Quantitative Dissertation Checklist

· The following provides guidance for reporting on quantitative studies.

· All items may not be relevant to your particular study; please consult with your chair for guidance.

· The checklist items may not necessarily be in the order that works best for your dissertation. Please consult with your committee; however, the checklist should work well in the absence of other considerations.

· Instructions for Students:

· Indicate on the checklist the page number (use the actual document page number, not the MS Word pagination) where the appropriate indicator is located.

· Respond to comments from the chair and/or URR comments in the comment history box. Do not delete previous commentsjust add your response and use some means to clearly identify your remarks (different font/bold/italics/color).

· Instructions for the chair and/or URR

· Provide specific feedback in the comment history column. Do not delete previous commentsjust add your response and use some means to clearly identify your remarks (different font/bold/italics/color).

· If you made detailed comments on the draft (using track changes and comments), you can make reference to the draft rather than restate everything in the checklist comment history section.

Date: (click here and type today’s date )      

Student’s Name:       Student ID (for office use only) --      

School: (click here and pull down to select school name )

Committee Members’ Names:

Chairperson      

Member      

University Research Reviewer      

Front Matter

Checklist Items

Comment History

Title [Insert Dissertation Title]

Type of relationship between variables.

Key variables (independent and dependent).

Applicable population.

Abstract

Describe the research problem and why it is important.

Identify the purpose of the study.

State the theoretical foundations and/or conceptual frameworks, as appropriate.

Summarize the key research question(s).

Describe, concisely, the overall research design, methods, and data analysis procedures.

Identify key results, conclusions, and recommendations that capture the heart of the research (for the final study only).

Conclude with a statement on the implications for positive social change.

CHAPTER 1

Checklist Items

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Comment History

Introduction

Describe the topic of the study, why the study needs to be conducted, and the potential positive social change implications of the study

Preview major sections of the chapter

Background

Briefly summarize research literature related to the scope of the study topic

Describe a gap in knowledge in the discipline the study will address

End the section on why the study is needed

Problem Statement

State the research problem

Summarize evidence of consensus that the problem is current, relevant, and significant to the discipline

Frame the problem in a way that builds upon or counters previous research findings focusing primarily on research conducted in the last five years

Address a meaningful gap in the current research literature

Purpose of the Study

Provide a concise statement that serves as the connection between the problem being addressed and the focus of the study. The purpose contains:

Indication that this is a quantitative study.

The study intent (such as describe, compare, correlate, explore, and develop).

The independent, dependent, and covariate variables.

Research Question(s) and Hypotheses

State the research questions.

State the null and alternative hypotheses that identify the independent and dependent variables being studied, the association being tested, and how the variables are being measured.

Theoretical and/or Conceptual Framework for the Study

Studies must include either a theoretical foundation or a conceptual framework section or both.

Theoretical Foundation

Identify the theory or theories and provide the origin or source.

State concisely the major theoretical propositions and/or major hypotheses with a reference to more detailed explanation in chapter 2.

Explain how the theory relates to the study approach and research questions.

Conceptual Framework

This applies to some epidemiological studies (as well as to some other quantitative studies).

Identify and define the concept and/or phenomenon that grounds the study.

Concisely describe the conceptual framework (a description of the body of research that supports the need for the study) as derived from the literature with more detailed analysis in chapter 2.

State the logical connections among key elements of the framework with a reference to a more thorough explanation in chapter 2.

State how the framework relates to the study approach and key research questions, as well as to instrument development and data analysis, where appropriate.

Nature of the Study

Provide a concise rationale for selection of the design and/ or tradition.

Briefly describe the key study variables (independent, dependent, and covariates).

Briefly summarize the methodology (from whom and how data are collected and how data will be analyzed).

Definitions

Provide concise definitions of the independent variable, dependent variable(s), and any covariates (with more detailed analysis of coding, etc. described in chapter 3).

Define terms used in the study that have multiple meanings (e.g., socioeconomic status, educator, health service professional, etc.). Do not include common terms or terms that can easily be looked up in a dictionary.

Include citations that identify support in the professional literature for the definition or operational definition.

Assumptions

Clarify aspects of the study that are believed but cannot be demonstrated to be true. Only include assumptions critical to the meaningfulness of the study.

Describe the reasons why the assumption(s) was (were) necessary in the context of the study.

Scope and Delimitations

Describe specific aspects of the research problem that are addressed in the study and why the specific focus was chosen (issue of internal validity).

