3. Time Topics Activities / Participation
5:30 PM Overview: Dissertation
Timeline, Phases,
Deliverables
Interactive Presentation
5:40 PM Resources for Each
Phase
Interactive Presentation,
Real Time Quiz
5:45 PM Future Topics: Web-based
surveys and
netnography
Real Time Evaluation
Plan Literature Design Analysis References
4. # Learning Goals & Objectives
1 Understand the Dissertation Timeline and Process
2 Learn how to develop a master plan for the dissertation
based on the Research Questions
3 Learn how a digital framework accelerates and aligns
dissertation milestones and deliverables
4 Learn the Digital Tools, Techniques, Tips, and Resources for
Each Phase
Socrative.com Room# 628993
# Teaching Methods
1 Audience Response System, Branching Presentation
Plan Literature Design Analysis References
7. Chapter 1
Introduction
Chapter 2
Literature
Review
Chapter 3
Methodology
• Document management
• Interconnected,
interdependent with own
special requirements
• Writing support
Chapter 4
Results
Chapter 5
Discussion
Conclusions &
Recommendations
Plan Literature Design Analysis References
8. Phase Major Activity Key Decisions
Milestones/
Deliverables
Remarks
Tools, Techniques,
Tips
Select Topic Topic
State Problem
Statement, Rationale /
Academic Significance
Select Committee
State Research
Questions, Hypotheses
/ Propositions
Concept Paper Results from the Plan
the Research phase +
RQs, Hypotheses /
Propositions
Concept conversation
Best approach for
framing a topic
Chapter 1 Introduction Chapter 1 will be
revisited and edited
after other Chapters
completed
Context diagram
Draft Proposal Outline Begin overall outline
for dissertation early.
Plan
Plan the Research
Prepare Proposal
Plan Literature Design Analysis References
9. Mind mapping
Search
Reference Manager
Notes and Highlighting
Process
Tools
Plan Literature Design Analysis References
10. Phase Major Activity Key Decisions
Milestones/
Deliverables
Remarks
Tools, Techniques,
Tips
Identify and select
appropriate academic
domains, relevant
theories, and search
databases
Where, what to search Structured note-taking
Decide how to store
and track potentially
useful content
References database References template;
coding of the literature
Use Google Scholar
notifications
Decide what literature
to include / exclude
"Pilot" reference list;
annotated references
database (template)
How to search KW
search, advanced
Boolean, natural
language
Skim, scan, preview
Develop Argument Qualify and select
claims; select
argument pattern
Argument logic pattern Selection and
organization of claims
from pervious, related
studies
Survey / Validate the
literature; logic chain
Survey the Literature &
Form Argument
Organize claims Argumen supporting
RQ, hypothesis
Argument of discovery;
identify current
knowledge regarding
topic
Concept mapping,
citation mapping,
timeline mapping
Critique the Literature Argument of advocacy:
advocate and define
the argument
Argument of advocacy
Write the Literature
Review
Chapter 2. Literature
Review
Literature
Review
Initial Search
Plan Literature Design Analysis References
11. • Skim & scan
• Import APA references
• Build annotated bibliography
• Note-take and highlight (Kindle
Reader)
• Import-store-embed article PDFs
• Collect and analyze content
Plan Literature Design Analysis References
12. Logic chaining
Argument = reason(a) + reason(b) + … +reason(n) <therefore> conclusion
Plan Literature Design Analysis References
16. The Literature Review: Six Steps to Success by
Brenda T. McEvoy, Lawrence A. Machi
You have 184 highlighted passages
You have 3 notes
Last annotated on October 19, 2012
A literature review is a written document that
presents a logically argued case founded on a
comprehensive understanding of the current
state of knowledge about a topic of study. This
case establishes a convincing thesis to answer
the study’s question .Location 270 •
What appears in the text
file transferred from the
Kindle to a laptop or
desktop computer
Plan Literature Design Analysis References
18. Phase Major Activity Key Decisions
Milestones/
Deliverables
Remarks
Tools, Techniques,
Tips
Design Research Study Select methodology
appropriate to RQs
Chapter 3.
