Assignment Four: Course Research Paper Proposal – Initial Draft
Due Date: Feb. 26, Thursday,
print out to bring to class and submit to Turnitin.com prior to class
This deliverable directly addresses
the culminating experience and deliverable for this course on research
methods. You will begin to define and
refine more precisely the topic you have identified in your research area of
interest. Below is the department’s
official standard for Master’s level research projects and theses. You are two provide a well-formed
project/paper proposal using these guidelines. You will find helpful some links to Dr. Juliano’s and Dr. Keuneke’s web
pages (I have provided the links to these on our course home page on my ecst web pages). The
guidelines for a project proposal outlined on Dr. Keuneke’s
web pages are very similar to the Computer Science Department’s official
guidelines. You are also to provide a
bibliography for the project proposal that meets the department’s standards and
guidelines as part of the proposal itself.
You are to combine all elements into one paper and submit this to
turnitin.com.
CSCI
Department of Computer Science
Minimum
Standards for Project/Thesis Projects
The purpose of a graduate project is to demonstrate that the student exhibits the qualities of a Computer Science professional. This means that the student must be able to integrate a great deal of information from many sources, plan a study, and prepare a formal research report summarizing his/her findings. The report must tie the specific of what the student has done in the project or thesis to the larger body of literature (articles, texts, etc.) that the student researched.
Proposals: A project/thesis proposal must be thoroughly researched and developed and must meet the conditions set by the Department of Computer Science. Please read the following:
“Students who select the thesis or project as their culminating
activity are urged to complete it during the semester
they are enrolled in the designated
course (customarily taken during
the last semester of the
master’s program). In cases where
the thesis or project is not
completed during enrollment in these
units, students are allowed a maximum of three additional semesters to complete the thesis or project. If
the thesis or project is not
completed by this deadline (and the
program time limit has not run out), members of the committee can choose to withdraw. In the case of a faculty member withdrawing, it is the responsibility
of the student to reconstitute the committee.
Exceptions to the policy on Graduate Advisory Committees may be
requested by the graduate program coordinator
and must be approved by the dean of Graduate Programs.”
-- Page 6, Guide to Graduate Studies.
“The research proposal is a conceptual statement of a problem that
warrants significant study. The graduate
student should work with the graduate advisory committee in developing a
research proposal and receive approval from the committee before research
begins.” -- Page 27, Guide to Graduate
Studies.
TO ENROLL IN CSCI 699
P/T, YOU MUST HAVE COMPLETED THE FOLLOWING:
· GRADUATE WRITING EXAM OR CSCI305/EECE335.
· A PROPOSAL SUBMITTED AND APPROVED BY YOUR ADVISORY COMMITTEE AND 2/3 OF THE COMPUTER SCIENCE FACULTY.
·
COMPLETED THE GRADUATE CORE COURSES AND HAVE MET
ALL CONDITIONS SET
Consider the following before you begin to write your proposals and consult this list as you proceed:
The proposal should include a title page, a table of contents, and a bibliography. If there are any diagrams or figures they must be produced electronically (not hand-drawn) or copied unless referenced. The proposal should be double spaced in 12 point font with 1" margins on all sides. The Proposal should use a format similar to the one that will be used for Master’s Project/Thesis write-up itself, and is generally expected to mass more than 8 pages, double spaced.
Your proposal must have the following
components components:
Cover Page: The cover page will include the project title, the author’s name, the date, The Department, and the names of the Committee Chair and Committee Member. The Title should be as specific as possible: for example, the title “A Comparison of the Costs and Benefits of using Microsoft .NET Web Services, with the Open Source Web Service Tools Provided with J2EE, With Sample Implementations in Both Environments” would be a much better title than “Comparing Web Services and Distributed Computing in Two Environments”.
Table
of Contents.
Table
of Figures.
Introduction: In this section, the student will present a clear idea of what needs led up to proposing this project.
Purpose: The introduction should include a statement of the general objectives in doing this project – what is the Project/Thesis proposing to accomplish here? (Are you trying to apply a new technology? Are you trying to see if a new algorithm works? Or . . . what?)
Problem Statement: The introduction should also include a statement of the specific problem or problems that the project addresses. (What is the underlying issue that led to proposing this project? Is there a strong need for the application, or is there a gap in the knowledge of how to apply a given algorithm or methodology?).
Literature Review: In the Literature Review portion of the proposal, the student will survey a portion of the published work (generally at least 12 articles from refereed journals and textbooks/monographs) that provide context for the current problem. This might include work in software engineering, database work, and published work, both general and specific, that relates to the problem and past solutions to the problem. If the student uses web references, be sure that the reference is to a permanent document. (Sun, Intel, and other sources will post controlled documents, with document numbers, on their websites, and these should be referenced listing author, publication number, company, and publication date, along with the URL and date of access.)
Solution Description: In this section, which can also be entitled “Method”, the student will describe what he/she will do to address the problem and meet the project objectives, building on the foundation of the work that has cited in the Review of the Literature.
Schedule: In this portion of the proposal, the student will list the various parts of the project, including additional research, and the planning, development, installation, and testing of the project, plus the writing of the various components (chapters) of the final project report, and specify the dates by which he/she intends to complete each. You must phrase your checkpoint items in terms of tangible deliverables that can be demonstrated.
Reference List: This lists, in IEEE or ACM journal form, the sources that the student has referenced throughout the proposal. Please note that this is NOT a bibliography, and each reference is linked to specific citations in text, As noted above, references to at least 12 refereed journals and textbooks/monographs are required. The student may wish to provide a bibliography as well..
Annotated Bibliography: The annotated bibliography is a list of all of the related research materials that the student is aware of that relate to his/her general research area along with comments as to why each entry is important. This list may be much larger and less specific than the reference list, and entries are not linked to the body of the text via citations, although entries on the reference list may also be entered here.
Index.
Appendices.
Format of the Proposal: The Proposal should use a format similar to the one that will be used for Master’s Project/Thesis write-up itself, and is generally expected to mass more than 8 pages, double spaced.