This document provides guidance for students on completing their critical review assignment for Module 3 of the BAPP WBS3760 course. It reviews the structure of the critical review and provides tips for each section. Key sections covered include the introduction, evaluation of the inquiry process, analysis of findings, and critical reflection. Students are encouraged to get feedback from peers, tutors, and their advisor as they draft their critical review. The deadline to submit the critical review and accompanying professional artifact is January 7th, with presentations scheduled for January 23rd and 24th.
Slides from the NW part-time researcher workshop on 1 November featuring sessions on academic writing styles and getting the best from a part-time supervisor. This workshop was hosted by the University of Chester (Warrington campus) and facilitated by Emma Gillaspy and Moira Peelo
Writing essay has different stages which form the common phrases of essay. The phrases are planning, thinking, researching, writing and editing. This lesson guides you how to write essay through the understanding of these phrases.
How to Write A Research Paper? - Useful Tips For Successful Academic WritingResearchLeap
Academic writing is a style of writing that makes your work easier to read and understand. No matter how well versed you are with grammar, punctuation and other areas that come into play for writing papers, making a mistake with the content hurts your overall academic writing.
The purpose of academic writing is to make your work clear and understandable to whoever is reading and/or evaluating it. Another important part of academic writing is ensuring that your work is fully and correctly referenced. The tips in Research Leap Manual on Academic Writing contain practical methods of creating an academic paper which your readers will easily follow. With this guide, you will learn how to:
Choose a topic
Think (brainstorm)
Build an organized text
Write good introduction, thesis, body and conclusion parts
Format your writing
Reference your work
Get expert academic writing tips straight to your inbox, and become a better academic writer. Download our PDF manual right now from the attachment.
Your comment and feedback are highly appreciated. To receive other tips and manuals, and to expand your research network and access research opportunities, join us on Linked In or FB.
Slides from the NW part-time researcher workshop on 1 November featuring sessions on academic writing styles and getting the best from a part-time supervisor. This workshop was hosted by the University of Chester (Warrington campus) and facilitated by Emma Gillaspy and Moira Peelo
Writing essay has different stages which form the common phrases of essay. The phrases are planning, thinking, researching, writing and editing. This lesson guides you how to write essay through the understanding of these phrases.
How to Write A Research Paper? - Useful Tips For Successful Academic WritingResearchLeap
Academic writing is a style of writing that makes your work easier to read and understand. No matter how well versed you are with grammar, punctuation and other areas that come into play for writing papers, making a mistake with the content hurts your overall academic writing.
The purpose of academic writing is to make your work clear and understandable to whoever is reading and/or evaluating it. Another important part of academic writing is ensuring that your work is fully and correctly referenced. The tips in Research Leap Manual on Academic Writing contain practical methods of creating an academic paper which your readers will easily follow. With this guide, you will learn how to:
Choose a topic
Think (brainstorm)
Build an organized text
Write good introduction, thesis, body and conclusion parts
Format your writing
Reference your work
Get expert academic writing tips straight to your inbox, and become a better academic writer. Download our PDF manual right now from the attachment.
Your comment and feedback are highly appreciated. To receive other tips and manuals, and to expand your research network and access research opportunities, join us on Linked In or FB.
Research Proposal Assignment Research Proposals exist for tw.docxaudeleypearl
Research Proposal Assignment
Research Proposals exist for two reasons: One, as a guide for you to examine the overall shape and scope of your project, and two, to elicit funding from sponsors for said project (usually). As I can pay you only in joy and index cards, this proposal focuses more on the former intended outcome and as practice for future proposals in your career. For our purposes, you will generate a three-paragraph long proposal for your final research paper. Remember that this is a proposal – i.e. a suggestion for what you would like to write about within the confines of your discourse community. Essentially, you’re going to take something you love and identify an exigence affecting the discourse community around that thing you love.
Tip – Your interests/passions will lead you to a subject – such as “global warming”
Your proposal will investigate a topic related to that subject – such as “the effects of global warming on the breeding methods of the Canadian Goose.” (NOTE: the proposal is simply to start investigating the topic. That investigation will lead to your research question and a more formalized inquiry, but don’t try to get to that point just yet).
“HAY GIIIIRRRRLLLLLLLLLL”
Don’t concern yourself with writing an introduction or a conclusion or with presenting the proposal as a concept that is written in stone. You are proposing an investigation, NOT to find a solution.
