1 / 17

Research Methodology: Writing a Scientific Research Proposal

Research Methodology: Writing a Scientific Research Proposal. Dean Sherzai MD, MAS Ayesha Z. Sherzai, MD, MAS. Writing a research proposal. Formulating a research problem. Conceptualize research design. Selecting a sample. Collecting and processing data. Introduction. A Quick Glance.

laird
Download Presentation

Research Methodology: Writing a Scientific Research Proposal

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Research Methodology: Writing a Scientific Research Proposal • Dean Sherzai MD, MAS • Ayesha Z. Sherzai, MD, MAS

  2. Writing a research proposal Formulating a research problem Conceptualize research design Selecting a sample Collecting and processing data Introduction A Quick Glance

  3. A research proposal has three main points: • Explanation of proposed research (what will be done) • Methods and techniques to be employed (how it will be done) • Novelty and importance of the study (why it should be done)

  4. Organization • Title • Abstract • Introduction and Review • Research Hypothesis • Material and Methods • Conclusion and Justification • Bibliography

  5. Title • Provide a specific summary of the proposed work • Minimal words, clear language

  6. Abstract • One paragraph • Description of the hypothesis and the goals of the experiment • Readers can quickly assess the basic premise of your proposal

  7. Introduction • Say it in the first paragraph! Readers can be impatient • “In the proposed study, we seek to examine...”

  8. Review of the literature • Lengthiest part of proposal • Begin with basics, narrow the focus to pertinent proposed work • Use plenty of primary sources of information: Textbooks, journal articles, website (with caution!) • Cite appropriately

  9. Identification of the knowledge gap • State what we do not know from reading the existing fund of knowledge • Justification for starting the project

  10. Research Hypothesis • What is the hypothesis that you are testing? • What are the questions that you seek to answer? • Based on what is known in this field, explain what you expect to see and hope to show through your result

  11. Material and Methods • Dictated by the nature of your research • Describe your data source, process of collection in detail • Describe the statistical analysis to be used, limitations

  12. Conclusion and Justification • Explicitly state how your proposed research will advance knowledge • What are the far-reaching effects? Will your study potentially change practices or policies? Why is it that your research deserves funding?

  13. Bibliography • Include all the resources that were used in the writing of the paper • Follow your guidelines for formatting

  14. Bibliography • Example: • Agosti C, Borroni B, Akkawi NM, Bordonali T, Padovani A. Acute myocardial infarction presenting with transient global amnesia. J Am Geriatr Soc. 2006; 6: 1004. • Jain S, Ton TG, Boudreau RM, et al. The Risk of Parkinson Disease Associated with Urate in a Community-Based Cohort of Older Adults. Neuroepidemiology. 2011; 4: 223-229.

  15. A note on sources, paraphrasing and citations • Terse, clearcut, no artistic enhancement • Avoid quoting directly • Read the article, put it down, write it in your own words • Citations: Author, year

  16. A note on voice • Active voice (“I” or “We”) • Switch between active and passive voice to avoid repetition

  17. Important Points • Organized, well-written, concise, complete proposal = easier to conduct experiment • Good writing when paired with a thorough understanding of the subject matter is a valuable skill to possess

More Related