Define the boundaries of the study by identifying populations included and excluded and theories and/or conceptual frameworks most related to the area of study that were not investigated (this is an issue of external validity).

Address potential generalizability.

Limitations

Describe limitations of the study related to design and/or methodological weaknesses (including issues related to limitations of internal and external validity, construct validity, and confounder variables).

Describe any biases that could influence study outcomes and how they are addressed.

Describe reasonable measures to address limitations.

Significance

Identify potential contributions of the study that advance knowledge in the discipline. This is an elaboration of what the problem addresses.

Identify potential contributions of the study that advance practice and/or policy, as applicable.

Describe potential implications for positive social change that are consistent with and bounded by the scope of the study.

Summary

Summarize main points of the chapter.

Provide transition to chapter 2.

CHAPTER 2

Checklist Items

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Comment History

Introduction

Restate the problem and the purpose.

Provide a concise synopsis of the current literature that establishes the relevance of the problem.

Preview major sections of the chapter.

Literature Search Strategy

List accessed library databases and search engines used.

List key search terms and combinations of search terms (with more detailed search terms located in an appendix, if appropriate).

Describe scope of literature review in terms of years searched as well as types of literature and sources searched, including seminal literature as well as current peer-reviewed literature.

In cases where there is little current research, and few (if any) dissertations and/or conference proceedings, describe how this was handled.

Theoretical Foundation

Name the theory or theories.

Provide origin or source of the theory.

Describe major theoretical propositions and/or major hypotheses, including delineation of any assumptions appropriate to the application of the theory.

Provide a literature- and research- based analysis of how the theory has been applied previously in ways similar to the current study.

Provide the rationale for the choice of this theory.

Describe how and why the selected theory relates to the present study and how the research questions relate to, challenge, or build upon existing theory.

Conceptual Framework (As appropriate)

Identify and define the concept and/or phenomenon.

Synthesize primary writings by key theorists, philosophers, and/or seminal researchers related to the concept or phenomenon.

Provide key statements and definitions inherent in the framework.

Describe how the concept or phenomenon has been applied and articulated in previous research and how the current study benefits from this framework.

Literature Review Related to Key Variables and/or Concepts

Provide an exhaustive review of the current literature that includes the following information:

Describe studies related to the constructs of interest and chosen methodology and methods that are consistent with the scope of the study.

Describe ways researchers in the discipline have approached the problem and the strengths and weakness inherent in their approaches.

Justify from the literature the rationale for selection of the variables or concepts.

Review and synthesize studies related to the key independent, dependent, and covariate variables to produce a description and explanation of what is known about the variables, what is controversial (i.e., mixed findings by researchers), and what remains to be studied.

Review and synthesize studies related to the research questions.

Summary and Conclusions

Concisely summarize major themes in the literature.

Summarize what is known as well as what is not known in the discipline related to the topic of study.

Describe how the present study fills at least one of the gaps in the literature and will extend knowledge in the discipline.

Provide transitional material to connect the gap in the literature to the methods described in chapter 3.

CHAPTER 3

Checklist Items

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Comment History

Introduction

Restate the study purpose as described in chapter 1.

Preview major sections of the chapter.

Research Design and Rationale

Concisely state the study variables (independent, dependent, covariate, mediating, and/or moderating variables, as appropriate.

Identify the research design and its connection to the research questions.

Explain any time and resource constraints consistent with the design choice.

Describe how design choice is consistent with research designs needed to advance knowledge in the discipline.

If conducting an intervention study, defend the choice of intervention.

Methodology

(needs to be described in sufficient depth so that other researchers can replicate the study)

Population

Define the target population.

State target population size (if known) or approximate/estimated size.

Sampling and Sampling Procedures

Identify and justify the type of sampling strategy.

Explain specific procedures for how the sample will be drawn.

Describe the sampling frame (inclusion and exclusion criteria).

Use a power analysis to determine sample size and include:

· Justification for the effect size, alpha level, and power level chosen.

· Cite the source for calculating or the tool used to calculate the sample size.

Procedures For Recruitment, Participation, and Data Collection (for students collecting their own data)

Thoroughly describe recruiting procedures and particular demographic information that will be collected.

Describe how participants will be provided informed consent.

Describe how data are collected.

Explain how participants exit the study (for example, debriefing procedures, etc.).

Describe any follow-up procedures (such as requirements to return for follow-up interviews, treatments, etc.).

Additional Information if Conducting a Pilot Study:

Describe the relationship of the pilot study to the main study (for example, what is the purpose of the pilot study?).

