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Writing Empirical Research Reports: A Basic Guide for Students of
the Social and Behavioral Sciences, Ninth Edition, offers clear and
practical guidance on how to write research proposals, reports,
theses, and dissertations. The book describes the types of
information that should be included, how this information should be
expressed, and where various types of information should be placed
within a research report. The organization is designed to walk
students through all the elements required when writing an original
research report for a class, for a thesis/dissertation, or for
publication. Most guidelines are illustrated with examples from
actual (and recent) research reports published in peer-reviewed
journals across the social and behavioral sciences. The new edition
includes fully updated examples and chapter exercises, expanded
material on qualitative methods, significant new material on
research ethics, and new content on online research including
social media. Accompanied by online resources for students and
instructors, Writing Empirical Research Reports is ideal for use in
research methods courses, thesis/dissertation preparation courses,
research seminars where writing a research report is a culminating
activity, and any graduate-level seminar in which the instructor
covers the vital components necessary to prepare a research
manuscript for submission for publication.
Writing Empirical Research Reports: A Basic Guide for Students of
the Social and Behavioral Sciences, Ninth Edition, offers clear and
practical guidance on how to write research proposals, reports,
theses, and dissertations. The book describes the types of
information that should be included, how this information should be
expressed, and where various types of information should be placed
within a research report. The organization is designed to walk
students through all the elements required when writing an original
research report for a class, for a thesis/dissertation, or for
publication. Most guidelines are illustrated with examples from
actual (and recent) research reports published in peer-reviewed
journals across the social and behavioral sciences. The new edition
includes fully updated examples and chapter exercises, expanded
material on qualitative methods, significant new material on
research ethics, and new content on online research including
social media. Accompanied by online resources for students and
instructors, Writing Empirical Research Reports is ideal for use in
research methods courses, thesis/dissertation preparation courses,
research seminars where writing a research report is a culminating
activity, and any graduate-level seminar in which the instructor
covers the vital components necessary to prepare a research
manuscript for submission for publication.
Proposing Empirical Research: A Guide to the Fundamentals provides
step-by-step instructions for students who will be writing their
first research proposal in the social and behavioral sciences and
using both quantitative and qualitative methods. The structure of
the book enables students to work independently with confidence
while writing the first drafts of their proposals. Each major
section is divided into short topics and for each topic, students
are asked to complete an exercise that leads them toward the goal
of preparing a proposal. Numerous illustrative examples throughout
the book make the recommendations for proposal writing come alive.
In addition, the 10 model proposals provided at the end of the book
illustrate proposal writing and provide material for classroom
discussions. New to the Sixth Edition: Updates throughout to
reflect research and learning in the digital/online environment,
e.g., online surveys, digital organization tools, digital
recruitment methods for research, and digital databases, records,
and archives. Discussion of qualitative methods. Updated
references, model proposals, end of chapter exercises etc.
Proposing Empirical Research is ideal for use in research methods
classes where students write a proposal as a term project,
thesis/dissertation preparation classes, senior research seminars
where proposing and conducting research is a culminating
undergraduate activity, and any graduate-level seminar in which the
instructor wants to incorporate a project that will engage students
in critical thinking about the content area.
This useful guide educates students in the preparation of
literature reviews for term projects, theses, and dissertations.
The authors provide numerous examples from published reviews that
illustrate the guidelines discussed throughout the book. New to the
seventh edition: Each chapter breaks down the larger holistic
review of literature exercise into a series of smaller, manageable
steps Practical instructions for navigating today's digital
libraries Comprehensive discussions about digital tools, including
bibliographic and plagiarism detection software Chapter activities
that reflect the book's updated content New model literature
reviews Online resources designed to help instructors plan and
teach their courses (www.routledge.com/9780415315746).
Proposing Empirical Research: A Guide to the Fundamentals provides
step-by-step instructions for students who will be writing their
first research proposal in the social and behavioral sciences and
using both quantitative and qualitative methods. The structure of
the book enables students to work independently with confidence
while writing the first drafts of their proposals. Each major
section is divided into short topics and for each topic, students
are asked to complete an exercise that leads them toward the goal
of preparing a proposal. Numerous illustrative examples throughout
the book make the recommendations for proposal writing come alive.
In addition, the 10 model proposals provided at the end of the book
illustrate proposal writing and provide material for classroom
discussions. New to the Sixth Edition: Updates throughout to
reflect research and learning in the digital/online environment,
e.g., online surveys, digital organization tools, digital
recruitment methods for research, and digital databases, records,
and archives. Discussion of qualitative methods. Updated
references, model proposals, end of chapter exercises etc.
Proposing Empirical Research is ideal for use in research methods
classes where students write a proposal as a term project,
thesis/dissertation preparation classes, senior research seminars
where proposing and conducting research is a culminating
undergraduate activity, and any graduate-level seminar in which the
instructor wants to incorporate a project that will engage students
in critical thinking about the content area.
This useful guide educates students in the preparation of
literature reviews for term projects, theses, and dissertations.
The authors provide numerous examples from published reviews that
illustrate the guidelines discussed throughout the book. New to the
seventh edition: Each chapter breaks down the larger holistic
review of literature exercise into a series of smaller, manageable
steps Practical instructions for navigating today's digital
libraries Comprehensive discussions about digital tools, including
bibliographic and plagiarism detection software Chapter activities
that reflect the book's updated content New model literature
reviews Online resources designed to help instructors plan and
teach their courses (www.routledge.com/9780415315746).
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