Chapter 2 Research Planning & Proposal Writing
Chapter 2 Research Planning & Proposal Writing
Chapter 2 Research Planning & Proposal Writing
R ES EA R C H M ETH O D O LO G Y F O R EN G I N EER S ( S O S 4 1 3 )
5 T H Y E A R WAT E R R E S O U R C E S E N G I N E E R I N G , U G
NOVEMBER 2022
Chapter Objectives:
Proposal
Writing
Most common questions while developing a research proposal
• What is the proposed study about?
• Why is the study to be conducted?
• Where will the study be carried out?
• What is the objective of the proposed study?
• What type of data is required to achieve these objectives, where and how is it collected?
• What period of time will the study cover?
• How will the data be analyzed?
• Who are the potential beneficiaries?
• What is the resources requirement of the study?
• When and how the research output will be disseminated?
What makes a good proposal?
• Relevance, either to the work of the funding body or to the student’s
course.
• The research is unique, or offers new insight or development.
• The title, and objectives are all clear and concise.
• Comprehensive and thorough background research and literature review
has been undertaken.
• There is a good match between the issues to be addressed and the
approach being adopted.
Steps in Your BSc Senior Project work
• Group formation (Dep’t duty)
Let Students’ submit
• Selection of topic and Advisor (you + Dep’t duty) their area of interest
soon
• Writing a proposal (You with your Mentor’s guide)
Research/Project and
Proposal Writing
Research Proposal
What is a Research/Project Proposal?
• A research proposal is your PLAN
– It describes in detail about your study
– Decisions about your study are based on
the quality of proposal
• Approvals to proceed by the evaluators
Components of Research/Project Proposal
Title Essential elements
Summary: (contents) of a
proposal
Introduction:
– Significance of the research: why do you want to do the research and why is it important?
– Statement of the Problem: what is the problem and what do you want to achieve?
– Objectives: what do you want to do?
Literature Review: who have done similar work, what were their methods and results?
Materials and Methods: what materials and/or data are needed how are you going to do it?
Work Plan: starting date and deadline of the project
Budget Requirement: for BSc Degree requirement, this will be omitted
References: Sufficient Books, articles should be used cited formally
Title
• First thing you read
• The first step in a research process is the choice
of researchable problem for investigation
• Examples:
Your title?
Cover
Page
Executive Summary Abstract
• It is usually written last (so that it
accurately reflects the content of
the report) and is usually about
200 to 300 words long.
• The purpose of this section is to lay the broad foundation for the
problem that leads to the study, to create reader interest in the topic,
and to make the reader feel the urgency of the problem and the need to
study it.
Writing of Background:
• Concisely sets the aims of the research and show how it fills the
identified gaps in the literature and practice
• The inclusion of irrelevant (or too many) references may lead evaluators
to question your understanding of the area.
Introduction
Significance of the Project
• Give brief description about:
– Why do you want to do the research/project?
• Tell why the problem has been a problem, why previous attempts have
failed to solve it, or why you think this particular problem is important
• Survey of available and relevant literature. This enables the researcher to:
– Find out what data available for operational purposes
– Find out if there is a gap in theories
– Find out whether the existing theory is applicable to the problem under
study
• The next step after the statement of the problems is setting up the
objectives
• It must be stated clearly and specifically under the heading of major and
specific objectives
Research objectives
• Objectives should be listed under two sub
headings: general and Specific objectives.
General General: describes the long term goal your
project contribute to.
Specific Objectives: describes the objective of
your project in response to the core problem
• Example:
Assignment 1 (5%)!
Scarcity
Reader doesn't know
End with gap analysis
39
Materials and Methods
• Is about how the research/project is going to be
conducted, where it is to be conducted, and what
materials and/or data are needed.
6 Data analysis
7 Report writing
8 Presentation
Budget Requirement
• Provide specific
explanations for:
– Need for specific
technologies and software
• Tabular form
Reference citation
• When you are writing your thesis proposal and report, you
are required to refer to the work of other authors.
• Referencing types:
– Harvard
– APA (American Psychological Association)
Harvard
• The in-text citation:
• Harvard is an 'author/date' system, so your in-text citation
consists of author(s) and year of publication.
• If you quote directly from an author or paraphrase a specific
idea or piece of information from a source, you need to
include the page number of the quote or passage in your in-
text citation.
The reference list:
• If quoting or citing a source which has been cited within another document,
mention the original source together with the secondary reference details, for
example: (Smith, 2008, as cited in Jones, 2010).
• Only the secondary reference (i.e. Jones, 2010) should be included in the reference
list.
• For citations in brackets with two authors the ‘&’ symbol can be used.
e.g. (Brown & Black, 2010)
• If the author citation forms part of your sentence the word ‘and’ must
be used,
• Literature review
• Materials and Methods
• Work plan
• Financial Requirements
• References
Common pitfalls to avoid
• Forget to include table of contents
• Not connecting the proposed research to the literature review
• Not enough detail about methods
• Jargon & sweeping generalities
• Relying solely on your supervisor
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Revise and Edit
• Back-up proposal everyday!
• Always print on paper and edit
• Use standard font
• Number your pages
• Read out loud
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The End!