Additional Information if Conducting an Intervention

Describe clearly and thoroughly the nature of the treatment, intervention, or experimental manipulation, how it will be designed and administered, and by whom and to whom it will be administered.

For Students Using Archival Data

Include all procedures for recruitment, participation, and data collection associated with the main study.

Describe the procedure for gaining access to the data set.

Describe necessary permissions to gain access to the data (with permission letters located in an appendix).

If historical or legal documents are used as sources of data, demonstrate the reputability of the sources and justify why they represent the best sources of data.

Instrumentation and Operationalization of Constructs

For published instruments provide:

· Name of developer(s) and year of publication.

· Appropriateness to the current study.

· Permission from developer to use the instrument (permission letter should be included in an appendix).

· Published reliability and validity values relevant to their use in the study.

· Where and/or with what populations the instrument was previously used and how validity/reliability are/were established in the study sample.

For all researcher instruments provide:

· Basis for development (literature sources or other bases for development, such as a pilot study).

· Plan to provide evidence for reliability (for example, internal consistency and test/retest).

· Plan to provide evidence for validity (for example, predictive and construct validity).

· Establish sufficiency of instrumentation to answer research questions.

For intervention studies or those involving manipulation of an independent variable:

Identify materials/programs applied as treatment or manipulation.

Provide information on the developer of the materials and/or programs.

If published, state where, how, and with which populations the instrument was previously used.

If researcher-developed materials, state the basis for development and how the materials were developed.

Provide evidence that another agency will sponsor intervention studies (such as clinical interventions).

Operationalization

For each variable describe:

Its operational definition.

How each variable is measured or manipulated.

How the variable/scale score is calculated, what the scores represent, and an example item.

Data Analysis Plan

Identify software used for analyses.

Provide explanation of data cleaning and screening procedures as appropriate to the study.

Restate the research questions and hypotheses here as written in chapter 1.

Describe in detail the analysis plan including the elements below including:

· Statistical tests that will be used to test the hypothesis(es).

· Procedures used to account for multiple statistical tests, as appropriate.

· Rationale for inclusion of potential covariates and/or confounding variables.

· How results will be interpreted (key parameter estimates, confidence intervals and/or probability values, odds ratios, etc.).

Threats to Validity

Describe threats to external validity (for example, testing reactivity, interaction effects of selection and experimental variables, specificity of variables, reactive effects of experimental arrangements, and multiple-treatment interference, as appropriate to the study) and how they will be and/or were addressed.

Describe threats to internal validity (for example, history, maturation, testing, instrumentation, statistical regression, experimental mortality, and selection-maturation interaction, as appropriate to the study) and how they will be and/or were addressed.

Describe any threats to construct or statistical conclusion validity.

Ethical Procedures

Agreements to gain access to participants or data (include actual documents in the IRB application).

Describe the treatment of human participants including the following (include actual documents in the Institutional Review Board [IRB] application):

· Institutional permissions, including IRB approvals that are needed (proposal) or were obtained (completed dissertation);include relevant IRB approval numbers in the final dissertation.

· Ethical concerns related to recruitment materials and processes and a plan to address them.

· Ethical concerns related to data collection and/or intervention activities (these could include participants refusing participation or early withdrawal from the study and response to any predicable adverse events) and a plan to address them.

Describe treatment of data (including archival data), including issues of:

· Whether data are anonymous or confidential and any concerns related to each.

· Protections for confidential data (data storage procedures, data dissemination, who will have access to the data, and when data will be destroyed).

Other ethical issues as applicable (these issues could include doing a study within one’s own work environment, conflict of interest or power differentials, and justification for use of incentives).

Summary

Summary of design and methodology of the method of inquiry.

Transition to chapter 4.

CHAPTER 4

Checklist Items

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Comment History

Introduction

Review briefly the purpose, research questions, and hypotheses.

Preview the organization of chapter 4.

Pilot Study (if applicable)

Concisely report the results of the pilot study.

Report any impact of the pilot study on the main study (for example, changes in instrumentation, data analysis strategies, etc.).

Data Collection

Describe the time frame for data collection as well as actual recruitment and response rates.

Present any discrepancies in data collection from the plan presented in chapter 3.

Report baseline descriptive and demographic characteristics of the sample

Describe how representative the sample is of the population of interest or how proportional it is to the larger population if non-probability sampling is used (external validity).

Provide results of basic univariate analyses that justify inclusion of covariates in the model, if applicable.

