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دسته بندی: آموزشی ویرایش: 5 نویسندگان: Judith Bell سری: Open Up Study Skills ISBN (شابک) : 9780335235827 ناشر: Open University Press سال نشر: 2010 تعداد صفحات: 293 زبان: English فرمت فایل : PDF (درصورت درخواست کاربر به PDF، EPUB یا AZW3 تبدیل می شود) حجم فایل: 3 مگابایت
در صورت تبدیل فایل کتاب Doing Your Research Project: A Guide for First-Time Researchers in Education, Health and Social Science به فرمت های PDF، EPUB، AZW3، MOBI و یا DJVU می توانید به پشتیبان اطلاع دهید تا فایل مورد نظر را تبدیل نمایند.
توجه داشته باشید کتاب انجام پروژه تحقیقاتی خود: راهنمای محققان اولین بار در آموزش ، بهداشت و علوم اجتماعی نسخه زبان اصلی می باشد و کتاب ترجمه شده به فارسی نمی باشد. وبسایت اینترنشنال لایبرری ارائه دهنده کتاب های زبان اصلی می باشد و هیچ گونه کتاب ترجمه شده یا نوشته شده به فارسی را ارائه نمی دهد.
Acknowledgements xi Introduction 1 PART I Preparing the ground 3 1 Approaches to research 5 Action research and the role of practitioner researchers 6 Case study 8 Critics of case study 9 Survey 11 The experimental style 12 Ethnography and the ethnographic style of research 14 The grounded theory approach 15 Narrative inquiry and stories 18 Which approach? 22 Further reading 22 2 Planning the project 27 Selecting a topic 27 Getting started 28 The purpose of the study 30 Hypotheses, objectives and researchable questions 31 Working title and the project outline 33 Timing 34 Supervision 35 Student–supervisor relationships 35 Codes of practice for supervision 36 Change of supervisor 37 Keeping records of supervisory tutorials 38 The research experience 38 Writing as you go along and the research diary 39 Planning the project checklist 40 Further reading 42 3 Ethics and integrity in research 44 Research contracts, codes of practice, protocols and the principle of informed consent 45 Ethics committees 47 Confidentiality and anonymity 49 Safeguarding confidentiality and anonymity if disseminating information by computer 50 Ethical research in practice, the problems of ‘inside’ research and personal codes of practice 53 Codes of ethical practice relating to intellectual ownership/property 57 The ethics and integrity in research checklist 59 Further reading 61 4 Reading, referencing and the management of information 63 Reading 63 Note-taking and guarding against plagiarism 64 Referencing 67 Creating, editing and storing references electronically 71 The card index 74 The management of information 74 A lot of fuss about nothing? 76 Reading, note-taking, guarding against plagiarism, referencing and the management of information checklist 78 Further reading 80 5 Literature searching 82 Defining the parameters of your search (search limiters) and keywords 83 Focusing, refining and grouping your keywords 84 Passwords, usernames and working from home 86 Libraries, librarians – and books 87 Scanning books into digital format 88 Journals 91 Citing sources from the Internet 92 Evaluating sources 93 Copyright and licensing restrictions when downloading items from web pages 95 Time to move on 96 The top ten guide to searching the Internet 96 Further reading 98 Appendix: Search engines and Internet Gateways 99 6 The review of the literature 103 The ‘critical review’ of the literature 104 Theory and theoretical (or conceptual) frameworks 105 The ‘critical review’ in practice 107 Reviewing the reviews 111 The review of the literature checklist 112 Further reading 114 PART II Selecting methods of data collection 115 Introduction 117 Constraints 118 Reliability and validity 119 Thinking about computer data analysis? 120 Not thinking about computer data analysis? 121 A reminder 122 Further reading 122 7 The analysis of documentary evidence 124 Brendan Duffy The nature of documentary evidence 125 Approaches to documents 125 The location of documents 126 The selection of documents 131 The critical analysis of documents 134 The analysis of documentary evidence checklist 138 8 Designing and administering questionnaires 140 Exactly what do you need to find out? 141 Question types 141 Question wording 142 Appearance and layout 148 Drawing a sample 149 Piloting the questionnaire 151 Distribution and return of questionnaires 152 Respondents’ and your rights and responsibilities 152 Non-response 153 Analysis of data 154 Designing and administering questionnaires checklist 154 Further reading 157 9 Planning and conducting interviews 160 The ethics of conducting interviews 160 Advantages and disadvantages of the interview 161 Question wording 162 The interview schedule 162 Group interviews and focus groups 165 Recording interviews 167 Bias – the old enemy 169 Remember! 170 Planning and conducting interviews checklist 172 Further reading 175 10 Diaries, logs and critical incidents 177 Representativeness 178 The diary-interview method 179 Piloting returns forms and instructions to participants 180 The primary pupils’ food diary 182 The supply teachers’ diary and time log 182 The general practitioners’ time log 183 The asthma treatment diary 184 The heads of department critical incidents and problem-portfolio logs 184 The ethics of diary use 186 A final word of warning 186 Diaries, logs and critical incidents checklist 187 Further reading 189 11 Observation 191 Unstructured observation 192 Participant observation 193 Structured observation and keeping records 195 Recording behaviour 197 Content 199 A few words of warning – again 201 After the event 202 Observation checklist 203 Further reading 204 PART III Interpreting the evidence and reporting the findings 207 Introduction 209 12 Interpreting the evidence and reporting the findings 211 List questions 212 Quantity and category questions 214 Measures of central tendency 215 Coding 221 Grids 224 Scales 225 Verbal questions 233 Conclusions 233 Interpreting the evidence and reporting the findings checklist 234 Further reading 235 13 Writing the report 238 Getting started 238 The final writing task 239 Structuring the report 241 The need for revision 248 Any possibility of plagiarism? 250 Evaluating your own research 251 Writing the report checklist 252 Further reading 255 References 258 Index 271