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Business School

Semester 1-2, 2010/11

BSB20133-M
BUSINESS RESEARCH METHODS RESIT

This is an Individual Assignment requiring you to


produce one Written Research Proposal
Hand in date: by 12 noon, 17th August 2011
All assignments should be handed in to the Business School
reception, 2nd Floor, Brindley Building. You will need to obtain a
date-stamped receipt of proof of submission.

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BSB 20133-M: Business Research Methods for September 2007 Postgraduate Intake

Individual Assessment
One Written Research Proposal (100%)
Outline Points to Consider:
1. The assessment for this module is a research proposal that could
realistically and feasibly be adopted as part of producing a
dissertation for your elected masters award (e.g. MBA, MSc, MA). It
is your step-by-step plan for discovering new knowledge.
2. It is not essential that this completed assignment (research proposal)
eventually be used for your awards dissertation.
3. It is not required that you engage in any primary data collection for
the completion of this assignment (for example: interviewing,
questionnaire distribution, contacting businesses, etc.). If you feel you
must engage in gathering such data, then you must apply for and
gain ethical approval not to do so would result in a failed score
being awarded for the assignment.

Assessment Objectives:
The written proposal of this assignment is designed to assess your ability to:

Demonstrate a competent understanding of research methods, and


methodological and philosophical underpinnings, applicable to researching
within the broad field of business and management.

Undertake a critical review of recent and relevant research appropriate to


the development of the field of business and management
understanding.

Plan and produce an organised and logically planned and executed


research approach to contributing to business and management theory
and, where appropriate, practice.

Use the Harvard Referencing System to cite and reference academic


sources.

Assessment Requirements:
A written research proposal of not less than 2,000 words, and no more than
3,000 words, that synthesises and critically evaluates business and
management related research methods.
You are required to state the number of words used at the end of the
assignment. You may include diagrams, figures, appendices, etc. without
word penalty. A sliding scale of penalties for excess length will be imposed.

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BSB 20133-M: Business Research Methods for September 2007 Postgraduate Intake

The penalties will be as follows:


Up to 10% excess words: no penalty
11-20% excess words:
- 5% penalty
21-30% excess words:
-10% penalty
31% plus excess words: cannot achieve more than a pass grade (50%).

Assignment Proposal Options:


You must choose only 1 (ONE) of the proposal options given
below:
a. Applied- Consultancy Research Proposal, or
b. Experimental-Scientific Research Proposal, or
c. Conceptual-Theoretical Research Proposal
You must clearly state at the beginning of your assignment
which of the above (a, b, c) you have chosen to write your
proposal on.
Further details are as follows:
A research proposal can be considered as a thoroughly planned
statement of intent. It will clearly demonstrate that your research
intentions, if carried out to your proposed plan, would result in an
effective and complete project (e.g. Dissertation).
See, for example, your BRM textbook: Saunders, et al, Research
Methods for Business Students, pp. 38-45
a.
Applied- Consultancy Research Proposal
Applied or Consultancy Research seeks to solve practical problem/s and offer
practicable solutions. In business or management contexts, it will be focused
on a problem or problems, or to address specific questions, that would benefit
from researching and offering solutions. Example problems could be: a
company may be finding that an unusually high percentage if its graduate
trainees leave within one year of joining the company, or, what would be the
effects of the introduction of a new incentive scheme? To actually carry out this
type of research, you would eventually (but not at this proposal stage) have to
be able to gain access to a business or organisation and access relevant data.

