Guideline For Writing A Research Proposal Suggested by Dr. Chelli
Guideline For Writing A Research Proposal Suggested by Dr. Chelli
A research proposal is intended to convince others that you have a worthwhile research project and
that you have the competence and the work-plan to complete it. Generally, a research proposal should
contain all the elements involved in the research process and include sufficient information for the reader
to evaluate the proposed study. All research proposals should address the following questions: What do
you want to accomplish? Why do you want you want to do it? How are going to do it?
Outline
The following outline is suggested for use; it includes all that is generally required in a proposal. It is just
a model that can be adjusted.
1. Cover page: it should identify the proposed project’s title which should be simple and brief. A model
is suggested below:
January 2012
2. Table of contents
3. Introduction.
At the end of this single paragraph, we need to know:
The problem at the core of your project (one or two sentences),
significance of the study (one sentence),
the purpose of the study (one sentence)
the hypothesis or hypotheses
Very simply, literature review needs to address the following main issues:
What is known about the research problem?
What are the gaps?
Where and how does the proposed research fit into this picture?
What contribution will the proposed research make to the existing academic knowledge and how will it enrich current
practises?
9. Methodology
The researcher introduces the methods which will be used for data collection and analysis, population, research sample,
research procedures and the overall research approach. Data analysis must also be considered in this section.
Questions in this section relate to the following:
What type of research is it?
What method (s) will be used to collect and to analyze data? (quantitative, qualitative or both)
Why is this method(s) the most appropriate for the planned research?
What are the techniques to be followed for data collection ( questionnaires, measurement…) and data analysis (and
why)?
Are they feasible and will answer the overall research problem set out in the aim of this research?
In visualizing a research sample, a researcher should address the following questions:
Who are the research participants?
What characteristics of the overall population do they represent?
Which sampling method will you use