Order Number |
636738393092 |
Type of Project |
ESSAY |
Writer Level |
PHD VERIFIED |
Format |
APA |
Academic Sources |
10 |
Page Count |
3-12 PAGES |
Guidance on Writing a DBA Research Proposal This page provides guidance on how to write a research proposal, with a few suggestions on what to include and what to avoid. What is a DBA proposal? A DBA proposal is an outline of your proposed research that is designed to: • Formulate and define a clear, interesting research question; this may take the form of a hypothesis to be tested, or an open-ended enquiry related to your work base.
Establish the relevance and value of the proposed research question in the context of current academic thinking, highlighting its originality and significance and its application to your professional practice/organisation
Suggest what you hope to discover at the end of your research and what impact it may have to your professional practice/organization.
What do I need to include? A research proposal will include the following (note that this is a general guide and that you may have been given more specific instructions by your supervisor): • A working title: this might not be the finalised title of your project, but must show that you have thought about what you are hoping to achieve.
Make sure any key words appear in the working title. • A general overview: a brief section about the subject area you are looking at, and how it fits into which discipline(s). This will be most important in DBA research proposals where you are applying for funding, as you will need to show how your topic fits into the disciplines funded by the body.
You are therefore summarising what has been done before on this topic. Remember that a DBA is original research exploring work-based problems, so for DBA proposals you will also need to show that what you’ll be studying hasn’t been done before. • Key research questions: the aims and objectives of the research.
What are the questions you’ll be looking to answer? What are you hoping to find out? If undertaking original research, your hypothesis can be explained in this section. Be careful not to include an unachievable number of goals or be over-ambitious. Ambition is good but you must be able to actually carry out the things you have described.
Where are you likely to access data from? • Expected results: obviously you can’t say what the results will be, because you haven’t done the research yet.
You can, however, explain what kinds of results you hope to achieve, such as a greater understanding of the way something works, a new method of doing something and so on. Think about how your research will affect or impact the subject area and your professional practice.
The Use of Gantt chart is a good way of demonstrating how your time will be allocated.
You won’t be able to answer every question about the topic, or look into every single aspect of a subject.