Paragraph 1: In the first paragraph of your proposal, introduce your research paper topic and describe what you think at this point the main focus of the paper might be. Include a tentative thesis in this paragraph – but think of it more as a hypothesis. The beauty of research is that it is always fluid and informs itself. Therefore, starting out with an axe to grind (so, something you intend to prove) is a recipe for failure. Let the research guide you as you move toward your final paper, but having a preliminary thesis helps your investigation stay focused. What interests you about the topic you have chosen? Why should this exigence be addressed? What value will it provide to the further research of your discourse community?
Paragraph 2: In the second paragraph, discuss the sources that you intend to use. What will be the most useful in investigating your topic? If it will be a literature review, what journals look promising as sites for article collection, and why? If you intend to do a full research project, what methods do you foresee yourself using, and why? Who might the participants be, or will you use a data set instead? (Such as surveying moviegoers vs analyzing 20 movie posters)
Paragraph 3: In the third paragraph, speculate on what obstacles you foresee in this project and/or what you anticipate to be the most difficult part of the assignment. Why? What can you do ahead of time to try and avoid these sorts of roadblocks?
Me on my way to steal your girl research funding
500-750 words
Answered all questions in-depth (prov ...
Ashford 5: - Week 4 - Discussion 1
Your initial discussion thread is due on Day 3 (Thursday) and you have until Day 7 (Monday) to respond to your classmates. Your grade will reflect both the quality of your initial post and the depth of your responses. Reference the
Discussion Forum Grading Rubric
for guidance on how your discussion will be evaluated.
Share Your Action Research Study
Action research is a form of inquiry in which a problem is identified and a series of actions are planned as a way of gaining deeper understanding of the range of possible solutions. The purpose of this discussion is to promote reciprocal sharing of your final action research report with others in your community of practice (your peers in this course) who would value the knowledge you have gained through the action research process. In this discussion, you will create a presentation using the software of your choice (e.g., PowerPoint, Google Docs, Present.me, YouTube, Prezi, Jing, SlideRocket, or another program) to present your findings to your school at an after school staff meeting. Include speaker notes if using PowerPoint. If using a program other than PowerPoint, submit a document with speaker notes included for each slide.
There are two parts to this discussion.
Part 1:
Share the process and results of the action research planned in EDU671 and conducted in EDU675. At a minimum:
Describe the purpose of your study by writing a statement that completes the following sentence, “The purpose of this study is to…” (two to three sentences).
Post your research question(s) - Include definitions of key technical terms, if necessary. (one to three sentences)
Outcomes/Results The “so what?” of your study—Answers to your research questions. (three to four sentences)
Assuming you would conduct another cycle of this study, what specific modifications or adjustments would you make, and why? (three to four sentences)
Explain why this study is important to the school and the students. ( two to three sentences)
Explain why this study is important it is important for teachers and other educational practitioners to become researchers of their own practice. (two to three sentences)
Part 2:
Attach a link to your
ePortfolio (Pathbrite)
.
In one paragraph, reflect on your experience with the redesign of the Week Three Assignment in terms of challenges you encountered and how you overcame those challenges. Also include how your assessment promotes learning and innovation skills and how it could be used as a tool for ongoing evaluation of student progress.
Use the
PowerPoint Template
as a guide to help create a high quality presentation.
Alternate:
If you do not have your own completed action research to utilize, you will take a slightly different approach to complete this discussion: Using the Ashford University Library, locate and analyze a peer-reviewed educational action research study. You will follow the same guidelines in Part 1 of the discussion.
COM114 Fall 2019 Reflective JournalCOM114 Fall 2019A.docxmccormicknadine86
COM114 | Fall 2019 | Reflective Journal
COM114 | Fall 2019
American University of the Middle East Student Name: ____________________ Student ID: _ Section: _
COM114 | Fall 2019
American University of the Middle East Student Name: ____________________ Student ID: ______________ Section: ________
HOMEWORK
Reflective Journal [10%]
Course: COM 114 Fundamentals of Speech Communication
Instructors: Alvaro Subero,Nurcan Kose, Arda Jebejian, Filomachi Spathopoulou, Hanane Benali, Slaheddine Mnasri, Belen Gaspar Garcia, Stavros Papakonstantinidis
Term:Fall 2019
Assignment Title: Reflective Journal
Rationale
Self-reflection is a purposeful activity in which you exercise multiple skills, such as critical thinking, personal responsibility, adaptability, and more. When you debrief an experience, you reflect on everything including the process, the choices and discoveries you make, and the problems you encounter. The purpose of the self-reflection questions below is to inspire you to think about your learning journey. For example, how has this knowledge made you better? How can you apply your new knowledge to other areas of your studies? What is its significance in the real world?
