Research Philosophy and Practice: Course Handbook
Research Philosophy and Practice: Course Handbook
Course Handbook
COURSE HANDBOOK
Course Overview
Research Philosophy and Practice develops research skills in business research methods which
are essential for your dissertation and for a career in business research. It is designed to help
you to prepare for the dissertation by allowing you the opportunity to learn about approaches to
research and how to use them.
Topic
Topic Title
The Nature of
Research
1
9
10
11
12
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Detailed Structure
th
1 16 Jan
rd
2 23 Jan
th
3 30 Jan
th
4 6 Feb
th
5 13 Feb
th
6 20 Feb
th
7 27 Feb
th
8 6 Mar
th
9 13 Mar
th
10 20 Mar
th
11 27 Mar
rd
12 3 April
NO LECTURE
UNIVERSITY
CLOSED
Lecture Title
The Nature of
Research
Finding a
Project
The Literature
Review
Research
Philosophy and
Case Studies
Finding Your
Data
Working with
Historical and
Contemporary
Data Sources
Gathering
Qualitative Data
Analysing
Qualitative Data
Managing
Ethics in
Research
Projects
Gathering
Quantitative
Data
Analysing
Quantitative
Data
Managing the
Research
Project
Chapter
The chapter number and title corresponds directly with the lecture.
Week
Further Reading
Factsheet
Tutorial
The Idea of a
Dissertation
Aim and
Objectives
Literature
Review
Research
Philosophy
Questions on Finding a
Project
Focusing Your
Research Question
Citing, Quoting
and
Referencing
Writing
Rules Well,
sort of!
Data Analysis
What is Academic
Integrity
Theory,
Context and
Data
Writing your
proposal I
Alexander, M., MacLaren, A., OGorman, K., & White, C. (2012). Priority
Queues: Where social justice and equity collide. Tourism Management, 33(4)
875-884..
Bryce, D., Curran, R., OGorman, K.D. and Taheri, B. (2015) Visitors
Engagement and Authenticity: Japanese Heritage Consumption. Tourism
Management, XX, XXX
Matta, N. E., & Ashkenas, R. N. (2003). Why good projects fail anyway. Harvard
Business Review, 81(9), 109-114
Questions for
an ethical
study
Questions on Analysing
Quantitative Data: SPSS
labs*
Writing your research
proposal II*
General Advice
on Writing
Your
Dissertation
NO TUTORIALS
UNIVERSITY CLOSED
Questions on Analysing
Qualitative Data
Some groups will have SPSS labs in week 11 and Writing your research proposal in week 10, the other groups will have this in reverse.
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research
Learning Materials
The course provides five main sources of learning materials: Lectures; Tutorials; Core Textbook; Further
Readings, and Factsheets. All of these are discussed in detail below. However, these must be
augmented by a sixth: Individual Reading! The easiest way to generate ideas for research projects is to
read journal articles as this helps you discover how other researches present their ideas, and it will also
stimulate your own thinking. Many authors also finish their papers with ideas for further research!
Reading relevant material is a pre-requisite for successful completion of this class and so for proceeding
to and completing your Masters dissertation. The assignments depend on clear understanding of issues
involved in the topic chosen and a structured formulation of ideas. Lectures and tutorials introduce you to
the relevant topics and act as a catalyst for further study; they can never be a substitute for broader
reading around the subject. The recommended readings for the lectures provide a good overview of
methods; however, wider reading will be required for successful completion of the class and your
dissertation.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Lectures are designed to last approximately two hours; sometimes there will be 2 one hour
lectures.
Tutorials fall into two types: Tutorials 1, 3, 6, 7 & 8 are what I would call typical discussions.
Tutorials 2, 4 and 5 are mini-lectures.
Core Textbook matches exactly each of the 12 blocks and has been written by experts from
the department here in Edinburgh for this course.
Further Reading is a key journal paper that has been used in writing of the chapter and can
also illustrate the method or technique under discussion in each block
Factsheets are sometimes serious or amusing, or a mix of both. Often used to emphasise
some points made in that block.
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Assessment
The assessment for this course is based on two courseworks; they have equal weighting and are
worth 50% each. Together the two assignments combine to form your complete research proposal
and serve as your map to your dissertation. The assessment details can be found on VISION in the
Coursework page and will be covered in the lectures and tutorials.
Assignment 1 is an annotated bibliography of 5 academic journal articles chosen by you related to
your dissertation subject area and should be about 1500-1600 words maximum. There should be a
brief Introduction (100 words) of the topic and a Summary (about 250 words) to pull the bibliography
together.
Each section should address these sorts of issues regarding each article:
1. Purpose/scope
2. Audience and level of reading difficulty
3. Bias or standpoint of author
4. Relationship to other works in the field
5. Data collection and analysis
6. Findings, results, and conclusions
7. Format/special features e.g., bibliography, glossary, index, survey instruments, testing devices,
etc.
Assignment 2 is the Methodology and Structure sections of your research proposal and should
contain the follow sections:
1. Research Philosophy.
2. Data Collection Methods.
3. Data Analysis Techniques.
4. Ethical Issues.
5. Structure of final work.
An Introduction, Summary and Bibliography should be included also.
Referencing in Assignments
Both assignments should be referenced, drawing on general methodology textbooks, books that focus on
particular data collection methods and analysis techniques and ethics, and loads of journal articles. How
many references are required: the answer is as many as necessary. However, again, at least 20 to 30 for
Assignment 2 would be a rough guide.
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