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BSB 20133-M: Business Research Methods for September 2007 Postgraduate Intake

b.
Experimental-Scientific Research Proposal
Experimental or Scientific research is a systematic gathering of information in
order to test a hypothesis. It is designed to test cause-and-effect relationships.
In its simplest form it is designed to compare two (or more) groups (an
experimental group and a control group). Example experiments could be: the
use of blogs by masters students as a way of improving strategic
management knowledge, or, e-mailing is better than cold-telephone-calling for
eliciting response rates to business research questionnaire requests.
c.
Conceptual-Theoretical Research Proposal
Management and business scholars may be interested in analyzing subject
specific concepts, such as discussing alternative notions of competitive
advantage and whilst conceptual analysis often falls within the realms of
philosophers, it is also necessary for business and management
researchers to give consideration to theoretical-conceptual issues within the
field. Example issues could be: the re-contextualisation of a theory, from, say,
profit led businesses to that of not-for-profit organisation, or, B2B through
WWW as an entrepreneurial mode of opportunity identification.

Assignment Guidelines:
A written proposal must be compiled in a suitable format that must
incorporate the following:
A Working Title - That clearly indicates the variables, their relationships and
the target population to which the results may be applied.
An example: A Purposeful Sample Study of Masters Management Students
Ownership and Uses of Mobile Telephony
Proposal Format The unambiguous identification and justification of
relevant sections, their sub-sections and contents.
An example:
Section One Introduction
Statement of the Problem
Need & Justification of the Study
Research Aim/s & Objectives
Research Questions, Propositions or Hypotheses
Definition of Terms
Limitations and any Basic Assumptions of the Study
Section Two Literature Review
What is Presently Known about the Problem?
Relevant & Pertinent Literature to the Purpose of the Study
Organisation of Review and its Justification
Discussion of the Review Findings and Implications
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BSB 20133-M: Business Research Methods for September 2007 Postgraduate Intake

What has been Learned?


What are the Gaps in Knowledge?
Lead-in to Proposed Study

The Above Section Should Include Comprehensive In-Text References


(including any secondary sources) and included in References Section
Section Three Research Approach and Methodology
How the study will be Conducted and its Justification
Research Design
Steps to be taken in the Investigation - Detailed
Population, Subject and Sample Selection
Test Conditions
Methods to be Used How and Why
Ethical Issues and Procedures
Measures of Outcome
Procedure for Data Analysis
Contingencies
The Above Section Should Include Comprehensive In-Text References
(including any secondary sources) and included in References Section
Section Four Project Plan, Timetable Schedule (e.g. Project Management
& Gantt Chart) & Resources
Subject Selection
Approval of Subjects and other Issues
Data Collection
Data Analysis
Final Draft of Project/Dissertation
Target Completion Dates and Milestones
Resource Requirements
Travel
Supplies
Copying
Software
Data Entry
Other Costs
Section Five References and Potential Bibliographic Field/s
Use of Harvard Referencing Convention Throughout the Document

Important - The above guides only contain examples - they are not
definitive. You must structure and justify Your proposal to meet Your
research needs.
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BSB 20133-M: Business Research Methods for September 2007 Postgraduate Intake

Assessment Guidelines:
Level M modules require that work carried out will incorporate most of the
following features:

Fail:

The assignment lacks the structure, content and use of appropriate


terminology that would be expected from a student able to conduct a
disciplined analysis of business and management issues; or make
appropriate conclusions following a critical evaluation of a range of
theoretical options.
The assignment does not demonstrate ability of independent thought and
is unlikely to contain a recognisable critique of academic literature,
although it may list some theories/concepts that may, or may not, apply.
The assignment does not balance academic theory and the practical
application of such theories to a well-described research proposal.
The assignment provides little, if any, evidence of the student having "read
around" the subject matter. As such the assignment contains few, if any,
academic references or, if they do, sources are unlikely to be consistently
and/or accurately cited and referenced using Harvard referencing
conventions (However the assignment must not contain plagiarism, which
is a University Offence - see attached guidelines on Plagiarism)
The assignment may be inconsistent in approach as well as content sometimes minor areas, or inappropriate theories, might be discussed at
length while relevant or seminal theories are omitted all together. Indeed it
may not be clear exactly which theoretical area or practical problem the
student is critically analysing in the assignment.
Any conclusions to resolve the practical research problem discussed will
probably not result from a disciplined analysis of the proposal problem or a
critical evaluation of a range of theoretical options available.