Tasks/ Instructions
· Students should fill in all five reflective journal entries as provided by the instructor.
· In order to answer each entry, students should write clear, concise, and error-free sentences and paragraphs, minimum 100 words per reflection entry.
· Ideally, each entry should be answered at the end of each designated week of classes.
· It is the student’s responsibility to submit the journal (Turnit-in) on the date of final submission announced on Moodle
·
REFLECTIVE JOURNAL | REFLECTION #1 | WEEK 4
Make a list of all the fears you have related to public speaking. Order them on a continuum from least feared to most feared. Decide which fears are preventable and describe how they could be prevented. For the unpreventable fears, decide what you could do if they occur. Fill in the table below and put your thoughts in a paragraph.
Fear
Preventable?
Unpreventable?
REFLECTIVE JOURNAL | REFLECTION #2 | WEEK 5
Reflect on your first individual presentation (Interpretive Reading) and answer the following:
a. What did you do well?
b. What would you like to improve in the upcoming speeches?
Refer to the grading rubric of this assignment to be more specific in your response.
REFLECTIVE JOURNAL | REFLECTION #3 | WEEK 9
Reflect on your experience so far and answer the following questions:
a. How do you evaluate your individual performance during the first half of the course?
b. In what area did you improve the most?
c. List three ways you think you have developed or grown as a result of this course.
REFLECTIVE JOURNAL | REFLECTION #4 | WEEK 10
Listen carefully to a classmate’s informative speech and then answer the following questions:
a. What is the name of your classmate?
b. What is his/her topic?
c. Which vocal or bod ...
Final professional artefacts and oral presentation m3 4.12.15
Final cs3 m3 21.11.12
1. Campus Session 3
Module 3 BAPP WBS3760
21st November 2012
Review of Analysis and Learning
For the Critical Review
Hendon Campus
School of Media and Performing Arts
2. Welcome – Rome was not built in a day…
Please use these slides to help with your work.
3.
4. Where are you now? Evaluate…
Where are you now in your process? You could be in several places at once now!
5.
6. CS3 Review of the Critical Review structure
• Title Page see example on the Libguide
1. Introduction – Indicative 500 words – talked about
this CS2
2. Evaluation of the Inquiry Process – Indicative
2500 words - talked about this CS2 – 1 slide in
this presentation
3. Analysis of the Findings – Indicative 2500
words
4. Critical Reflection – Indicative 500 words
• Bibliography (Harvard style) and Appendices
• Supporting Evidence – explained later
7. Section 2 Review: Evaluation of the Inquiry Process
relates to the Analysis Tools that were used
Describe these in your evaluation but make sure to be clear about the
ones you used in your analysis.
Literature
Observation
Survey
Interview
Focus Groups
Don’t forget other gathering data tools like participant observation from
your private journals, the gathering of documents while doing interviews,
workshops, etc.
You may have gathered visual or audio-visual materials that you need to
consider for anonymity (this depends on the consent issues you agreed
with your participants).
8. Section 3 Analysis of Findings
Analysis: your findings (what you found out from the data
you gathered) and your analysis of the findings compared to
your literature and earlier perceptions of the topic, conclusion
of this stage.
What implications/benefits/impact did your inquiry have?
Did you conduct any activities/events/interventions that used
what you found out in your practice? and possible further
inquiry topics.
9. Analysis of Findings: possible points to consider
What did the data indicate about your topic, research
question or hypothesis? What did you find out?
The professional inquiry
has been a way to Findings are interesting
gather data about a because they relate to
phenomenon e.g. how things actually are in
an event your work environment.
a development
a change.
The inquiry tools that you used
should have provided you with
the evidence that you need for
your inquiry. If not… why not?
