project. Brainstorming Purpose Statement Research Questions Review of Literature. Abstract Introduction Review of Literature concludes with purpose statement and enumerated research questions Methods and Procedures Results Discussion Reference List
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Beginning Your Choral Research Project Brainstorming Purpose Statement Research Questions Review of Literature
Abstract Introduction Review of Literature concludes with purpose statement and enumerated research questions Methods and Procedures Results Discussion Reference List Appendices 150-250 words (written last) Article: a paragraph; Thesis: Chapter 1 (5-12 pages) Article: 2-5 pages; Thesis: Chapter 2 (20-30 pages minimum) Article: 2-5 pages; Thesis: Chapter 3 (whatever it takes) Article: 4-8 pages; Thesis: Chapter 4 (whatever it takes) Article: 1-3 pages; Thesis: Chapter 5 (10-15 pages) Parts of the Written Research Study
The formulation of a problem is far more often essential than its solution, which may be merely a matter of mathematical or experimental skill. To raise new questions, new possibilities, to regard old problems from a new angle requires creative imagination and marks real advance in science. --A. Einstein and L. Infeld, The Evolution of Physics, 1938.
Introduction Review of Literature concludes with purpose statement and enumerated research questions Methods and Procedures Results Discussion Reference List Appendices Article: a paragraph; Thesis: Chapter 1 (5-12 pages) Article: 2-5 pages; Thesis: Chapter 2 (20-30 pages minimum) Article: 2-5 pages; Thesis: Chapter 3 (whatever it takes) Article: 4-8 pages; Thesis: Chapter 4 (whatever it takes) Article: 1-3 pages; Thesis: Chapter 5 (10-15 pages) Parts of the Written Research Study the heart of the study
Mapping Your Research Project • What turns on your curiosity? • Select a general topic • Immediately begin your quest for bibliographic control • Formulate several research problems • Articulate a purpose for this particular study • Design specific research questions for this particular study
Identify the General Topic • Choose a problem/issue/question/phenomenon important to YOU • Begin posing a variety of questions • Rule out “yes or no” questions, and use “why, how, or what” questions • Make sure questions are directly related to your chosen problem/issue • Make sure your questions are answerable in some fashion • Brainstorm about the larger issues to generate answerable questions
On what do you focus your research? •A problem or opportunity •A puzzle or dilemma Some broad areas of potential investigation: Choral sound/choral singing/choir acoustics Conducting Rehearsing Learning Historical roots Philosophic inquiry Sociological dimensions
Brainstorming, reviewing related literature, leading up to a Purpose Statement • Clear development of the purpose statement provides logical structure to and a roadmap for your study: “The purpose of this study is……” • Make it as specific and as de-limited as possible • Lean and mean: Avoid unrelated or ornamental ideas/concepts. • Revise, Revise, Revise
Out of the purpose statement come enumerated Research Questions • Allow you to specifically define the problem/issue and how you will investigate it • State research questions as clearly and specifically/empirically as possible • What are attitudes of faculty members toward choir as a curricular class? • What are faculty attitudes in my school towards choir as a curricular class? • What are faculty attitudes in my school towards choir as a curricular class, as measured by a faculty attitude survey?
Research Questions • Do faculty attitudes toward choir as a curricular class in my school, as measured by a faculty attitude survey, differ among those with no choral singing experience, less than two years of choral singing experience, and those with more than five years of choral singing experience? • Do faculty attitudes toward choir as a curricular class in my school, as measured by a faculty attitude survey, differ among male and female teachers? • Do faculty attitudes toward choir as a curricular class in my school, as measured by a faculty attitude survey, differ according to subject area taught?
Definition of Terms Sometimes, you will need to define certain words associated with your study. For example, if the purpose of your study is to assess the “blend” of two college choirs, you will need to define precisely what “blend” is as you are using it in your study. In a thesis or dissertation, these definitions typically come in Chapter 1, following your purpose statement and research questions. In an article, they may either precede or follow the review of literature.
Definition of Terms Such definitions should come where they make the most sense. They must, however, come before your methods section. It is sometimes advisable simply to cite a definition that you find in the literature. At other times, however, you may need to define the term yourself, particularly if you are the first to coin it for a particular purpose, e.g., “circumambient.”
Review of Literature • What have others discovered or undertaken that is related to your intended research project? • Provides context/background to your research problem/issue. • Enables you to reflect upon and dialogue with previous approaches as you plan and design your project. • Prevents you from needlessly “reinventing the wheel.” • Affords you bibliographic control.
Review of Literature • Typically constructed as an inverted pyramid: generally related to most directly related, each study cited becoming increasingly more specific to the context and conduct of your project. Smith (2001) investigated music Generally related studies Jones (1989) examined choral music More related Directly related Simon and Says (2003) surveyed college choirs Very specifically related Jeffers (1966) compared attitudes of male and female college choir members
Review of Literature • Written in past tense • Initially includes “just the facts” of each study, no overt editorializing or value judgments • However, the very act of selecting some studies and not others, as well as how studies are arranged and labeled in your review of literature, obviously entails judgments of value • The point is to make your review of literature an implicit, logical argument giving background/context to your proposed study, while providing factual data that point to coherent reasons why both your topic and your methodology can contribute to knowledge in the field
Review of Literature • For an article, generally 2-5 pages in length. • For a master’s thesis, a minimum of 20 pages. • For a dissertation, a minimum of 30 pages. • For some historical and philosophical studies, the review of literature need not be a separate section or chapter.
Where to Locate Literature • The “usual suspects”: database and library research sources. • Don’t forget about Dissertation Abstracts International. • Follow up on the reference lists in studies related to your topic. • Follow up, in turn, on the reference lists included in THOSE studies, etc. • Keep adding to and modifying your key terms/words as you learn more about your topic.
Research Planning • Research Topic: What am I interested in? • Purpose Statement: How am I interested in it? • Research Question: What specifically do I want to find out? • Research Strategy: How will I come to know and evaluate this phenomenon? • Data Collection: What kinds of things will I need to collect before I begin? How will I collect the data? How often? How long? • Data ARE plural. Datum is singular.
Collect Data • Use any appropriate information that can help you answer your question • Cross-sectional or longitudinal data • Look for readily available data • Types of data can be: tallies, surveys, demographic information, test results, observations, interviews, documents, photographs, sound recordings, concert programs, etc.
Replication of a Study • According to the scientific method, you should be able to replicate a study/experiment and obtain the same results. Replication is an accepted purpose for a study. • If you find someone else has already conducted the study you had in mind and you don’t want to replicate it, perhaps you can substitute a variable or a different procedure and thus still contribute to that line of investigation.
Recommendations for Further Research • Do not neglect to read the recommendations for further research in studies that interest you. Often, you may find there a good research idea, or something that will prompt you to formulate one.