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Moving Forward with Your Research Proposal. January 23, 2006. Today’s Schedule. 3:00 - 3:40PM Summary and discussion of Lowenthal paper (led by Dr. Wright) 3:40 - 4:15PM Developing a hypothesis and Elements of the proposal (by Dr. Nolin)
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Moving Forward with Your Research Proposal January 23, 2006
Today’s Schedule • 3:00 - 3:40PM Summary and discussion of Lowenthal paper (led by Dr. Wright) • 3:40 - 4:15PM Developing a hypothesis and Elements of the proposal (by Dr. Nolin) • 4:15 - 4:45PM Students write their research hypothesis and brief explanation • 4:45 - 5:20PM Students break into groups and critique each others' work
Outline • Developing a testable and tractable hypothesis • Elements of a proposal • Developing a detailed proposal outline • Scientific writing style
What is a good idea? • Innovative, major advances in the field • exciting new method • new way of looking at old problem • novel application of existing methods in a new field or region • Certain, feasible, incremental additions to existing base of knowledge • Combining research efforts usually kept separate
What makes a good idea a good research topic? • Scientifically interesting to geographers • Important to non-scientists • Feasible (in terms of available resources) • Have clear objectives: • Specific • Measurable • At least one objective should involve obtaining an answer to a scientific question or falsifying a hypothesis • Should have the enthusiastic support of your research advisor
Clear objectives Personal factors in place Interesting - scientifically and to you Well-planned Important - needs to matter to others Feasible
What is a hypothesis? • A hypothesis is a provisional concept that, after careful evaluation is either accepted or rejected • It should be falsifiable based on observations • If it is confirmed by observations, that does not mean that it has been proven
Conjecture vs. Hypothesis • Conjecture is a statement that cannot be proved or disproved • A conjecture is frequently misconstrued as a hypothesis • Example of a conjecture: “God is male”
The Research Proposal Should try to answer the following basic questions: • What (research problem are you proposing to answer)? • Why (are these research problems significant)? • How (do you propose to answer these problems)?
Elements of a Proposal • Title • Abstract • Purpose/Significance and Research Objectives • Relevant Background Information • Methods • Timetable • Budget (where appropriate) • References • Figures and Tables
Title • Should be as short as possible but convey a sense of what the proposal involves • Use an “action title” • Make first word significant if possible • Strong, precise words
Abstract • Concise summary of the proposal in less than 250 words (1 page)
Purpose/Significance and Research Objectives • Spell out the geographic problem you are addressing • State the objectives (list form) • Describe the significance of the proposed research • Be specific
Relevant Background Information • Provide specific data and theories from previous studies that are relevant to understanding your research problem • What were their strengths and limitations? • Convey the pertinent geographic information with appropriate and thorough literature references • Relate to your objectives
Methods • State and describe specific methods • Provide sufficient detail that the reader can understand the method • Avoid jargon! • If equipment and facilities are not readily available in the Dept. of Geosciences, state your plans to obtain access elsewhere
Timetable • Provide a tentative schedule in tabular form • Completion of classes • Field studies • Laboratory work • Preparation of thesis (plan for at least one term!)
Budget • If funding for expenses is needed then a budget should be included: • Field work • Laboratory analyses • Special software, etc. • Prepare itemized list • Outline your plans for funding
References • List all the references cited in text by alphabetical order of first author • Follow the format of a major geography journal
Figures and Tables Examples: map of study area, table of instrument characteristics. • They must be legible and of excellent quality • Should be original if at all possible • Figure captions appear below the figure • Table captions appear above the figure
Writing your Proposal Outline • Use section headings that convey information • Provide sufficient detail • You should have at least ten headings in your outline
Interrelation of landscape and climate controls on streamflow in the Oregon Cascades • Streamflow patterns in the Oregon Cascades • Two types of landscape controls: • Geology • Vegetation • Snow vs. Rain and their contributions to streamflow • Climate warming will reduce low flows and increase peak flows in the Cascades • Shift from snow- to rain-dominated precipitation • Increase in fire frequency will change land cover • Basalt permeability will mitigate effects in the high Cascades • A new coupled climate-hydrology-ecosystem model • Noble gas measurements establish temperature and elevation of groundwater recharge zone
Scientific Writing Tips • Think of your audience -- who are they and what do they want to know? • Language: • Mechanics -- grammar, spelling • Precise • Clear • Familiar • Style should be interesting and forthright • Structure: • Clear outline • Linear • Common threads • Concise
The Writing Center Writing assistants are available to help with brainstorming, organization, grammar and usage, and all aspects of writing Online writing lab for assessment of writing problems (24-48 hour turnaround) Waldo 123 http://cwl.oregonstate.edu/ 737-5640
Academic Success Center They will help you with Goal setting Study skills Listening habits Time management Wellness 101 Waldo Hall http://success.oregonstate.edu/ 737-2272