Treatment and/or Intervention Fidelity (as appropriate)

Describe whether the treatment was administered as planned and any challenges that prevented planned implementation as described in chapter 3.

Describe any adverse events (those with serious consequences) related to the intervention.

Results

Report descriptive statistics that appropriately characterize the sample.

Evaluate statistical assumptions as appropriate to the study.

Report statistical analysis findings, organized by research questions and/or hypotheses, including:

· Exact statistics and associated probability values.

· Confidence intervals around the statistics, as appropriate.

· Effect sizes, as appropriate.

Report results of post-hoc analyses of statistical tests, if applicable.

Report any additional statistical tests of hypotheses that emerged from the analysis of main hypotheses, as appropriate for the study.

Include tables and figures to illustrate results, as appropriate, and per the current edition of the Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association

Summary

Summarize answers to research questions.

Provide transitional material from the findings and introduce the reader to the prescriptive material in chapter 5.

CHAPTER 5

Checklist Items

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Comment History

Introduction

Concisely reiterate the purpose and nature of the study and why it was conducted.

Concisely summarize key findings.

Interpretation of the Findings

Describe in what ways findings confirm, disconfirm, or extend knowledge in the discipline by comparing them with what has been found in the peer-reviewed literature described in chapter 2.

Analyze and interpret the findings in the context of the theoretical and/or conceptual framework, as appropriate.

· Ensure interpretations do not exceed the data, findings, and scope.

Limitations of the Study

Describe the limitations to generalizability and/or trustworthiness, validity, and reliability that arose from execution of the study. These should be used to revise what was written in chapter 1 for the proposal.

Recommendations

Describe recommendations for further research that are grounded in the strengths and limitations of the current study as well as the literature reviewed in chapter 2.

· Ensure recommendations do not exceed the study boundaries.

Implications

Positive Social Change

· Describe the potential impact for positive social change at the appropriate level (individual, family, organizational, and societal/policy).

· Ensure implications for social change do not exceed the study boundaries.

Describe methodological, theoretical, and/or empirical implications, as appropriate.

Describe recommendations for practice, as appropriate.

Conclusion

Provide a strong “take home” message that captures the key essence of the study.

APA Form and Style Check

Checklist Items

Comment History

Citations and Referencing

All citations have been crosschecked to ensure that there are corresponding references (and that there are no references that do not have associated citations).

All sources are cited correctly per APA formatting requirements (for example, studies listed in alphabetical order by first author; no first names of authors).

Grammar, Spelling, and Syntax

The paper has been thoroughly checked for grammar, spelling, and syntax errors.

For the final dissertation, the dissertation has been checked for correct verb tense representing a completed study.

Headings

Headings are used, consistent with the Walden Dissertation Template, to make sections of thought distinct.

Use of the Writing Center Template

The Writing Center Dissertation Template (APA, 6th edition) was used to construct the proposal and/or dissertation so that all formatting is correct.

1. When I first read the article, I was in shock that a hospital would not help a father that their child is very sick. The hospital was in the wrong on the action that was taken place I feel as though they should have taken her in and evaluate her but instead, they made them wait. There could have been many reasons that they didn’t check her they could have been short of staff but that is no excuse. But know what the communication was between the staff and the father is what no one know. Having the father wait and make the call to the 911 just so that his child could be seen and still get denied treatment is very uncalled for. This is considering negligence and the hospital is at fault and they are being sued and while they feel as paying of the family dose not bring the 3-year-old back.

2. My first thought was how can it be possible in a hospital not to respond to someone who passed out especially a child, that was an emergency code because they didn’t know what happen to the child. This action was very unprofessional and unethical. The hospital shouldn’t have never done that and assuming that the father was basically acting up just to be seen quicker when he really had an emergency. Definitely this situation was a negligence, that’s not the proper way to assist a patient. In addition to the dispatcher, I believe he did right by calling the emergency department at the hospital but at the same time he should have sent an ambulance to make sure this patient was safe or been help by someone at the hospital. Also, he should have asked more questions regarding the patient’s condition at the moment.

