dissertation prospectus
Dissertation Prospectus Template
Introduction
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Criteria (Required Components): score 0-3 |
Peer Evaluation Score (0-3) |
Professor or Chair Evaluation Score (0-3) |
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Introduction This section briefly overviews the research focus or problem, why this study is worth conducting, and how this study will be completed covering all of the major areas in the literature that is germane to your topic. The recommended length for this section is 3-4 paragraphs. |
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1. Dissertation topic is introduced. |
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2. Describes how the study extends prior research or fills a “need” or “defined gap” from current literature. Research shares that research is needed to assess the direction of the relationship between issues. |
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NOTE: This Introduction section provides the foundation for the Introduction section in Chapter 1 of the Proposal. |
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NOTE: When writing this section ensure it has a logical flow, as well as uses correct paragraph structure, sentence structure, tense, punctuation, and APA format. |
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Comments from the Evaluator:
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Background of the Problem
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Criteria (Required Components): score 0-3 |
Peer Evaluation Score (0-3) |
Professor or Chair Evaluation Score (0-3) |
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Background of the Problem The background section explains both the history of and the present state of the problem and research focus. The recommended length for this section is two-three paragraphs. |
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1. Identifies the “need,” or “defined gap” that will lead to the research problem statement in a following section. Citations from the literature in the last 5 years describe the problem as a current “need” or “gap” for further research. |
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2. Discusses how the “need” or “defined gap” has evolved historically into the current problem or opportunity to be addressed by the proposed study. |
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3. ALIGNMENT: The problem statement for the dissertation will be developed from and justified by the “need” or “defined gap” that is described in this section and supported by the Literature. |
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NOTE: This Background of the Problem section becomes the Background of the Study in Chapter 1 in the Proposal. It is then expanded to develop the comprehensive Background to the Problem section in Chapter 2 (Literature Review) in the Proposal. |
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NOTE: When writing this section ensure it has a logical flow, as well as, uses correct paragraph structure, sentence structure, tense, punctuation, and APA format. |
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Comments from the Evaluator:
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Theoretical Foundations and Review of the Literature/Themes
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Criteria (Required Components): score 0-3 |
Peer Evaluation Score (0-3) |
Professor or Chair Evaluation Score (0-3) |
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Theoretical Foundations and/or Conceptual Framework This section identifies the theory(s) or model(s) that provide the foundation for the research. This section should present the theory(s) or models(s) and explain how the problem under investigation relates to the theory or model. The theory(s) or models(s) guide the research questions and justify what is being measured (variables) as well as how those variables are related (quantitative) or the phenomena being investigated (qualitative). Review of the Literature This section provides a broad, balanced overview of the existing literature related to the proposed research topic. It describes the literature in related topic areas and its relevance to the proposed research topic findings, providing a short one-two sentence description of each theme/topic and identifies its relevance to the research topic supporting it with at least one citation from the literature.
