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Developing Effective Research Proposals

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This is your step-by-step guide to success with your research proposal. This new edition covers every section of the proposal, telling you all you need to know on how to structure it, bring rigour to your methods section, impress your readers and get your proposal accepted.

With practical tips and advice throughout, new features

Comprehensive explanation of method and methodology, and how to maximize this crucial section of your proposal A new section on mixed an increasingly common approach in research A new chapter on how to get it right with ethics Fresh exercises and activities, now for each key chapter. The Third Edition provides an authoritative and accessible guide for anyone tackling a research proposal. It is perfect for students in education, nursing, health, and across the social sciences.

190 pages, Kindle Edition

First published March 15, 2000

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Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews
Profile Image for Stef Rozitis.
1,695 reviews84 followers
July 12, 2016
This book was pretty clear, went through what needs to happen for a research proposal to be well written and was broad minded enough to be useful to most writers, regardless of which research methods qualitative or quantitative they were using.

While I take Punch's point about being dispassionate and not coming to research with an axe to grind, I only partially agree (it is a valid thing for me to watch out for in my writing). I think you do need to be personally involved enough to care about your thesis even if you do also need to have the self-discipline to step back from your perspective and observe. I also think that all researchers have bias, it is just that some are comfortable enough within the status quo not to show it so much.

Anyway that was a minor thing. I found this book very useful. I wish I had my own copy because I am reluctant to let it go back to the library (but I need to). I think as I begin to write my own proposal I will refer to it again and again and check that what I am doing is working. I also like all the strategies about writing things to help you think...I think I will need to do that too (and have already done some). If you think you might write a thesis soon or in the future this book is well worth reading (it is quite a slim book too and logically set out for easy reading).
Profile Image for Stef Rozitis.
1,695 reviews84 followers
August 13, 2021
Reread this because my upervisor thought I should. It's more useful now that I have had a go, it helps me understand what I have not been getting right but also to see that as an OK part of the process. I feel optimistic that between this and my supervisor I will get there this time (no thanks to my former workplace which decided to dump me)
Profile Image for Will.
157 reviews2 followers
January 20, 2025
Punch up your research proposal with DERP.

It is mercifully slim and very well laid out.
Profile Image for unperspicacious.
124 reviews40 followers
April 19, 2011
This second edition is a gem. I have read in the following order, Chs. 1, 7, 2, 3, and 4, leaving the remaining Chapters 5, 6 and 8 to a later date.

Things I found particularly useful so far:
- The discussion on whether one should approach research projects primarily from the point of view of the problems they address or through leading questions, and the false dichotomy that can arise (Ch. 2, pp. 15-16)
- The simplified model of the research process, without the hypothesis (pp. 17) and with one present (Ch. 3, 27-28)
- Structuring the proposal into three basic layers: the whats (the research subject matter), the hows (methodology) and the whys (relevance to theory, practice and policy) (pp. 17)
- the hierarchy of concepts - research area => research topic => general research questions => specific research questions => data collection questions (Ch. 3).

Detailed content headers are provided at the beginning of each chapter in numbered sub-headings. This makes it very useful for drilling straight down to a particular issue if ongoing work on a proposal is running into problems.

Perhaps this is all blindingly obvious to others more intelligent and experienced, but Punch's typologies and frameworks are a lifesaver for me, especially for someone trying to structure and distill insights from a decade's worth of accumulated literature into what will probably end up as five page single-sided proposal on some grey-beard's desk...

I also found Delamont et al's (2004) 'Supervising the Doctorate' through this book, which has a cracker of a chapter on tips for putting together literature reviews.

Now to actually try and put all this stuff into practice...
Profile Image for Rachel.
8 reviews7 followers
August 28, 2013
Beneficial for second year undergraduate? Not in my opinion as diverse as alternative texts in research methods
Profile Image for Martecia Ann.
Author 1 book1 follower
Read
January 11, 2018
it was a required textbook for graduate school, so it's not like I really wanted to read it.
Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews

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