3. After reading the case, I am shocked to know the hospital didn't help this father that needed urgent care for his 3 year old daughter that passed out. Clearly, this was an emergency that could not wait and the hospital/employees in that department is definitely at fault for this little girls death. The hospitals actions towards this situation was unprofessional,negligence, illegal and unethical. In addition, the father had to call 9-1-1 for help even though he was sitting in front of the hospital's emergency exit. No amount of money can make up for a death. The hospital/employee could've avoided a lawsuit by simply helping a child in need. The hospital directly employs most doctors, nurses, and administrative personnel. These employees are paid by the hospital to do a job, and because of that payment arrangement, hospitals become liable for patient injuries caused by these employees. Most states follow the legal doctrine of “respondent superior, ” meaning employers must answer for the negligent actions of their employees. The same doctrine applies to employees working in hospital emergency rooms. If an employee commits an act of negligence while acting outside their scope of employment, the hospital may be able to escape liability, although the negligent employee could be held legally responsible as an individual. (Hospital Emergency Room (ER) Malpractice and Compensation for Injuries. (2016, December 22). Retrieved from https://www.injuryclaimcoach.com/er-malpractice.html)

4. Dying at the Hospital's Door case on page 177 is a very sad situation but unfortunately it happens quite often in the hospitals all across the world. The hospital was total negligent in not treating the child properly which is proven by their out-of-court settlement. I know at times parents can be a little bit obnoxious and exaggerate children’s conditions just so they can be seen sooner, but in this situation, it was truly valid. All hospitals should have triage nurses that access patients as they enter the emergency room to determine the need of urgency for illness or injuries. This way they can decide the order of treatment. Even is the hospital felt that the child’s condition was not as serious, as soon as they received word that the child passed out, someone should have went out to access the situation instead of saying there was nothing that they could do. Children of that age does not know how to describe their symptoms so when it comes to children, they should take it seriously.

Qualitative Dissertation Checklist

· The following provides guidance for reporting on qualitative studies.

· All items may not be relevant to your particular study; please consult with your chair for guidance.

· The checklist items may not necessarily be in the order that works best for your dissertation. Please consult with your committee; however, the checklist should work well in the absence of other considerations.

· Instructions for Students:

· Indicate on the checklist the page number (use the actual document page number, not the MS Word pagination) where the appropriate indicator is located.

· Respond to comments from the chair and/or URR comments in the comment history box. Do not delete previous commentsjust add your response and use some means to clearly identify your remarks (different font/bold/italics/color).

· Instructions for the chair and/or URR

· Provide specific feedback in the comment history column. Do not delete previous commentsjust add your response and use some means to clearly identify your remarks (different font/bold/italics/color).

· If you made detailed comments on the draft (using track changes and comments), you can make reference to the draft rather than restate everything in the checklist comment history section.

Date: (click here and type today’s date )      

Student’s Name:       Student ID (for office use only) --      

School: (click here and pull down to select school name )

Committee Members’ Names:

Chairperson      

Member      

University Research Reviewer      

Front Matter

Checklist Items

Comment History

Title [Insert Dissertation Title]

Most important conceptual issue investigated.

Qualitative tradition applied.

Participant group to which the study applies.

Abstract

Describe the research problem and why it is important.

Identify the purpose of the study.

State the theoretical foundations and/or conceptual frameworks, as appropriate.

Summarize the key research question(s).

Describe, concisely, the overall research design, methods, and data analysis procedures.

Identify key results, conclusions, and recommendations that capture the heart of the research (for the final study only).

Conclude with a statement on the implications for positive social change.

Chapter 1

Checklist Items

Pg/NA

Comment History

Introduction

Describe the topic of the study, why the study needs to be conducted, and the potential social implications of the study.

Preview major sections of the chapter.

Background

Briefly summarize research literature related to the scope of the study topic.

Describe a gap in knowledge in the discipline that the study will address.

End the section on why the study is needed.

Problem Statement

State the research problem.

Provide evidence of consensus that the problem is current, relevant, and significant to the discipline.

Frame the problem in a way that builds upon or counters previous research findings focusing primarily on research conducted in the last 5 years.

Address a meaningful gap in the current research literature.

Purpose of the study

Provide a concise statement that serves as the connection between the problem being addressed and the focus of the study and contains:

The research paradigm.

The intent of the study (such as describe, compare, explore, develop, etc).

The concept/phenomenon of interest.

Research question(s)

State the research questions.

Theoretical and / or Conceptual Framework for the Study

(Studies must include either a theoretical foundation or a conceptual framework section (studies may include both))

Theoretical Foundation

Identify the theory or theories and provide the origin or source.

State concisely the major theoretical propositions and/or major hypotheses with a reference to more detailed explanation in chapter 2.

Explain how the theory relates to the study approach and research questions.

Conceptual Framework

This applies to qualitative and some epidemiological studies (as well as some other quantitative studies)

Identify and define the concept/phenomenon that grounds the study.