The recommended length for this section is two-three paragraphs |
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1. Theoretical Foundations section identifies the theory(s), model(s) relevant to the variables (quantitative study) or phenomenon (qualitative study). This section should explain how the study topic or problem coming out of the “need” or “defined gap” in the Background to the Problem section relates to the theory(s) or model(s). (Two to three paragraphs) |
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2. Review of the Literature Themes/Topics section: This section lists the major themes or topics related to the research topic. It provides a short one-two sentence description of each theme/topic and identifies its relevance to the research topic supporting it with at least one citation from the literature. (One paragraph per theme/topic). |
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3. ALIGNMENT: The Theoretical Foundations models and theories need to be related to and support the problem statement or study topic. The sections in the Review of the Literature are topical areas needed to understand the various aspects of the phenomenon (qualitative) or variables/groups (quantitative) being studied; to select the design needed to address the Problem Statement; to select surveys or instruments to collect information on variables/groups; to define the population and sample for the study; to describe components or factors that comprise the phenomenon; to describe key topics related to the study topic, etc. |
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NOTE: This Theoretical Foundations section is expanded upon to become the Theoretical Foundations section in Chapter 1 (Introduction &Literature Review). The Theoretical Foundations section is also used to build upon the Introduction in Chapter 1. This Review of Literature Themes/Topics section is expanded upon to provide the Review of the Literature section in Chapter 1 (Literature Review). The Review of the Literature Themes/Topics section is also used to provide the basis for the Significance of the Study section in Chapter 1. |
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NOTE: When writing this section ensure it has a logical flow, as well as uses correct paragraph structure, sentence structure, tense, punctuation, and APA format. |
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Comments from the Evaluator:
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Problem Statement
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Criteria (Required Components): score 0-3 |
Peer Evaluation Score (0-3) |
Professor or Chair Evaluation Score (0-3) |
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Problem Statement This section includes the problem statement, the population affected, and how the study will contribute to solving the problem. The recommended length for this section is two paragraphs. |
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1. Presents a clear declarative statement that begins with either: “It is not known how or why…” (qualitative), or “It is not known if or to what degree/extent…” (quantitative). |
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2. Clearly describes the magnitude and importance of the problem, supporting it with citations from the literature. |
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3. ALIGNMENT: The problem statement is developed from and justified by the “need” or “defined gap” defined by the Literature that is discussed in the Background to the Problem section above. |
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NOTE: This section becomes the foundation for the Problem Statement section in Chapter 1(and other Chapters where appropriate) in the Proposal. |
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NOTE: When writing this section ensure it has a logical flow, as well as uses correct paragraph structure, sentence structure, tense, punctuation, and APA format |
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Comments from Evaluator:
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Research Question(s) and Phenomenon or Research Questions, Hypotheses, and Variables
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Criteria (Required Components): score 0-3 |
Peer Evaluation Score (0-3) |
Professor or Chair Evaluation Score (0-3) |
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Research Question(s) and/or Hypotheses This section narrows the focus of the study and specifies the research questions to address the problem statement. Based on the research questions, it describes the variables or groups and their hypothesized relationship for a quantitative study or the phenomena under investigation for a qualitative study. (2-3paragraphs) · The recommendation is a minimum of three research questions along with related hypotheses and variables is required for a quantitative study. · Also recommended is a minimum of three research questions along with the phenomenon description is required for a qualitative study.
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1. Qualitative Designs: States the research question(s) the study will answer, and describes the phenomenon to be studied. or 2. Quantitative Designs: States the research question(s) the study will answer, identifies the variables, and presents the hypotheses. |
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3. ALIGNMENT: The research questions are based on both, the Problem Statement and Theoretical Foundation model(s) or theory(s). There should be no research questions that are not clearly aligned to the Problem Statement. |
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NOTE: This section becomes the foundation for the Research Question(s) and/or Hypotheses section in Chapter 2 in the Proposal. |
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NOTE: When writing this section ensure it has a logical flow, as well as uses correct paragraph structure, sentence structure, tense, punctuation, and APA format. |
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Comments from the Evaluator:
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Significance of the Study
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Peer Evaluation Score (0-3) |
Professor or Chair Evaluation Score (0-3) |
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Significance of the Study This section identifies and describes the significance of the study and the implications of the potential results based on the research questions and problem statement, hypotheses, or the investigated phenomena. It describes how the research fits within and will contribute to the current literature or body of research. It describes potential practical applications from the research. The recommended length for this section is two paragraphs. |
