PROPOSAL
WRITING IN GEOGRAPHY, GEO 6119
UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA, DEPARTMENT OF GEOGRAPHY
SPRING 2013
Please note that this syllabus is being
constructed, WILL change before the class begins, and MAY change as the semester
progresses.
8 March 2013
Instructor: Dr. Michael W. Binford
Office Location: 3141A Turlington Hall
Office Hours:Tuesdays and Wednesdays 4:00 –
5:00
Also, feel free to e-mail me or stop by my
office
Phone: 392-0494 but I don't use the phone very
well
E-Mail: mbinford@ufl.edu
COURSE DESCRIPTION
Research design, proposal writing and proposal evaluation for geographic
studies
PREREQUISITES
This course is intended for advanced (second year or beyond) graduate
students in Geography who have general ideas of the thesis or dissertation
research. This course will develop those ideas using literature, help students
frame questions and hypotheses incorporating theory, discuss data collection and
methods, etc. Students outside the discipline can enroll, but the proposed
research should be of a nature where geography graduate students and the
instructor can evaluate proposal content (e.g. environmental or earth sciences,
forestry, etc.). You should discuss any questions and concerns with the
instructor.
COURSE OBJECTIVES
The course will provide a forum for discussion, shared experiences, and
intellectual resources for graduate students to be able to write effective,
successful research proposals.
The purposes of this course are: 1) to examine the early stages of research
(research question definition, library research, planning, research design,
variable selection, proposal writing); 2) to write a research proposal in
National Science Foundation (NSF) format; 3) to learn the process of
constructive criticism in reviewing other’s proposals (your proposal will be
evaluated by three peers and the instructor).
POLICY ON ATTENDANCE AND CLASS DEMEANOR
This class is about your own graduate research and missing class is not a
good idea. Participation is 40% of the grade. The panel review is an additional
20% and your presence is necessary. Early semester absences can be excused but
they should be minimal and reasonable. Given that this class has a proposal
deadline and a panel review, incompletes are not viable options. If you miss
more than one class or cannot make one of the critical meetings at the end of
the semester, your grade will be affected. If you have a documented absence
(illness, medical or family emergency) towards the end of the semester, I will
consider giving an incomplete and work with students to create a contract where
alternative projects are assigned. Similarly, tardiness and creating
distractions (cell phones, texting, laptop usage when not part of the class
purpose) are not advisable.
ASSIGNED READINGS
The Firestein book ("Ignorance") is required. All of the other books are
"recommended" although I urge you to have a copy of the Friedland and Folt book.
They are all inexpensive. It is very important that you have access to several
of them during the class. Which ones will depend on your own area of research.
It will be your responsibility to find them in whatever form or from whatever
vendor that you can.
Firestein, S. 2012. Ignorance: How It Drives Science. Oxford University
Press, Oxford, UK. 195 pp.
Friedland, A.J. and C.L. Folt. 2009. Writing Successful Science Proposals.
2ndEd. Yale University Press. 201 pp.
Blaxter, L., Hughes, C., and Tight, M., 2006, How to Research, Open
University Press, Buckingham, UK, 287 pp. (3rd edition) $25
Hillel,
D., 1987, On the tortuous path of research: Soil Science, v. 143(4), pp.
304-5.
Kitchin, R. and Tate, N.J., 2000, Conducting Research in Human Geography:
Theory, Methodology and Practice, Prentice Hall/Pearson Education Ltd., Harlow,
England, 330 pp. (ISBN 0-582-29797-4). $35
National
Academies of Science, Engineering and Medicine, 2009, On Being a Scientist: a
Guide to Responsible Conduct in Research. Third Edition, Committee on Science,
Engineering, and Public Policy (COSEPUP), free download available for
personal use
Valiela, I., 2009, Doing Science: Design, Analysis and Communication of
Scientific Research, Second edition, Oxford University Press, Oxford, UK, 352
pp. $40/$10
Other articles and books, based on topic(s) of the week 2 ADDITIONAL
HELPFUL READINGS (Available from instructor or library, there are many more
books and articles; our class website will have pdfs of several articles
concerning methods and more)
Clifford. N. and G. Valentine, eds., 2003, Key Methods in Geography, Sage
Publications Ltd., 592 pp.
Eyles, John and Smith, David M., 1988, Qualitative Methods in Human
Geography, Polity Press, Oxford, UK, 272 pp.
Flowerdew, R., and Martin, D., 1997, eds., Methods in Human Geography: A
Guide for Students Doing a Research Project, Longman, Harlow, Essex, England,
296 pp.
Gatrell, J.D., G.D. Bierly, R.R. Jensen, 2005, Research Design and Proposal
Writing in Spatial Science, Springer, 216 pp.