Describe concisely the conceptual framework (for qualitative studies, the contextual lens; for quantitative studies, description of the body of research that supports the need for the study) as derived from the literature with more detailed analysis in chapter 2.

State the logical connections among key elements of the framework with a reference to a more thorough explanation in chapter 2.

State how the framework relates to the study approach and key research questions as well as instrument development and data analysis where appropriate.

Nature of the study

Provide a concise rationale for selection of the design/tradition.

Briefly describe the key concept and / or phenomenon being investigated.

Briefly summarize the methodology (from whom and how data are collected and how data will be analyzed).

Definitions

Provide concise definitions of key concepts or constructs.

Define terms used in the study that have multiple meanings (e.g., socioeconomic status, educator, health service professional, etc.). Do not include common terms or terms that can easily be looked up in a dictionary

Include citations that identify support in the professional literature for the definition or operational definition.

Assumptions

Clarify aspects of the study that are believed but cannot be demonstrated to be true. Include only those assumptions that are critical to the meaningfulness of the study

Describe the reasons why the assumption(s) was/were necessary in the context of the study.

Scope and Delimitations

Describe specific aspects of the research problem that are addressed in the study and why the specific focus was chosen.

Define the boundaries of the study by identifying populations included and excluded and theories/conceptual frameworks most related to the area of study that were not investigated.

Address potential transferability.

Limitations

Describe limitations of the study related to design and / or methodological weaknesses (including issues related to limitations of transferability and dependability).

Describe any biases that could influence study outcomes and how they are addressed.

Describe reasonable measures to address limitations .

Significance

Identify potential contributions of the study that advance knowledge in the discipline. This is an elaboration of what the problem addresses.

Identify potential contributions of the study that advance practice and/or policy (as applicable).

Describe potential implications for positive social change that are consistent with and bounded by the scope of the study.

Summary

Summarize main points of the chapter.

Provide transition to chapter 2.

CHAPTER 2

Checklist Items

Pg /NA

Comment History

Introduction

Restate the problem and the purpose.

Provide a concise synopsis of the current literature that establishes the relevance of the problem.

Preview major sections of the chapter.

Literature Search Strategy

List accessed library databases and search engines used.

List key search terms and combinations of search terms (with more detailed search terms located in an appendix if appropriate).

Describe the iterative search process by explaining what terms were used in what database to identify germane scholarship.

In cases where there is little current research, and few(if any) dissertations and/or conference proceedings, describe how this was handled.

Theoretical Foundation (as appropriate)

Name the theory or theories.

Provide origin or source of the theory.

Describe major theoretical propositions and/or major hypotheses, including delineation of any assumptions appropriate to the application of the theory.

Provide a literature and research based analysis of how the theory has been applied previously in ways similar to the current study.

Provide the rationale for the choice of this theory.

Describe how and why the selected theory relates to the present study and how the research questions relate to, challenge, or build upon existing theory.

Conceptual Framework (As appropriate)

Identify and define the concept/phenomenon.

Synthesize primary writings by key theorists, philosophers, and / or seminal researchers related to the concept or phenomenon.

Provide key statements and definitions inherent in the framework.

Describe how the concept or phenomenon has been applied and articulated in previous research and how the current study benefits from this framework.

Literature Review Related to Key Variables and/or Concepts

Provide an exhaustive review of the current literature that includes the following information:

Describe studies related to the constructs of interest and chosen methodology and methods that are consistent with the scope of the study.

Describe ways researchers in the discipline have approached the problem and the strengths and weakness inherent in their approaches.

Justify from the literature the rationale for selection of the variables or concepts.

Review and synthesize studies related to the key concepts and/or phenomena under investigation to produce a description of what is known about them, what is controversial, and what remains to be studied.

Review and synthesize studies related to the research questions and why the approach selected is meaningful.

Summary and Conclusions

Concisely summarize major themes in the literature.

Summarize what is known as well as what is not known in the discipline related to the topic of study.

Describe how the present study fills at least one of the gaps in the literature and will extend knowledge in the discipline.

Provide transitional material to connect the gap in the literature to the methods described in chapter 3.

CHAPTER 3

Checklist Items

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Comment History

Introduction

Restate study purpose as described in chapter 1.

Preview major sections of the chapter.

Research Design and Rationale

Restate research questions exactly as described in chapter 1.

State and define central concept(s) / phenomenon (a) of the study.

Identify the research tradition.

Provide rationale for the chosen tradition.

Role of the Researcher

Define and explain your role as observer, participant, or observer-participant.