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1. Describes how the proposed research will contribute to the Literature, relating it specifically to other studies from the Background to the Problem and Problem Statement above. |
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2. Describes how the proposed research will contribute to the literature on the selected theory(s) or model(s) that comprise the Theoretical Foundation for the study. |
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4. ALIGNMENT: Part 1 is based on specific studies from the Background to the Problem and Problem Statements sections above and identifies how this research will contribute to that Literature. Part 2 is based on specific model(s), theory(s) or variables from the Theoretical Foundations section above and identifies how this research will contribute to the knowledge on those model(s) or theory(s). Part 3 reflects on potential practical applications of the potential research findings based on Literature in the field of practice. |
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NOTE: However it does build on the Background to the Problem , Problem Statement and Theoretical Foundations sections. This section becomes the Significance of the Study section in Chapter 1 in the Proposal. |
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NOTE: When writing this section ensure it has a logical flow, as well as uses correct paragraph structure, sentence structure, tense, punctuation, and APA format. |
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Comments from the Evaluator: |
Rationale for Methodology
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Criteria (Required Components): score 0-3 |
Peer Evaluation Score (0-3) |
Professor or Chair Evaluation Score (0-3) |
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Rationale for Methodology This section clearly justifies the methodology the researcher plans to use for conducting the study. It argues how the methodological framework is the best approach to answer the research questions and address the problem statement. It uses citations from textbooks and articles on research methodology and/or articles on related studies. The recommend length for this section is two paragraphs and completion of Table 1 (quantitative) and/or Table 2 (qualitative) in Appendix B. |
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1. Identifies the specific research methodology for the study (quantitative, qualitative, or mixed). |
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2. Justifies the research methodology to be used for the study by discussing why it is the best approach for answering the research question and addressing the problem statement. Uses citations from original sources in the literature on the specific research methodology to support the arguments. (NOTE: Books such as those by Creswell, which are secondary sources summarizing others approaches to research, may not be used as sources in this section). |
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3. ALIGNMENT: The selected methodology should be justified based on the Problem Statement and Research Questions. |
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NOTE: This section becomes the foundation for the Research Methodology in Chapter 2 of the Proposal. |
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NOTE: When writing this section ensure it has a logical flow, as well as uses correct paragraph structure, sentence structure, tense, punctuation, and APA format |
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Comments from the Evaluator: two paragraphs should be 1. Table 1 incomplete. This study seems to be growing. Let’s take it back to basics and make certain that the research questions and hypothesis are clear on what we are looking at and what we are suggesting the results will be. There seems to be too many variables!
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Nature of the Research Design for the Study
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Criteria (Required Components): score 0-3 |
Peer Evaluation Score (0-3) |
Professor or Chair Evaluation Score (0-3) |
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Nature of the Research Design for the Study This section describes the specific research design to answer the research questions and why this approach was selected. It describes the research sample being studied as well as the process that will be used to collect the data on the sample. The recommend length for this section is two paragraphs and completion of Table 1 (quantitative) and/or Table 2 (qualitative) in Appendix B. |
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1. Identifies the specific type of research design chosen for the study as well as a sample appropriate for the design. (e.g., Quantitative designs include descriptive/survey, correlational, causal-comparative, quasi-experimental, and experimental. Qualitative designs include case study, narrative, grounded theory, historical, and phenomenological.) Although other designs are possible, these are the designs RU recommends doctoral learners use to help ensure a doable study. |
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2. Discusses why the selected design is the best design to address the research questions as compared to other designs. |
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3. ALIGNMENT: The selected Research Design should be justified based on the research questions as well as the hypotheses/variables (quantitative) or phenomenon (qualitative). It should also be aligned with the selected Research Methodology. |
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NOTE: This section provides the foundation for Nature of the Research Design for the Study in Chapter 2 of the Proposal. |
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NOTE: When writing this section ensure it has a logical flow, as well as uses correct paragraph structure, sentence structure, tense, punctuation, and APA format. |
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Comments from Evaluator: Again, this might change based on the revisiting of the Research Questions and Hypothesis. |
Purpose of the Study
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Criteria (Required Components): score 0-3 |
Peer Evaluation Score (0-3) |
Professor or Chair Evaluation Score (0-3) |
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Purpose of the Study The purpose statement section provides a reflection of the problem statement and identifies how the study will be accomplished. It explains how the proposed study will contribute to the field. The recommend length for this section is two paragraphs. |