10. Think of analysis as a triangle of data to develop meaning that
you can tell others using your own point of view
Data – findings from your
inquiry (evidence)
Literature – Experience –
expertise from relating your
others and from a insider-researcher
collected body of understanding
knowledge in your
field and beyond
(Adesola with Paula added)
11. Analysis of Findings: critical arguments
How do your findings relate Conclusion of this section -
to your literature i.e. earlier what
perceptions of the topic or implications/benefits/impact
critical arguments about the did your inquiry have to your
topic/issues/phenomenon? professional practice? Your
Use examples from your workplace? Your community
literature. of practice?
How did your own What additional knowledge
professional and understanding do you
activities/events/interventi have about your professional
ons relate to the findings practice? Possible further
from your inquiry? inquiry topics?
12. Analysing Observations (revisited from Reader 6)
The data is gathered and displayed as descriptions, quotes,
diagrams to show relationships, quantitative charts/displays
to show quantitative data, audio, audio-visual, and
photographic evidence, etc.
Your observations record what has happened sensitively
and appropriately to issues of ethics, permission and
confidentiality.
You need to report an understanding of the context for the
event or meeting that was observed in order to draw
conclusions from the data.
13. Analysing the survey/questionnaire data (revisited)
The framework for data analysis of replies determined in advance.
Coding your questionnaire: There are five steps involved in the
coding process (Survey Monkey can export this data):
1. Develop the coding frame for both pre-coded (closed) and open
questions.
2. Create a codebook and coding instructions.
3. Code the questionnaires.
4. Transfer the values to a computer (as in an Excel spreadsheet).
5. Check and clean the data (you can make simple graphs with the
data).
Interpretation involves identifying significant results, trends, patterns,
similarities and differences and offering an explanation for them. This
can be expressed in the form of numbers or words in your findings.
14. Analysing interviews and focus groups (revisited)
The analysis of data collected from interviews can be
complex. It has been collected within a certain context
and must be analysed with that in mind.
The qualitative researcher can categorise (code) data
that has emerged into themes. Quotes can be selected
because they typify the data (common responses) or there
might be some statements that are significant though only
said once (significant).
The data is organised so that comparisons, contrasts and
insights can be made with the aim of finding the
meaning of the evidence presented.
15.
16. Group Exercises for Analysis
Using the Critical Review as Next
a structure for discussion 1.Tell the group your main
findings and points of
On pieces blank piece of A4 analysis
– 5 minute exercise 2.an elected member of the
group can act as scribe for
1.Review your introduction you while you are talking and
using 3 main bullet points give you the notes
2.Review your evaluation 3.Reflect on responses and
using 5 main bullet points questions from the group
and write a blog about your
Note: guidelines for these sections are in analysis process
Module Handbook if you need to review them.
Please do this at home if you are not in the campus session!
17. Section 4 - Critical Reflection
Critical Reflection - a critical self-analysis of the learning journey based
on your learning journal
Have your acquired new knowledge and understanding about yourself?
Your job? Your workplace? Your community of practice?
What is it? explain by
Your learning journey has been continuous since the 1. beginning of
the course and 2. this module… what has changed? How has the
work you have done on the BA (Hons) affected your performance
and progression? How has your professional practice been
affected?
18. Group Exercises for the Critical Reflection
Mindmap your critical
reflection using 1 A4 piece
of paper
Critical reflection
Critical reflection
Module 3
Module 3
BAPP Arts
BAPP Arts
Discuss this with the group in order to
explain in further depth the things that you
have learned – scan mindmap and put on
your blog
Please do this at home if you are not in the campus session!
19. Supporting Evidence as Appendices
Supporting Evidence blog texts, Questions:
visual evidence, blank consent form,
blank questionnaires, interview
questions, observation grids, etc. Each Should images of
appendix should be cited (e.g. your work be put in
Appendix 1) in the Critical Review and the text of the
be relevant to what you have said. Critical Review?
These are a way that you can more How are you using
clearly show what you have images to
accomplished – and relate to the
thinking and actual activities of the communicate in
inquiry… your Artefact?
20. Harvard citation and bibliography
The use of citation for words and images – any ideas
that are quoted or paraphrased – you must reference
these in a Bibliography,
Review university guidelines on copyright.