Reveal any personal and professional relationships researcher may have with participants, with emphasis on supervisory or instructor relationships involving power over the participants.

State how any researcher biases and / or power relationships are or will be managed.

Other ethical issues as applicable (these could include doing a study within one’s own work environment, conflict of interest or power differentials, and justification for use of incentives) and the plan for addressing these issues.

Methodology

(needs to be described in sufficient depth so that other researchers can replicate the study)

Participant Selection Logic

Identify the population (if appropriate).

Identify and justify the sampling strategy.

State the criterion/a on which participant selection is based.

Establish how participants are known to meet the criterion/a.

State number of participants / cases and the rationale for that number.

Explain specific procedures for how participants will be identified, contacted, and recruited.

Describe the relationship between saturation and sample size.

Instrumentation

Identify each data collection instrument and source (observation sheet, interview protocol, focus group protocol, video-tape, audio-tape, artifacts, archived data, and other kinds of data collection instruments).

Identify source for each data collection instrument (published or researcher produced).

If historical or legal documents are used as a source of data, demonstrate the reputability of the sources and justify why they represent the best source of data.

Establish sufficiency of data collection instruments to answer research questions.

For published data collection instruments

Who developed the instrument and what is the date of publication?

Where and with which participant group has it been used previously?

How appropriate is it for current study (that is, context and cultural specificity of protocols/instrumentation) and whether modifications will be or were needed?

Describe how content validity will be or was established.

Address any context- and culture-specific issues specific to the population while developing the instrument.

For researcher-developed instruments

Basis for instrument development (Literature sources, other bases (such as pilot study).

Describe how content validity will be / was established.

Establish sufficiency of data collection instruments to answer the research questions.

Procedures For Pilot Studies (as appropriate

Include all procedures for recruitment, participation, and data collection associated with the pilot study and the main study.

Describe the relationship of the pilot study to the main study (e.g., what is the purpose of the pilot study?)

Include the IRB approval number (completed dissertation).

Procedures For Recruitment, Participation, and Data Collection (for students collecting their own data)

For each data collection instrument and research question, provide details of data collection.

· From where data will be collected?

· Who will collect the data?

· Frequency of data collection events.

· Duration of data collection events.

· How data will be recorded?

· Follow-up plan if recruitment results in too few participants.

Explain how participants exit the study (for example, debriefing procedures).

Describe any follow-up procedures (such as requirements to return for follow-up interviews).

Data Analysis Plan

For each type of data collected identify:

· Connection of data to a specific research question.

· Type of and procedure for coding.

· Any software used for analysis.

· Manner of treatment of discrepant cases.

Issues of Trustworthiness

Credibility (internal validity): Describe appropriate strategies to establish credibility, such as triangulation, prolonged contact, member checks, saturation, reflexivity, and peer review.

Transferability (external validity): Describe appropriate strategies to establish transferability, such as thick description and variation in participant selection.

Dependability (the qualitative counterpart to reliability): Describe appropriate strategies to establish dependability, such as audit trails and triangulation.

Confirmability (the qualitative counterpart to objectivity): Describe appropriate strategies to establish confirmability, such as reflexivity.

Intra- and intercoder reliability (where applicable).

Ethical Procedures

Agreements to gain access to participants or data (include actual documents in the IRB application).

Describe the treatment of human participants including the following (include actual documents in the Institutional Review Board (IRB) application):

· Institutional permissions, including IRB approvals that are needed (proposal) or were obtained (for the completed dissertation, include relevant IRB approval numbers).

· Ethical concerns related to recruitment materials and processes and a plan to address them.

· Ethical concerns related to data collection/intervention activities (these could include participants refusing participation or early withdrawal from the study and response to any predicable adverse events) and a plan to address them.

Describe treatment of data (including archival data), including issues of:

· Whether data are anonymous or confidential and any concerns related to each.

· Protections for confidential data (data storage procedures, data dissemination, who will have access to the data, and when data will be destroyed).

Other ethical issues as applicable (these issues could include doing a study within one’s own work environment; conflict of interest or power differentials; and justification for use of incentives).

Summary

Summary of main points of the chapter.

Transition to chapter 4.

Chapter 4

Checklist Items

Pg /NA

Comment History

Introduction

Review briefly the purpose and research questions.

Preview chapter organization.

Pilot Study (If Applicable)

Describe the conduct of the pilot study.

Report any impact of the pilot study on the main study (for example, changes in instrumentation and /or data analysis strategies).