Methodology,
Research Design &
Protocol
Units of analysis; data
collection protocol
(what data collected
how by whom or what)
Reliability, biases,
errors, interrater
reliabillity
Submit Final Proposal When to submit the
proposal
Proposal Approval Understand University
/ Committee
requirements
Obtain Human Subjects
Approval
Validate feasibility of
data collection
IRB / HSRB Approval Proposal should be
mature enough to
support WU IRB
review. Submit this
request early.
HHS HSRB certification
Collect the Data Research database Raw Data Set or
Historical Data Set
Process / Code the (Raw)
Data
Determine best means
of coding /
classification schedule
and tool(s)
Coded Data Set Select inductive and
deductive codes
applicable to
independent variables
Code Book,
anonymization of
sensitive data, code
mapping
Analyze the Results Decide best practice
for analysis
(descriptive,
inferential, analysis by
generalization)
Use statistical and /
generalization tools
and techniques
Statistical analysis and
/ or generalization
Organize the Results Determine best
approach to visualie
and present results
Chapter 4. Results
Research
Design
Final
Research
Paper
Write conclusions
limitations, suggestions for
further study
Chapter 5. Conclusions Analysis by
generalization;
consistency with
previous chapters.
Generalization and
visualiation templates
Research
Execution
Research
Analysis
Plan Literature Design Analysis References
20. Codes by Interview
Anonymized verbatim
Interview text
An aggregate codebook
maintains unduplicated codes
across entire study
Plan Literature Design Analysis References
22. • Customize E2E Digital Workflow: It is now
possible to work almost entirely digitally
– The only constraint is whether or not the article or
text has been digitized
– Workflow supports both analog and digital content
• Coordinate Online + Offline Work: Students can
work online (Internet-connected) and offline
(eReaders, e.g., Kindle)
• Use Digital Techniques + Tools: Each stage in the
development of a dissertation has unique
characteristics and requirements
• Improve Dissertation Quality: At the same time,
the entire dissertation must hold together
Plan Literature Design Analysis References
6
7
8
9
23. • Business and teaching experience
• Global executive, management, and technical roles
• Technical innovation in media
• Interactive teaching methods
• Social media, big data, netnography
Plan Literature Design Analysis References
25. • Ogden, E. (2007). Complete your dissertation or thesis in
two semesters or less. New York, NY: Roman & Littlefield.
• Miller, A. (2009). Finish your dissertation once and for all.
Washington, D.C.: American Psychological Association .
• Foss, S., and Waters, W. (2007). Destination dissertation: A
traveler’s guide to a done dissertation. New York, NY:
Roman & Littlefield.
• Leedy, P., and Ormrod, J. (2005). Practical research:
Planning and design. (8th ed.). Upper Saddle, NJ: Pearson,
Merrill, Prentice Hall.
• Thomas, R., and Brubaker, D. (2008). Theses and
dissertations: A guide to planning, research, and writing.
(2nd ed.). Thousand Oaks, CA: Corwin Press.
Plan Literature Design Analysis References
26. • Fisher, A. (2011). Critical thinking: An introduction. (2nd ed.).
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
• Galvan, J. (2006). Writing literature reviews: A guide for
students of the social and behavioral sciences. (3rd ed.).
Glendale, CA: Pyrczak Publishing
• Jesson, J., Matheson, L. and Lacey, F. (2011). Doing your
literature review: Traditional and systematic techniques.
London: Sage Publications, Ltd.
• Machi, L., and McEvoy, B. (2009). The literature review: The
six steps to success. (2nd ed.). Thousand Oaks, CA: Corwin
Press.
• Pan, M. (2008). Preparing the literature reviews. (3rd ed.).
Glendale, CA: Pyrczak Publishing.
• Wycoff, J. Mindmapping: Your personal guide to exploring
creativity and problem-solving. (1991). New York: Berkley
Books.
Plan Literature Design Analysis References
27. • Creswell, J. (2003). Research design: Qualitative,
quantitative, and mixed methods approaches. (2nd ed.).
Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.
• Creswell, J. (2007). Designing and conducting mixed
methods research. (2007). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage
Publications.
• Leedy, P., and Ormrod, J. (2005). Practical research:
Planning and design. (8th ed.). Upper Saddle, NJ:
Pearson, Merrill, Prentice Hall.
• Cooper, D., and Schindler, P. (2006). Business research
methods. (9th ed.). New York, NY: McGraw-Hill.
