Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Analysis
Analyse the topic
Write brief proposal on Your central question/problem Your proposed methodology Its significance
Survey reading and other resources Make notes and record bibliographical Refine the proposal
Synthesis
Make a flowchart showing main ideas, arguments, structure etc Write the first draft
Evaluation
Reflect, evaluate, get a perspective on the dissertation Review, rewrite
Presentation
Compile a bibliography
Make presentational requirements (formatting typing) Source: McEvedy, R, 1984, Analysis and Synthesis: Developing Report Writing Skills in Tertiary Students, in part1 of the Proceedings of the Australasian Fifth Annual Study Skills Conference Deakin University (15-18 May)
1.
What is your central question or problem? Why is this problem important and worthy of study? How will you go about it (research methods and underlying assumptions)?
2.
3.
Use this section to provide a setting for your area of research; Introduce your area of research, without going into specific details, touching upon the nuances of your work and the problems at hand; The theoretical and conceptual framework may not directly relate to your work but it shall provide an element of the foundation of your final work.
Introduction
This section shall provide the space for an extensive literature review; It is STRONGLY recommended you journalistic pieces when writing on your You may use it to supplement knowledge but it cannot be used literature review; avoid topic. your in a
Ideally a review should provide a broad spectrum of literature of your area of research;
Background
The purpose of this review is to provide the theoretical and conceptual framework of your work; it will also provide a better understanding of the discourse and help you to come to a conclusion on your research topic. If you choose to follow one school of thought over another, you must outline your interpretation and reasons for selecting it. If you fail to carry out solid literature review, you may end up writing several dissertations! This means one dissertation with several disjointed arguments, each one failing to fully support your research
Background
Sources