The context in which the research took place
· What is the background, the context, in which the research took place?
· Why is this subject or issue important?
· Who are the key participants and/or ‘actors’ in the area under investigation?
· Are there important trends or pivotal variables of which the reader needs to be made aware?
· A clear and succinct statement of the aims and objectives that the dissertation is going to address.
· Have you presented a clear and unambiguous exposition of your research aim, the objectives you will address to meet this aim and your research questions?
The way the Dissertation is to be organised
You should write your dissertation with the idea in mind that the intended reader and reviewer has some shared understanding of the area being investigated, however, underpinning concepts and arguments still need to be included as otherwise the depth of research will be compromised.
This short final section of the Introduction should tell the reader what topics are going to be discussed in each of the chapters and how the chapters are related to each other.
3.2.5. Literature Review:
The main reasons for the inclusion, in a Masters dissertation, of a literature review section are:
· To present and to analyze, in a critical manner, that part of the published literature which is relevant to your research topic and which acts as the basis for a fuller understanding of the context in which you are conducting your research.
· To act as a backdrop against which what you have done in the remainder of the dissertation may be analyzed and critically evaluated so as to give the reader the opportunity to assess the worth of your writing, analytical and research skills.
· To show that not only have you discovered and reported what you have found to be relevant in the literature search, but that you have understood it and that you are able to analyze it in a critical manner.
To show that your knowledge of the area of interest is detailed enough that you are able to identify gaps in the coverage of the topic; thus justifying the reason(s) for your research.
To enable readers to be able to measure the validity of your choice(s) of research methodology, the appropriateness of the process by which you analyze your results, and whether or not your findings are congruent with the accepted research which has gone before.
The literature review is presented in the form of a precis, a classification, a comparison and a critical analysis of that material which is germane to a full understanding of your research study.
Remember that your literature review should lead and justify the research objectives and questions of your dissertation. Your literature review should not just be a catalogue of authors, frameworks and ideas but should attempt to introduce a critical evaluation of those authors work.
Research Methodology.
You should begin the Research Methodology chapter by stating, again, the research objectives of the project. This will enable the reader to make an assessment as to the validity of your chosen research methodology.
This chapter is that part of the dissertation where you have the opportunity to justify to the reader the process by which the research questions, which were derived by an analysis of the relevant literature, were answered. It is not sufficient to say, for example, “suitable respondents were sampled using a quota sampling technique and then surveyed using a postal questionnaire” and then leave it at that. It might well be the case that, given the problem(s) to be investigated, such a choice of research methods is entirely appropriate. However, if you have not taken the opportunity to justify your research choices to a reader they could be correct in assuming that you have, by chance, merely guessed at what would work and, more by luck than judgement, arrived at the ‘correct’ solution to the problem.
The chapter on research methodology must, painstakingly argue for, and justify each, decision that is taken when arriving at the way in which the research is to be organised. Every time that you, the researcher, have to make a choice from a number of options, you must state what each of these are, why you made the choice you did, and why you rejected those not used.