Use Harvard referencing – WORDS and PICTURES
Advice on Harvard Referencing is in the Programme
Handbook and under the Writing Tab for the BAPP
Libguide
21. 1. Q&A from Module 3 BAPP
1. The questions that you ask in the interview survey, should you
comment on each answer? (i.e. the Interview has 14 questions and
the Survey has 24 questions). How many graphs do you put in?
Often there is not space to look at every response, so you may want to
focus on the most significant findings and the ones that most
participants used (more common) – in some cases these might be
the same BUT in the interviews only a few might have brought up
important issues that you want to talk about. You can use your
appendices to show findings that you were unable to spend much
time on in your analysis and refer the reader when needed.
Put in the number of graphs (data) or quotes (data) that relate to your
main points of analysis.
22. 2. Q&A from Module 3 BAPP
2. Does it matter if the information you’ve gathered is rubbish as long
as you comment that it is rubbish?
Difficult one… in this process you try to ask the right interview/survey
etc. questions to gather the data that you need to address your
research questions or hypothesis. However, there might be some
of the questions that did not lead to data that you expected or that
was useful as findings. In this case, you rely on the data that has
been useful and comment within the evaluation and perhaps in the
critical learning sections about the process BUT some unexpected
data is genuine so should be reported as a part of the inquiry.
Think this through – if your inquiry process has not allowed you to
explore the specific issues in your inquiry topic using primary
evidence from other people and literature, you need to discuss this
with your adviser.
23. 3. Q&A from Module 3 BAPP
3. What does the literature review in the Evaluation section cite?
The literature review covers the sources you have used, the people
and theories examined as knowledge and understanding mainly
from written sources BUT also videos, audio tapes, etc.
Investigating your topic by looking at what others have said about it
allows you and the reader to understand the context of your
inquiry.
You can quote and paraphrase from your literature to describe this
context and theorise your findings in your analysis – to compare
the findings to the debates in your field, back up certain findings,
use larger data sets that discuss your indicative findings, give a
historical setting, etc.
24. 4. Q&A from Module 3 BAPP
4. How much do we mention the Professional Artefact in the Critical
Review?
Yes, it is appropriate to mention the Professional Artefact in your
Critical Review, especially in your analysis or critical reflection.
You might also consider an explanatory section to your artefact–
we discussed the addition of a cover or written insert often found in
CDs to show what they are about and give credits.
The final ‘shape’ of the artefact and how it is explained is up to you, but
it would make sense to cover this explanation somewhere in the
work you submit.
25. 5. Q&A from Module 3 BAPP
5. What is the difference between the inquiry and the professional
artefact?
The inquiry is the process you have used for exploring a research
question or hypothesis – the topic area that you have focused on
during the module. Your inquiry includes your practitioner research
and might include a workshop or teaching intervention, but the
process of questioning and exploring the topic would have
informed your practice in order for you to do that activity.
The professional artefact exhibits the knowledge and understanding
from the inquiry findings, like the critical review, but will be some
type of product or ‘work in progress’ you have made for a
professional audience.
26. 6. Q&A from Module 3 BAPP
5. What is the difference between an ‘opinion’ and an ‘interpretation’?
This explanation comes from Paula’s work based learning but be
aware that in different academic cultures (arts and humanities) the
term ‘opinion’ might represent something else.
It might be helpful to think of an opinion as a personally held belief that
could be used in your critical reflection and an interpretation as an
analysis based on evidence – evidence that comes from the data
you have gathered through your practitioner research and inquiry
work (both the literature and the ‘tool’ like interview or survey) – so
in your analysis section you will be interpreting your findings using
critical thinking that relies on judgement e.g. what did you find out
and what did it mean? based on evidence form your inquiry.
27. Feedback from peers and tutors
Week 8: (19/11/12) Campus Session 3 you should be drafting
your Critical Review now + have you sent a brief summary to your
adviser? What about working with your special interest groups or
colleagues on BAPP Arts or in the workplace?
Week 9: (26/11/12): Send to adviser draft sections of your Critical
Review (Introduction, Evaluation, Analysis and Critical Reflection)
for written feedback. Get in touch with your adviser to negotiate
this feedback and when you will be sending this in…
The due date for the Critical Review and the Professional Artefact
are the 7th of January 2013.
Presentations will be the 23rd and 24th January – please RSVP now
for these dates in am/pm slots (contact Paula).