Pass:

Sufficient issues are addressed in order to distinguish between the rote


learning student and those students with the ability to generate a required
level of independent thought processes but which is inadequate to achieve
a distinction due to inconsistency or due to insufficient understanding.
Use of structure and terminology that shows an ability to undertake
disciplined analysis of the issues presented.
Content and structure that indicates an ability to analyse, evaluate and
make logical conclusions regarding research proposal issues that
encompasses both practical examples and theoretical elements.
Evidence that the theory behind the practical application of the proposals
concepts are clearly understood but with certain aspects of the analysis
being covered more extensively than others that indicates a less insightful
critique of particular areas.

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BSB 20133-M: Business Research Methods for September 2007 Postgraduate Intake

Use of more dated, limited or unrelated academic referencing showing


literature review and research technique that is short of a distinction level.
A satisfactory grasp of the requirements necessary to conduct an analysis
of practical research proposal issues; an ability to critique concepts from
the literature reviewed; and to make clear and practical conclusions to
resolve the research proposal issues faced.

Merit:
Apart from the attributes of a PASS paper, these papers will need to
encompass the following:
Evidence of critical analysis and evaluation of a wide range of issues and
strategies to demonstrate extensive reading, and application of theoretical
concepts.
Clear understanding of the theory related to the research proposal, with a
consistent level of analysis and critique applied throughout.
A balanced overview of the chosen topic, incorporating practical application
of the proposals theory or theories, resulting in well thought out and clearly
articulated conclusions.
Use of relevant and mostly up-to-date academic references, demonstrating
breadth in the selection of sources chosen for their appropriateness.

Distinction:
Apart from the attributes of a MERIT paper, these papers will need to
encompass the following:

Structure and content that distinguishes it as being well rounded in both


structure and content with practical and theoretical aspects of the paper
being more balanced and with conclusions put forward based on sound
theory that shows theoretical evidence.
Strong evidence of having read extensively around the chosen topic or
topics, with extensive referencing of the key theories and arguments
proposed, and which encompasses the creative application of academic
knowledge in such a way that it may well lead to the extension of such
academic knowledge.
Consistency in the arguments used to evaluate and critically analyse the
research proposals practical strategy and theories reviewed.
Use of a wider range of theoretical concepts than that of a PASS paper,
and which clearly and methodically remains focused on the issues.

(Assessment Guidelines - Adapted from: Toni Hilton, External Examiner, 2001)

Plagiarism:
It is strongly recommended that you read the full document on plagiarism
rules at:

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BSB 20133-M: Business Research Methods for September 2007 Postgraduate Intake

http://www.staffs.ac.uk/images/academic_dishonesty_tcm68-12681.pdf
Summarised below are some of the key points. You will have committed
plagiarism and may be caught, reported and punished (as described below)
if you:

Copy extensively from the work of others (from sources such as books,
magazines, journals, web sites for example) and submit the work as your
own. NB It is acceptable to refer to the work of others as long as you do
not use too much, and reference your sources properly. If you do not
know how to do this, please follow the guidelines given in the document
entitled Adding quotations and references to your written work on the
website:
http://www.staffs.ac.uk/schools/business/bsadmin/staff/s3/jamr.htm

Copy another students work and submit it for assessment under your
own name

Allow another student to copy your work and they then submit it for
assessment under their name

The last item is of particular importance; few students seem to understand


what it means. You should be aware that if, for example, you allow another
student to borrow your work and they subsequently copy some of that work
and present it as their own, you and they will both be punished, even though
they copied your work.
What happens if you get caught?
Examination Boards may punish offending students in a number of ways.
Typically, penalties range from reducing grades, making students re-sit
modules, through to failing students on a module or an entire award.
The University regards this form of cheating as a serious offence.

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