Components of A Research Proposal
Components of A Research Proposal
Suad Joseph
University of California, Davis
The basic components of research proposals are the same in humanities and social
sciences. How they are phrased and staged varies by discipline and by funding agency.
The questions posed below are required by most agencies in some form. If you answer
the “maximal” components below, you should be able to write proposals for most
funding agencies. The components may seem more “social science” than “humanities”,
but in fact, humanities funders ask the same questions, sometimes using different
language. Decode the language for your discipline. Keep in mind, many agencies are
interdisciplinary in their funding and have interdisciplinary review panels. Follow the
guidelines of your funding agency, answer the questions the funder poses, and use the
funder’s language for the components described below.
First paragraph or first page gives a brief summary of the whole project including:
1. State objectives / what you intend to do / the questions you will answer
Every project seeks an answer to a question. The clearer the question, the
more convincing the project
Ex: Test the hypothesis that the higher the level of education, the
more positive are attitudes towards women’s rights among men
between 20-50 in Cairo, Egypt
Ex: Explain why the French Revolution limited democratization in
municipal institutions (Ted Margadant* UCD History, by permission)
b. Descriptive
a. specific, concrete [you & others can attain them and agree they have
been attained]
c. measurable [Specify the criteria by which you will know you have
found what you are looking for. Humanities note: criteria may but need
not numerical.]
Ex: your point of departure is: the impact of level of education on…
Ex: your point of departure is: what explains attitudes towards women’s
rights…
Ex: your point of departure is: describing how father/son vs. mother/son
relations are represented.
Ex: your point of departure is: explaining why there are differences in
representation of father/son vs. mother/son relations in Egyptian literary
culture.
Ex: your point of departure is: demonstrate that Christian geography was
not anti-scientific
Ex: your point of departure is: shattering the illusion that geography is
static & fixed
Ex: your point of departure is: analyzing social order through analysis of
institutions and practices of criminal justice
Summary of state of the art, why research is needed, why your answer is
better, why research is important, where it will be conducted
D. Summary of Proposal
II. Review of the Literature (how the questions have been answered before)
A. Summarize only the relevant research, key paradigms, models, theories,
approaches
A. Build on limitations cited in literature review; indicate that your research will
overcome those limitations.
Ex: There are contradictory explanations of "X" which you will resolve.
Ex: The methodologies for resolving "X" are inadequate; your research will
produce a superior methodology
Ex: No research has been conducted on "X"– your research fills a significant
gap in scientific knowledge.
Ex: No research has tested this explanation of “X”. You will provide the test.
IV. Statement of Significance of this Research (why the answers to the questions
are important and therefore why proposal should be funded)
V. Theoretical Framework (why you answer the questions that way; justify your
answer)
3. Define all terms necessary to the theoretical framework and the answer to
the question (hypotheses). Definitions should allow you to operationalize
the terms. This means that you establish the criteria (measurement) by
which you know that you have found what you are looking for so that the
research findings can be clearly recognized, identified, and evaluated to
produce the answer. Measurement means you have clear criteria for
knowing you have found what you think you have found.
VI. Method/Design (how you will achieve objectives, answer the questions)
b. Ex: have contacts with local government or university which you will
gain your entry into the research site
1. Data should constitute information that will allow you to answer the
questions.
2. Show that data / research information will answer all questions listed in
problem
C. Methods
D. Validity
1. Internal
2. External
1. Procedures that will be used to transform raw data into answers to the
question.
VII. Time Table (how long it will take to achieve the objectives, answer the
questions)
C. Consider inflation.
XI. Abstract
X. Vitae
A. Short, focus on the background and skills that qualify you to do this research.
XI. Bibliography
B. Keep short, but complete. Include literature that one must know to do this project