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Research methodology and dissertation

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What should I do with it when I have it? Where will I need to use it? ... JISCMAIL specialist academic discussion lists. Joseph Rowntree Foundation ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Research methodology and dissertation


1
Research methodology and dissertation
  • Prof Marcus Ormerod

2
Knowledge
  • Information gathering/storage
  • Literature review
  • Critical thinking

3
Collecting knowledge
  • What information should I gather?
  • Where should I look for it?
  • How will I be able to obtain it?
  • What should I do with it when I have it?
  • Where will I need to use it?
  • How will I know if I have enough?
  • When do I stop looking?

4
What information should I gather?
Subject knowledge
  • What do I already know?
  • What am I looking for, to add to my knowledge?
  • What is useful knowledge here?
  • Who produced it and why?
  • When was it produced?
  • What are their main arguments?
  • What do their conclusions add to the subject?

5
What information should I gather?
Process knowledge
  • What do I already know?
  • What am I looking for, to add to my knowledge?
  • What literature is used to underpin their work?
  • How have they framed their research?
  • How did they design their research?
  • How have they arrived at their results?
  • What does the process add to the conclusions?

6
What information should I gather?
Style and approach knowledge
  • What do I already know?
  • What am I looking for, to add to my knowledge?
  • What is the style and approach they use?
  • What is the structure they have taken?
  • How do they set their boundaries?
  • What are the logical steps they take?

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Useful databases
  • APID - Architectural Publications Index on
    campus only
  • Archinet recommended web site for architecture
    and building
  • Architecture.com RIBA web site
  • Barbour Index Construction Expert
  • Barbour Index Professional Series
  • BCIS Online on certain campus machines
  • British Library Public Catalog
  • British Standards Online
  • BUBL Construction
  • Building Research Establishment
  • Business Source Premier (EBSCO)

11
  • Chartered Institute of Housing
  • CIBSE building services engineering
  • Civil Engineering Database (ASCE)
  • Construction and Building Abstracts
  • Construction Information Service very useful
    resource site
  • COPAC union Catalogue multiple university library
    search
  • Countryside Agency
  • Department for Communities and Local Government
  • Department for Environment, Food Rural Affairs
  • Department for Transport
  • Department of Health

12
  • Digimap OS maps
  • Emerald Insight (Emerald) business research
  • Environment Abstracts Archive
  • Environment Online
  • Estates Gazette Interactive
  • Health and Safety Executive
  • Housing Corporation
  • Housing Management Standards Manual on campus
    only
  • IDS Brief employment case law
  • Information Sources Guide for Construction
    Property Management
  • Ingenta Connect (Ingenta) academic articles
  • Institution of Civil Engineers
  • Institution of Occupational Safety and Health

13
  • JISCMAIL specialist academic discussion lists
  • Joseph Rowntree Foundation
  • Journal articles how to find them
  • Journals Guide for Construction Property
    Management
  • Journals_at_Ovid Full Text (Ovid)
  • JustCite index of UK and Europe legislation
  • Justis law reports
  • Lawtel legal information service
  • Lexis Nexis Butterworths Uk legislation
  • National Housing Federation
  • National Statistics
  • NoWAL Library Catalogues

14
  • Occupational Health and Safety Information
    Service
  • Red Book valuation and appraisal
  • Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (RICS)
  • University of Salford Library Catalogue
  • Westlaw UK UK law
  • ZETOC journals and conference proceedings

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Practicalities
  • Sources
  • Disciplines
  • Keywords
  • Storing material
  • Retrieving material

19
Literature Review
  • Takes the relevant literature and helps the
    reader understand the arguments, theories and
    patterns to form a credible theoretical base from
    which to start your empirical research

20
Literature review
  • Provides a current view of the relevant issues on
    the subject area
  • Demonstrates that you have read and understand
    the views and research of experts in the field of
    study
  • Identifies research methods and how to use them
    correctly
  • Helps develop the research topic, questions and
    hypothesis
  • Provides a platform from which you can go and
    conduct your own research
  • Enables you to compare your findings against a
    theoretical position

21
Practicalities
  • Skim read only what is relevant
  • Establish quickly the worth of the material
  • Look for similarities with other writers/material
  • Identify common issues/patterns/theories
  • Analyse arguments
  • Question the validity
  • Outline the criticisms they make
  • Make connections between ideas
  • Develop issues and themes
  • Collect quotations and/or paraphrase material
  • Correctly reference material

22
Critical thinking allows you to
  • Credibly defend a position or point of view
  • Extract the useful elements from the arguments of
    other people
  • Focus on the ideas, theories and arguments of
    others, rather than the author of them
  • Synthesising the work of others into a new point
    of view
  • Becoming aware of your own critical stance
  • Identifying weaknesses in the arguments of other

23
Critical thinking involves
  • Identifying other peoples positions, arguments
    and conclusions
  • Evaluating the evidence they present to defend
    these
  • Fairly weighing up alternative points of view
  • Identifying bias, assumptions and persuasion
  • Reflecting on what you have read
  • Drawing your own conclusions
  • Presenting your own point of view underpinned
    with evidence and well reasoned argument

24
Critical reading
  • Identify reasons given and conclusions drawn
  • Analyse how reasons are ordered, or combined, to
    construct a line of reasoning
  • Evaluate how well the reasons support the
    conclusion drawn
  • Evaluate the quality of the evidence that are
    used in the reasoning
  • Consider flaws and limitations in the reasoning
  • Consider what works well and why
  • Collect quotations and paraphrases that
    illustrate the main theories, points of view and
    arguments even if you disagree with them

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