EMHSS699
2 years ago
18
DownloadAttachment.pdf
TheResearchProposal.pdf
699ProspectusTemplate.docx
TheProspectus.pdf
AssignmentOne--CapstoneManualAPA.pdf
Theuseofdronesinemergencyanddisastermanagement1.docx
DavidKelley_Howtobuildyourcreativeconfidence_TEDTalk.pdf
- DownloadAttachment1.pdf
- EndofProgramAssessmentManualforGraduateStudents.pdf
- APAStyle.pdf
DownloadAttachment.pdf
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Selecting topics for research writing projects McKenna, Barbara J;McKenna, John J English Journal; Jul 2000; 89, 6; ProQuest Central pg. 53
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission.
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission.
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission.
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission.
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission.
TheResearchProposal.pdf
The Research Proposal The document that is ultimately used to obtain approval to do your project is the research proposal. The research proposal is typically designed to be an early draft of the final report, but without the Data Collection and Analysis, Conclusions & Recommendations, etc.
To form the research proposal, take the APUS EOP manual and create a document that will become your proposal and final report. Be sure it has all of the sections required by the manual. The major headings of the paper, subject to some variability, are typically:
You will complete the above sections and submit your draft to Week 3 assignment.
Cover Material (Includes title page, copyright, acknowledgments, etc.) Abstract (Written last--left blank for the proposal) Table of Contents Introduction (Includes as subheadings background, problem statement, and purpose of the research) Literature Review (initial in proposal, built out in rough draft) Methodology (includes methodology, hypothesis & research questions, and data collection & analysis plan) Results/Findings (Left blank in Proposal) Discussion or Analysis (left blank for the proposal) Conclusions & Recommendations (left blank for the proposal) References Appendices (including the CITI certificate and IRB approval, as appropriate)
699ProspectusTemplate.docx
[Title]
Prospectus
[Author]
American Public University System
EDMG 699: Capstone Thesis
[Instructor]
[Date]
Problem Statement
[Write an approximate 250-word description of your topic, explaining the problem you will be researching and what your interest is in it.]
Proposed Methodology
[Write an approximate 250-word description of the methodology and type of data that you will use to evaluate your case. Use what you’ve learned from Creswell (EDMG 540) or Yin (EDMG 611) to inform this section.]
Expected Value of the Research
[Write an approximate 250-word explanation of why you expect your analysis to be valuable to the field of emergency and disaster management.]
TheProspectus.pdf
The Prospectus When a research project is developed, the first document that is normally created is the prospectus. The prospectus gives the context of the research in simple terms and defines the problem that the research will solve. There is an element of salesmanship involved. Your prospectus may be used to convince a funding or approval authority that your project will make a valuable contribution, so it's important to explain the benefits of accomplishing the project. A prospectus may typically contain three sections:
1. Background and Problem Definition: This may include a hypothesis that will be tested or research questions that will be answered.
2. Methodology: This will be a brief explanation of the method to be used-- quantitative, qualitative, etc.--which will demonstrate why the research will be valid and accepted by the scientific community. It will also contain a preliminary data collection and research plan, which will show where the data will come from and how it will be evaluated.
3. Value of the project: This will be a description of the value that the completed research will provide to science, to the field of study, and to stakeholders such as the funding and approval authorities.
Be sure to review the EOP Manual for templates for the Title Page, Table of Contents, etc. Please utilize this format for all of your submissions to ensure consistency.
AssignmentOne--CapstoneManualAPA.pdf
Assignment One--Capstone Manual & APA
Instructions
How to Build Your Creative …
View the TED talk.
Download the Capstone Manual. Read chapters/sections: Introduction,
two, six, seven, and the appendices as appropriate. Read all material in
the 'APA Guides'. Note you will use the sections in the appendices of the
capstone manual as the outline for your project report. Note also that the
appendices do not comply with APA, so you will need to accommodate
that as you are putting your draft together.
Provide a statement in the assignment window that you have read the
required material and hit 'submit'.
Back to Content
Theuseofdronesinemergencyanddisastermanagement1.docx
1
The use of drones in emergency and disaster management
Student’s name
Institution affiliation
Course
Instructor’s name
Date
The project does not involve research on human subjects because it focuses solely on the technology and its application in crisis situations. Unmanned aerial vehicles, or drones, are used for a number of purposes, including search and rescue operations, assessing damage after a disaster, monitoring wildfire progression, and bringing emergency supplies to distant regions. Drones used in emergency and disaster response are classified as non-human subjects research. Because this kind of research focuses on the technology itself and examines its capabilities, limitations, and possible applications to enhance emergency response efforts that ensures human volunteers are not directly engaged in the study. This research does not include the collecting of personal data or the experimenting on humans. In terms of ethics, the research project focuses on the utility and influence of drones in emergency and disaster management rather than their effects on human beings. It does not address questions of participant harm, privacy, or informed consent. The project will use case studies, data analysis, and previously published material to evaluate the benefits and drawbacks of employing drones in emergency situations. To perform this research ethically, it is vital to respect the privacy and confidentiality of any data collected by drones, as well as to adhere to local laws and regulations governing their operation. The research, which employs data analysis and previously published information, is primarily concerned with the technology itself and how it is used in crisis situations (Daud et al., 2022). This kind of study is characterized as non-human subjects research since it poses no risks to participants, informed consent, or privacy.
References
Daud, S. M. S. M., Yusof, M. Y. P. M., Heo, C. C., Khoo, L. S., Singh, M. K. C., Mahmood, M. S., & Nawawi, H. (2022). Applications of drone in disaster management: A scoping review. Science & Justice, 62(1), 30-42. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1355030621001477
DavidKelley_Howtobuildyourcreativeconfidence_TEDTalk.pdf
How to build your creative confidence 6,216,571 views | David Kelley | TED2012 � March 2012
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