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1. Presents a declarative statement: “The purpose of this _______study is….” that identifies the research methodology, research design, target population, variables/groups (quantitative), or phenomena (qualitative) to be studied, and geographic location. It often includes a version of the Problem Statement as a way to define the phenomenon or variables/hypotheses. |
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2. ALIGNMENT: The Purpose Statement includes: Research Methodology, Research Design, and Problem Statement from the previous sections. It also includes the target population, which should be of sufficient size to provide a large enough sample to complete the study and provide significant (quantitative) or meaningful (qualitative) results. |
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NOTE: This section becomes the foundation for the Purpose of the Study in Chapter 1 of the Proposal. |
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NOTE: When writing this section ensure it has a logical flow, as well as uses correct paragraph structure, sentence structure, tense, punctuation, and APA format. |
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Comments from the Evaluator:
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Instrumentation or Sources of Data
Data Collection Procedures
Data Analysis Procedures
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Criteria (Required Components): score 0-3 |
Peer Evaluation Score (0-3) |
Professor or ChairEvaluation Score (0-3) |
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Data Analysis Procedures This section describes how the data were collected for each variable or group (quantitative study) or for each research question (qualitative study). It describes the type of data to be analyzed, identifying the descriptive, inferential, and/or non-statistical analyses. Demonstrates that the research analysis is aligned to the specific research design. The recommend length for this section is one paragraph AND completion of Table 1 (quantitative) and/or Table 2 (qualitative) in Appendix B. |
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1. Describes the analysis to examine each stated research question and/or hypothesis. For quantitative studies, describes the analyses including the inferential and/or descriptive statistics to be completed. For qualitative studies, describes the specific analytic approach appropriate for the Research Design and each research question to be completed. In qualitative research the different research questions may require different approaches to doing qualitative data analysis, as well as descriptive statistics. |
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NOTE: This section provides the foundation for Data Analysis Procedures section in Chapter 2 in the Proposal.
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NOTE: When writing this section ensure it has a logical flow, as well as uses correct paragraph structure, sentence structure, tense, punctuation, and APA format. |
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Comments from the Evaluator:
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Ethical Considerations
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Criteria (Required Components): score 0-3 |
Peer Evaluation Score (0-3) |
Professor or Chair Evaluation Score (0-3) |
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Ethical Considerations This section discusses the potential ethical issues surrounding the research, as well as how human subjects and data will be protected. It identifies how any potential ethical issues will be addressed. The recommended length for this section is one paragraph. |
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1. Discusses potential ethical concerns that might occur during the data collection process. |
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2. Describes how the identities of the participants in the study and data will be protected. |
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3. Describes subject recruiting, informed consent and site authorization processes. |
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4. ALIGNMENT: Ethical considerations are clearly aligned with, and relate directly to the specific Data Collection Procedures. This section also identifies ethical considerations related to the target population being researched and organization or location as described in the Purpose Statement section. |
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NOTE: This section provides the foundation for Ethical Considerations section in Chapter 2 in the Proposal. |
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NOTE: When writing this section ensure it has a logical flow, as well as uses correct paragraph structure, sentence structure, tense, punctuation, and APA format. |
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Comments from the Evaluator:
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Quantitative Studies
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Research Questions: State the research Questions |
Hypotheses: State the hypotheses to match each Research question |
List of Variables/Groups to Collect Data For: Independent and Dependent Variable(s) |
Instrument(s) To collect data for each variable |
Analysis Plan Data analysis approach to (1) describe data and (2) test the hypothesis |
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Appendix D
Practice Proposal Defense (10%)
Doc. Standards F.1, 2, 3, 4
Each student will have an opportunity to practice a proposal defense. The audience for these proposal defenses will be made up of at least two students and one faculty. Student audience members will take the part faculty committee members do in a “real” defense, thus getting skill practice both as students and as future faculty. All students will be required to attend a minimum of 2 proposal defenses as “committee members.” Each student must attend one qualitative proposal defense and one quantitative proposal defense.
Guidelines for the proposal defense can be found in the Dissertation Handbook. Students are expected to follow the guidelines in the handbook.
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Grading Grid: Practice Proposal Defense (10%) |
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Student Presentation Style: Was it clear, professional, and scholarly? |
Power-Point: Was it clear, professional, and scholarly?
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Ability to respond to questions about the proposal content and study direction. |
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Possible |
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4
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10 |
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Earned |
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