RESIDENCY 2 FINAL ASSIGNMENT: Aligning Research Components Matrix: This is a working document for you to start and revise during the residency sessions as you work towards alignment. We don’t expect you to know now what will be your dissertation focus. Start with something close to your interests. Align the components as you develop your thinking. We expect your final dissertation will be different after many more iterations. The boxes will expand as you type. (See Guidelines and Rubric below.)
Name: Date: Residency Cohort: Cohort Leader: |
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College/School: |
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Specialization: |
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Working Title for your Dissertation (12 words or less): |
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Problem Statement |
Aligned Research Design |
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Dissertation Prospectus Rubric Quality Indicators |
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Research Components to Align |
Social Problem of Significance in the Field What is the social problem? Why is it important to address? What stakeholders would care? You can use citations. |
Background/Literature Review List key words and search terms to explore. Add at least 3 empirical references below. |
Meaningful Gap in Research Literature What researchable problem relates to the broader social problem in column 1? What might not have been researched about it? (Gap) |
Possible Research Question(s) |
Theories or Conceptual Framework Add at least one citation here and reference at end. |
Tentative Method of Inquiry |
Fill in each section as you develop ideas. |
Seminar 1 |
Seminar 2 and 3 |
Seminar 1 and 4 |
Seminar 4 |
Seminar 6 |
Seminar 5 |
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For example: |
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If the information did not change enter it here as well so the alignment is clear—do not leave any item blank and do not list “none”. |
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Reflect on your next steps for each component (column) based on the feedback and what you have learned during Residency 2. What do you need to do to prepare for Residency 3 (e.g. Read, annotate, network, build skills, use resources, etc.} |
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How you might network to find available data sources or feasible data collection sites? |
REFERENCES: (APA Format) At least three empirical articles and one theory book or article. |
GUIDELINES FOR RESIDENCY 2 FINAL ASSIGNMENT: You will develop the Final Assignment during each of the Residency 2 sessions. Residency 2 sessions were designed to help you learn how to develop and align research components.
The
columns in the Final Assignment are the components needed in a research study. These components correspond to the topics in the Residency 2 seminars:
· Social Problem or Significance in the Field – Seminar 1
· Background / Literature Review – Seminars 2 and 3
· Meaningful Gap in the Research Literature (or Research Gap) – Seminars 1 and 4
· Possible Research Question – Seminar 4
· Theories or Conceptual Framework – Seminar 6
· Tentative Method of Inquiry – Seminar 5
The
rows in the Final Assignment represent the iterative process of developing your research ideas. To complete the Final Assignment, there are four actions:
· 1st row: Write your initial ideas/thoughts for each item.
· 2nd row: Gather feedback from others on those items.
· 3rd row: Finalize your thoughts about each item.
· 4th row: Reflect on what you need to do to move forward.
RESIDENCY 2 FINAL ASSIGNMENT – GRADING RUBRIC
Residency 2 Final Assignment Criteria |
0—Element Missing |
1 to 2—Below Expectations |
3—Meets minimal expectations |
4 to 5–Exceeds Expectations |
(1) |
One or more item is completely not present; an answer of “none” is given for one or more items. |
Minimal information presented in the items so that the reader cannot determined what is being proposed, or the answers are not related to the item (“none” is not an acceptable answer for any element) |
Adequate information presented in all or most of the items so that the reader can determine what is being proposed but some areas may not be clear (“none” is not an acceptable answer for any element) |
Clear description of information presented in each of the items (“none” is not an acceptable answer for any element) |
(2) |
One or more item is completely not present; an answer of “none” is given for one or more items. |
Minimal information presented in the items so that the reader cannot determine what the feedback was |
Adequate description of the |
Clear description of the |
(3) Final Response |
One or more item is completely not present; an answer of “none” is given for one or more items. |
Minimal information presented in the items so that the reader cannot determine what is being proposed, or the answers are not related to the item |
Adequate information presented in all or most of the items so that the reader can determine what is being proposed but some areas may not be clear |
Clear description of information presented in each of the items |
(4) Reflection & Next Steps |
One or more item is completely not present; an answer of “none” is given for one or more items. |
Minimal information presented in the items so that the reader cannot determined what the student learned from the experience |
A reflection on each of the sessions/areas is provided as well as next steps planned in each session/area. |
Clear description of the |
(5) Writing |
Reader is not able to make sense of the materials provided. |
Inconsistent use of standard English obstructs presentation’s clarity and the reader’s understanding of ideas and/or inconsistent use of grammar and mechanics are evident throughout presentation. |
Consistent use of standard English and/or few inaccuracies in grammar and mechanics. |
Use of standard English, grammar, and mechanics are at a scholarly level. |
(6) APA |
APA formatting not used in citations/ references. |
Weak/Inconsistent use of APA formatting in citations/references. |
Consistent use of APA formatting in citations/references |
Use of APA formatting and citations indicate mastery. |
Grading:
(“none” is not an acceptable answer for any element)
Satisfactory (S)=
All items at a score of
3 or above (Meets minimal expectations)
Unsatisfactory (U)=
One or more items at a score of
2 or lower (Does not meet minimal expectations)
.
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