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Tutorial BRM

The necessary components of a research proposal include an introduction providing background on the study, a problem statement highlighting the issue being examined, a purpose statement summarizing the main goal, a literature review showing the writer's knowledge, relevant questions or hypotheses, a detailed methods section, and a conclusion stating the significance of the study and wrapping up ideas. The introduction gives context, the problem statement defines concerns, the purpose statement shares the main aim, and the literature review establishes why the study is needed and that the writer is informed on the topic. The methods section is the core, explaining the steps in detail and continuity, while the significance section conveys how the research will extend knowledge in the area.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
38 views1 page

Tutorial BRM

The necessary components of a research proposal include an introduction providing background on the study, a problem statement highlighting the issue being examined, a purpose statement summarizing the main goal, a literature review showing the writer's knowledge, relevant questions or hypotheses, a detailed methods section, and a conclusion stating the significance of the study and wrapping up ideas. The introduction gives context, the problem statement defines concerns, the purpose statement shares the main aim, and the literature review establishes why the study is needed and that the writer is informed on the topic. The methods section is the core, explaining the steps in detail and continuity, while the significance section conveys how the research will extend knowledge in the area.

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彭康安
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The necessary components of a proposal include introduction, problem statement,

purpose of the study, literature review, question or hypotheses, design method and procedures,
significance of the study and conclusion.

The introduction is the section of the document that gives readers background
information about the study that will be discussed. Its goal is to provide a context for the research
so that readers may see how it connects to previous studies.

The problem statement identifies the broad analysis approach as well as the study's
setting. The problem should be highlighted in a proposal so that the reader may quickly notice it.
In some cases, a lengthy conversation might conceal and poorly define concerns. Reviewers
and/or committee members will have difficulties recognizing the issue in such circumstances.

The purpose statement should provide a concise and accurate summary of the study's
main goal. If the writer doesn't understand the purpose, the reader won't either. The backdrop and
context for the study problem are provided by the literature review. It should state why the study
is needed and show that the writer is informed about the subject.

The following questions are pertinent to normative or census research such as is there any
sort of connection between them. They are most commonly utilized in qualitative research, but
their application in quantitative research is growing in popularity. Hypotheses are only utilized in
quantitative research and are relevant to theoretical study. When a writer makes a claim, the
reader is entitled to an explanation of the theory that led to it and of the assumptions underlying
the theory. Hypotheses must be based on the theoretical framework, just as conclusions must be
based on the data.

The study proposal's techniques or procedures section is its beating heart. The actions
should be explained in as much detail as possible, with a clear sense of continuity between them.
Significance of the study indicate how your research will refine, revise, or extend existing
knowledge in the area under investigation.

The conclusion of a research paper is where you wrap up your ideas and leave the reader
with a strong final impression.

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