Research Proposal Format
Research Proposal Format
Research Proposal Format
Research Proposal
Doctoral Program in Information Science and Technology <Area of Ph.D. Research Proposal>
<date of submission>
Abstract
The abstract is a brief summary of your Ph.D. Research Proposal, and should be no longer than 200 words. It starts by describing in a few words the knowledge domain where your research takes place and the key issues of that domain that offer opportunities for the scientific or technological innovations you intend to explore. Taking those key issues as a background, you then present briefly your research statement, your proposed research approach, the results you expect to achieve, and the anticipated implications of such results on the advancement of the knowledge domain. To keep your abstract concise and objective, imagine that you were looking for financial support from someone who is very busy. Suppose that you were to meet that person at an official reception and that she would be willing to listen to you for no more than two minutes. What you would say to that person, and the pleasant style you would adopt in those two demanding minutes, is what you should put in your abstract. The guidelines provided in this template are meant to be used creatively and not, by any means, as a cookbook recipe for the production of research proposals.
Keywords
This section is an alphabetically ordered list of the more appropriate words or expressions (up to twelve) that you would introduce in a search engine to find a research proposal identical to yours. The successive keywords are separated by comas.
Table of Contents
CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION .............................................................................................................. 4 CHAPTER 2 STATE OF THE ART ....................................................................................................... 4 1.1. FIRST PARAGRAPH ............................................................................................................................. 5 1.1.1. First sub-paragraph of first paragraph ................................................................................ 5 1.1.2. Second sub-paragraph of first paragraph ............................................................................ 5 1.2. SECOND PARAGRAPH ......................................................................................................................... 5 1.1.3. First sub-paragraph of second paragraph ........................................................................... 5 1.1.4. Second sub-paragraph of second paragraph ........................................................................ 5 CHAPTER 3 RESEARCH OBJECTIVES AND APPROACH ............................................................ 5 CHAPTER 4 CURRENT WORK AND PRELIMINARY RESULTS ................................................. 6 CHAPTER 5 WORK PLAN AND IMPLICATIONS ............................................................................ 6 CHAPTER 6 CONCLUSIONS ................................................................................................................ 7 REFERENCES ........................................................................................................................................... 7
Chapter 1 Introduction
The introduction gives an overview of the research project you propose to carry out. It explains the background of the project, focusing briefly on the major issues of its knowledge domain and clarifying why these issues are worthy of attention. It then proceeds with the concise presentation of the research statement, which can take the form of a hypothesis, a research question, a project statement, or a goal statement. The research statement should capture both the essence of the project and its delimiting boundaries, and should be followed by a clarification of the extent to which you expect its outcomes to represent an advance in the knowledge domain you have described. The introduction should endeavour, from the very beginning, to catch the readers interest and should be written in a style that can be understood easily by any reader with a general science background. It should cite all relevant references pertaining to the major issues described, and it should close with a brief description of each one of the chapters that follow. Many authors prefer to postpone writing the Introduction till the rest of the document is finished. This makes a lot of sense, since the act of writing tends to introduces many changes in the plans initially sketched by the writer, so that it is only by the time the whole document is finished that the writer gets a clear view of how to construct an introduction that is, indeed, compelling.
knowledge domain you are exploring which are of importance for your work should be mentioned here and listed at the end of the proposal. You should follow very strictly the appropriate referencing conventions and make sure that no document you refer to is missing in the final list of references, nor vice versa. The choice of referencing conventions may depend on the specific field where your research is located. Popular conventions are those established by the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM), the Association for Information Systems (AIS), the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE), and the American Psychological Association (APA).
The how to component of the proposal is called the Research Methods, or Methodology, component. It should be detailed enough to let the reader decide whether the methods you intend to use are adequate for the research at hand. It should go beyond the mere listing of research tasks, by asserting why you assume that the methods or methodologies you have chosen represent the best available approaches for your project. This means that you should include a discussion of possible alternatives and credible explanations of why your approach is the most valid.
Whatever its nature, comprehensive or sketchy, your work plan should be able to put in perspective the implications of the successive steps of your work, reinforcing, in the mind of the reader, the conviction that your approach is solidly oriented toward results, that the topic is timely and relevant, and that the outcomes of the project will contribute significantly to the enhancement of the field.
Chapter 6 Conclusions
The Conclusions briefly restate the objectives of your research project, recap the research approach you plan to follow, and clarify in a few words what you expect to find out, why it is scientifically valuable to find it out, and on what basis you expect to evaluate the validity of your results.
References
In this section you should list all the references you have made throughout the research proposal, making sure that you comply with the referencing conventions or citation styles that have been established for your specific field. The subject of referencing conventions is a fundamental one, requiring extensive discussion, so it will be dealt with elsewhere. To satisfy your curiosity for the time being, you may find hints on the ACM requirements at http://www.acm.org/pubs/submissions/submission.htm and look up examples of the differences between the conventions of the ACM, APA, and IEEE at http://www.library.dal.ca/subjects/csci_ref.htm. Bellow, you are given a few examples of citations complying with the requirements of the ACM An article in a journal: ABDELBAR, A.M., AND HEDETNIEMI, S.M. 1998. Approximating MAPs for belief networks in NP-hard and other theorems. Artificial Intelligence 102, 21-38. A book: GINSBERG, M. 1987. Readings in Nonmonotonic Reasoning. Morgan Kaufmann, Los Altos, CA. A chapter in a book: GREINER, R. 1999. Explanation-based learning. In The Encyclopedia of Cognitive Science, R. WILSON AND F. KEIL, Eds. MIT Press, Cambridge, MA, 301-303. An article in conference proceedings: MAREK, W., AND TRUSZCZYNSKI, M. 1989. Relating autoepistemic and default logics. In Proceedings of the 1st International Conference on Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Toronto, Canada, May 1989, H. BRACHMAN AND R. REITER, Eds. Morgan Kaufmann, San Mateo, CA, 276-288.