Setting

Describe any personal or organizational conditions that influenced participants or their experience at time of study that may influence interpretation of the study results (for example, changes in personnel, budget cuts, and other trauma).

Demographics

Present participant demographics and characteristics relevant to the study.

Data Collection

State number of participants from whom each type of data were collected.

Describe location, frequency, and duration of data collection for each data collection instrument.

Describe how the data were recorded.

Present any variations in data collection from the plan presented in chapter 3.

Present any unusual circumstances encountered in data collection.

Data Analysis

Report process used to move inductively from coded units to larger representations including categories and themes.

Describe the specific codes, categories, and themes that emerged from the data using quotations as needed to emphasize their importance.

Describe qualities of discrepant cases and how they were factored into the analysis.

Evidence of Trustworthiness

Credibility: Describe implementation of and / or adjustments to credibility strategies stated in chapter 3

Transferability: Describe implementation of and / or adjustments to transferability strategies stated in chapter 3

Dependability: Describe implementation of and / or adjustment to consistency strategies stated in chapter 3

Confirmability: Describe implementation of and / or adjustment to consistency strategies stated in chapter 3.

Results

Address each research question (chapter may be organized by research question or patterns or themes).

Present data to support each finding (quotes from transcripts, documents, etc.).

Discuss discrepant cases/ nonconfirming data as applicable.

Include tables and figures to illustrate results, as appropriate, and per the current edition of the Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association.

Summary

Summarize answers to research questions.

Provide transition to chapter 5.

CHAPTER 5

Checklist Items

Pg /NA

Comment History

Introduction

Concisely reiterate the purpose and nature of the study and why it was conducted.

Concisely summarize key findings.

Interpretation of the Findings

Describe in what ways findings confirm, disconfirm, or extend knowledge in the discipline by comparing them with what has been found in the peer-reviewed literature described in chapter 2.

Analyze and interpret the findings in the context of the theoretical and/or conceptual framework, as appropriate.

· Ensure interpretations do not exceed the data, findings, and scope.

Limitations of the Study

Describe the limitations to trustworthiness that arose from execution of the study. These should be used to revise what was written in chapter 1 for the proposal.

Recommendations

Describe recommendations for further research that are grounded in the strengths and limitations of the current study as well as the literature reviewed in chapter 2.

· Ensure recommendations do not exceed study boundaries.

Implications

Positive Social Change

· Describe the potential impact for positive social change at the appropriate level (individual, family, organizational, and societal/policy).

· Ensure implications for social change do not exceed the study boundaries.

Describe methodological, theoretical, and/or empirical implications, as appropriate.

Describe recommendations for practice, as appropriate.

Conclusion

Provide a strong “take home” message that captures the key essence of the study.

APA Form and Style Check

Checklist Items

Comment History

Citations and Referencing

All citations have been crosschecked to ensure that there are corresponding references (and that there are no references that do not have associated citations).

All sources are cited correctly per APA formatting requirements (for example, studies listed in alphabetical order by first author; no first names of authors).

Grammar, Spelling, and Syntax

The paper has been thoroughly checked for grammar, spelling, and syntax errors.

For the final dissertation, the dissertation has been checked for correct verb tense representing a completed study.

Headings

Headings are used, consistent with the Walden Dissertation Template, to make sections of thought distinct.

Use of the Writing Center Template

The Writing Center Dissertation Template (APA, 6th edition) was used to construct the proposal and/or dissertation so that all formatting is correct.

1

Prospectus

Title

Student Name

Name of program – Name of specialization

Walden University

A00000000

Prospectus: Title

Problem Statement

Insert the text of your problem statement here. Refer to the sample in the Prospectus Guide for an example of this section.

Significance

Insert the text of the purpose and significance of your study here. Refer to the sample in the Prospectus Guide for an example of this section.

Background

Insert the text of the background of your study here. Refer to the sample in the Prospectus Guide for an example of this section.

Framework

Insert the text of the framework of your study here. Refer to the sample in the Prospectus Guide for an example of this section.

Research Questions

Insert your research questions here. Refer to the sample in the Prospectus Guide for an example of this section.

Nature of the Study

Insert the text of the nature of your study here. Refer to the sample in the Prospectus Guide for an example of this section.

Possible Types and Sources of Information or Data

Insert the text of the types and sources of information or data for your study here. Refer to the sample in the Prospectus Guide for an example of this section.

References

Insert your reference list here. Refer to the sample in the Prospectus Guide for an example of this section.

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