Chapter One begins your
dissertation, it is separate from the abstract and any information mentioned in
the abstract needs to be repeated. (Please note that I go into much more detail
on each required element in my book). As a faculty member reading your paper, I
will look for an introduction to your study, which puts the study into context,
addressing the "why do we care about this?" question. Also in the
introduction, briefly discuss the current literature, indicating how your study
addresses the gap in the literature. By the time, I finish reading this
section, I should understand the key issues that your study addresses and why
your study is important.
In this chapter, I
will expect to see the theoretical basis for your study, the problem statement,
purpose, your research questions and hypotheses, an explanation of the type of
study you will do, assumptions and limitations, and definitions of terms. Think
of the chapter as concise summaries of information to be discussed in future
chapters. It generally works best to write this chapter after you have written
Chapters 2 and 3.
By the time I have
completed reading Chapter One, I should have a clear understand of your study,
why it is needed, an overview of your research method and analyses, and any
concerns you have identified. As a faculty reviewer, I will expect the chapter
to be well written with appropriate grammar and spelling.
Next time I will examine
Chapter 2. Do you have an issue or a question that you would like me to discuss
in a future post? Would you like to be a guest writer? Send me your ideas!
leann.stadtlander@waldenu.edu
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