2000 words in 7 hrs
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Paper…2000 Words (6‐8 pages)
• Go through journal notes.
• Pick a topic that you see as a potential area of improvement or one on which you believe that research could be useful in helping to guide what is happening.
• Think of interesting questions based on your notes, what you see, what you are thinking about in relation to your cite.
Question or Goal of Paper
• Your paper should be guided by one or two main research questions that arose based on experiences in your field placement. – You should work to – Which one is a style/writing preference – Why does it seem like minority children are the ones in foster care?
• Write the questions, then begin thinking creatively about them using literature….
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Research Questions
• Does race affect families’ experiences and successful reunification once they are in the dependency system?
*How many children are reunified and does this differ by race?
*Why the differences?
Literature Review
• Select different types of terms – Try them in google scholar
– Try them in psycINFO (go in from libraries online database)
• Off campus – VPN
– Select range 2010‐present (for example)
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Literature Review
• Pick more than 5 “peer‐reviewed” articles
• Most will be studies (so you will see sections about participants, research methods)
• Read abstracts, group the articles together based on similarities
– In findings
– In populations
– In conclusions
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Traditional Literature Review
• Introduction – Big picture—WRITE LAST – Research questions—WRITE out as a guide
• Background (1 paragraph) – Your placement – What you saw/what is going on that led to the questions
• Relevant work – Question 1/goal 1: 2‐3 paragraphs.
• Empirical studies (Summarize based on similarity) – Question 2/goal 2: 2‐3 paragraphs
• Empirical studies (summarize based on similarity)
• Conclusions – Summary: integrate the research, what are the answers to your questions. In summary,
research generally suggests first… and second…. – Next steps – Full circle—back to the big picture.
Study Options
• Design a Study: – Do you want to study how your (type of) organization works? – Do you want to study outcome of your (type of) organization’s
efforts? – Do you want to study predictors of outcomes (e.g., in the people
your organization serves) broadly
• Your answer affects your study design – Experimental studies (intervention—two groups, manipulate
something, see effects) – Correlational studies (examine the relations between variables
over time) – Survey individuals—talk to a group of people, summarize their
views—could then correlate factors with them to see why views differ
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Design a Study
• Introduction – Big picture—WRITE LAST – What are your questions and how they emerged from your field site (brief)
• Relevant work – What have former studies found that leads to your question?
• Summarize perhaps those that found one set of findings together • Perhaps a second set found a different pattern.
• Study Design – Who would participants be (how many, gender, age, etc.—at a specific job?) – What would they do?
• Would you manipulate something and see how they respond? • Would you just talk with people and summarize their responses (e.g., via a survey) • Would you examine the relations between two things, for instance, time in position and
job happiness?
• Conclusions – How your study will answer the questions you posed, and how it will fit with
the relevant literature