Plan Literature Design Analysis References
28. • Charmaz, K. (2006). Constructing grounded theory: A
practical guide through qualitative analysis. Thousand
Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.
• Hennink, M, Hutter, I., and Bailey, A. (2011). Qualitative
research methods. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.
• Saldana, J. (2009). The coding manual of qualitative
researchers. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.
• Seidman, I. (2006). Interviewing as qualitative research: A
guide for researchers in education and the social sciences.
(3rd ed.). New York, NY: Teachers College Press.
• Strauss, A., and Corbin, J. (1998). Basics of qualitative
research: Techniques and processes for developing
grounded theory. (2nd ed.). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage
Publications.
Plan Literature Design Analysis References
29. • Buckingham, A., and Saunders, P. (2009). The survey
methods workbook. Cambridge, England: Polity Press.
• Fink, A. (2003). How to design survey studies. (2nd ed.).
Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.
• Fowler, F. (2009). Survey research methods. (4th ed.).
Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.
• Rea, L., and Parker, R. (2005). Designing & conducting
survey research: A comprehensive guide. (3rd ed.). San
Francisco, CA: Wiley.
• Saris, W., and Gallhofer, I. (2007). Design, evaluation,
and analysis of questionnaires for survey research. San
Francisco, CA: Wiley.
Plan Literature Design Analysis References
30. • Hancock, D., and Algozzine, B. (2006). Doing
case study research: A practical guide for
beginning researchers. New York, NY: Teachers
College Press.
• Yin, R. (Ed.). (2004). The case study anthology.
Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.
• Yin, R. (2009). Case study research design and
methods. (4th ed.). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage
Publications.
Plan Literature Design Analysis References
31. • Greenwood, D., and Levin, M. (1998).
Introduction to action research: Social
research for social change. Thousand Oaks,
CA: Sage Publications.
• Herr, K., and Anderson, G. (2005). The action
research dissertation: A guide for students and
faculty. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.
Plan Literature Design Analysis References
32. • Anderson, D., Sweeney, D., and Williams, T.
(2012). Modern business statistics with
Microsoft Office Excel. (4th ed.). Mason, OH:
South-Western.
• Salkind, N. (2008). Statistics for People who
(think they) hate statistics. (3rd ed.). Thousand
Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.
• Gwet, K. (2010). Handbook of inter-rater
reliability. (2nd ed.). Gaithersburg, MD:
Advanced Analytics.
Plan Literature Design Analysis References
33. • Clines, R., and Cross, E. (2010). Research writing
simplified: A documentation guide. (6th ed.). New
York, NY: Pearson Education.
• Feak, C., and Swales, J. (2009). Telling a research
story: Writing the literature review. Michigan:
University of Michigan Press.
• Graff, G., and Birkenstein, C. (2010). They say I
say: The moves that matter in academic research.
(2nd ed.). New York, NY: Norton.
• Zerubavel, E. (1999). The clockwork muse: A
practical guide to writing theses, dissertations,
and books. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University
Press.
Plan Literature Design Analysis References
34. • Few, S. (2004). Show me the numbers:
Designing tables and graphs to enlighten.
Oakland, CA: Analytics Press.
• Krum, R. (2013). Cool infographics: Effective
communication with data visualization and
design.
• Tufte, E. (2001). The visual display of
quantitative information. (2nd ed.). Cheshire,
CT: Graphics Press.
Plan Literature Design Analysis References
35. • Brown, J., Broderick, A., and Lee, N. (2007). Word
of Mouth Communication Within Online
Communities: Conceptualizing the Online Social
Network. Journal of Interactive Marketing
• Kozinets, R. (2002). The Field Behind the Screen:
Using Netnography for Marketing Research in
Online Communities. Journal of Marketing
Research
• Macdonald,E., Wilson, H., and Konus, U. (2012).
Better Customer Insight - In Real-Time, Harvard
Business Review.
Plan Literature Design Analysis References
Editor's Notes
Branching logic, browser-based audience response system
I would like to know more about you and where you are in the dissertation process. So, I have a 5 questions I would like to ask before we go further.
Digital approach – iterative, multimedia, repository-based, cloud-based
Phase and Deliverable
Content is not exclusively text-based.
Tools are there to analyze text, video, and audio content.
Big data tools are there to analyze trillions of data points.