ResearchDesignAndWriting 2011
ResearchDesignAndWriting 2011
ResearchDesignAndWriting 2011
Instructor
Dr. Carolyn P. Rosé ([email protected])
Office hours: Students are encouraged to request meetings with the instructor as needed
Units: 12 (PhD/Master’s)
Readings and On-Line Discussions : Readings will be linked to the syllabus or passed out in class.
Students are expected to do the homework listed under each lecture in between that lecture and the
next one. Readings will be posted to the Syllabus page in the course Drupal. Each student will have
their own thread in the Drupal that they will post assignments and commentary to. Additionally, when
peer reviews are assigned, students will post to the thread of the student they are critiquing. Posts to
Drupal will occur approximately once a week.
Prerequisites: none
Course Description
In an increasingly competitive research community within a rapidly changing world, it is essential that
we formulate research agendas that are of enduring importance, with clean research designs that lead
to generalizable knowledge, and with high likelihood of yielding results that will have impact in the
world. However, even the best research, if not communicated well, will fail to earn the recognition that
it deserves. Even more seriously, the most promising research agendas, if not argued in a convincing and
clear manner, will fail to secure the funding that would give them the chance to produce those
important results.
Thus, in order to complement the strong content-focused curriculum, we are offering this professional
skills course that targets the research and writing methodology that are needed in order to excel in the
research community, both during your career preparation at CMU and in your career beyond.
This course focuses specifically on general experimental design methodology and corresponding writing
and reporting skills. More than that, this course explores the important connections between research
design and writing. The broader social and political context in which research is situated and must
respond to and interact with is also explored.
Grades will be based primarily on a series of writing and presentation assignments in which students will
apply principles from experimental design methodology. There will also be in-class activities to offer
students opportunities to apply and practice their skills. A take-home final exam will test skills and
concepts related to experimental design methodology, and will include short answer questions and a
critique of a research paper.
This is meant to be a hands on and intensely interactive course rather than a heavy reading and lecture
course. There will be some readings from a variety of sources throughout the semester that will be
provided through the course Drupal account. The bulk of the work outside of class will be devoted to a
significant writing project of the student’s own choosing. For example, a student may choose to work
towards a conference paper about on-going research, a significant literature survey, or a dissertation
proposal. There will be seven specific assignments throughout the semester, but most of these will be
related specifically to the student’s own project. In each case, students will have 1 week to complete
the assignment. Once posted, students will be assigned to peer review another student’s assignment.
Additionally, each assignment will get detailed feedback from me. Assignments, critiques, and feedback
will be posted to each student’s thread in the course drupal.
Additionally, at least once during the semester each student will give a 5 minute “project report” about
their in progress course project and a more substantial presentation about their project at the end of
the semester. Students may choose to do this more than once if they find it helpful to do so.
Semester Schedule
Note that some readings are left unspecified because they will be selected according to the interests of
the students in the class.
Introduction
Week 1 lect 1 Course Introduction
Homework Readings: Informal readings on choosing a dissertation topic, Self-assessment document
“Assignment 0”: Log into Drupal and post your writing goal for the semester to your personal course
discussion thread. Email me a sample of your writing.
Week 2 lect 1
Homework Readings: Bem, D. J. (2003). Writing the Empirical Journal Article , in Darley, Zanna, &
Roediger (Eds.) The Compleat Academic: A Practical Guide for the Beginning Social Scientist, 2nd Edition ,
Washington DC: American Psychological Association.
Week 4 lect 1
Homework Readings: 2 TBA articles with example literature reviews to critique in class
Formulating a Hypothesis
Week 5 lect 1
Homework Readings: TBA article
Week 5 lect 2 Assignment 3 assigned [Formulating a Hypothesis – includes both write up and
preparation of a presentation to be given in class in Week 6 Lect 2]
Homework Readings: TBA dissertation readings part 1 [examining the process of preliminary work
leading up to a dissertation proposal]
Week 6 lect 1
Homework Readings: dissertation readings part 2
Week 8 lect 1
Homework Readings: Kerlinger, F. & Lee, H. (2000). Foundations of Behavioral Research, Fortworth:
Harcourse College Publishers, Chapter 28.
Week 8 lect 2 Guest Lecture/ Assignment 4 critique assigned, student presentations given
Homework Readings: Trochim, W. (2005). Research Methods: The Concise Knowledge Base , Chapter 11,
Thomson
Week 10 lect 1
Homework Readings: Pitfalls of Data Analysis: How to Avoid Lies and Damned Lies, By Clay Helberg, M.
S. http://my.execpc.com/~helberg/pitfalls/
Week 11 lect 1
Homework Readings: EG Guba & YS Lincoln (1994). Competing paradigms in qualitative research.
Handbook of qualitative research.
Week 12 lect 1
Homework Readings: TBA article with exemplary usage of mixed methods
Week 12 lect 2 Assignment 6 critique assigned
Homework Readings: TBA example proposal
Week 14 lect 2
Homework Readings: TBA collection of “general audience” readings