Holloway, S.L., S. P. Rice, and G. Valentine, 2003, Key Concepts in
Geography, SAGE Publications, Incorporated, 360 pages.
Lindsay, James M., 1997, Techniques in Human Geography, Routledge, London,
209 pp.
Rogers, A., Viles, H., and Goudie, A., 1992, The Student’s Companion to
Geography, Blackwell, Oxford, UK, 386 pp.
Schumm, S.A., 1992, To Interpret the Earth: Ten Ways to Be Wrong, Cambridge
University Press, Cambridge, UK, 131 pp.
GRADING SCALE:A = 90 or above, 4.0; A- = 87-89.0, 3.67; B+ = 84-86.9,
3.33; B = 80-83.9, 3.0; B- = 77-79.9, 2.67; C+ = 74-76.9, 2.33; C = 70-73.9,
2.0; C- = 67-69.9, 1.67; D+ = 64-66.9, 1.33; D = 60-63.9, 1.0; D- = 57-59.9,
0.67; E = 56.9 or below, 0.0; Note: A grade of C- is not a qualifying grade
for major, minor, Gen Ed, Gordon Rule or College Basic Distribution credit.
ASSIGNMENTS AND GRADING:
WEEKLY READINGS AND LOG (15%):
PART 1: From twenty to over one hundred pages of possible readings are
assigned each week, and you should also be doing reading related to your
research. Assigned readings have practical advice, and some of you may be
somewhat to very familiar with different weekly topics. Physical geographers may
prefer to read Doing Science and human geographers may select another book.
Based on your prior background and experience, it is OK to skim these and/or opt
for something else on the list (see above list of additional helpful readings,
others could be looked at) and/or readings not on the list but pertaining to the
weekly topic. The bottom line is to find something helpful and share in class
(and in the log) what you read (some key points, quotes, helpful tables and
graphics and ideas) and what new insights you have. We will discuss the readings
the SAME week that the topic is presented, so read this list IN ADVANCE of
class. A bullet listing of ideas or a half-page of text for each week should
suffice. PART 2: Concurrent with these readings, you should set aside time for
research and reading related to your potential/chosen research topic(s). Also
keep and submit a log of tasks related to your own research to keep you on-task
and motivated. Students should be reading a minimum of 2 journal articles per
week, and skimming or reading the abstracts of several more. Towards the end of
the semester, you will turn in your WEEKLY LOGS as a Word file electronically.
Due Date: Each Week
PARTICIPATION AND DISCUSSION: CLASS (10%)
Your involvement (comments, ideas, questions, and experiences) in discussions
about readings and various facets of geographic research will improve the class
experience and result in a high participation grade. Unexcused absences or lack
of participation in other capacities will result in a low participation grade.
3
RESEARCH ASSIGNMENTS RELATED TO YOUR TOPICS (2, 20% total as follows)
Assignments intended to show components of how to design a research project
and to propel your towards your own research by giving you deadlines for
specific tasks.
TOPIC SELECTION AND DEVELOPMENT (10%)
Begin by choosing a subfield and potential research topics. Then develop at
least four research questions from these. Assess and discuss the viability of
each question based on resource, feasibility and other issues discussed in class
and then narrow down your list to the top two that would be “doable” within a
year and with $12,000 or less of funding (this number is chosen because of NSF
DDIG funding constraints). Find a minimum of three articles relevant to each of
your top two questions and list the complete citations. Discuss primary data
that would be collected and identify secondary data (from the internet, govt.
documents) that might complement your proposed study. Send a digital file of
your document to the instructor, who will post the papers for everybody to read.
We will discuss all ideas, and you will be the discussion leader for the
strengths and weaknesses of each of your ideas. Within one month from the start
of the semester, you will then have a few possible research questions to
investigate. These should be refined, improved, and fleshed out over the course
of the semester. Due Date: Week 4 meeting
The grading rubric is as follows: 20% thoughtfulness and originality of
ideas, having set a framework which identifies this as an important and unique
research problem by using appropriate narrative and citations from the
literature; 20% organization, structure and appearance including use of headings
and subheadings, consistency, 20% writing quality and grammar, aiming for
coherent sentences, appropriate sequence, use of transitions, free of errors,
20% quality, quantity, completeness of references and citations and coherence
with how the three selected relate to your proposed research questions, 20%
depth of discussion about primary data to be collected and secondary data used
including variables used, scale, spatial character, timing, frequency and length
of data, and other relevant data issues.
RESEARCH PAPER REVIEW (10%)
This is designed to create a working method by which you can synthesize
articles related to your research, now and possibly in the future. Find and
review two research papers that are published in peer-reviewed scientific
journals pertinent to your research topic. Use subheadings to structure your
review. Begin with a full citation of the article. You will evaluate objectives,
research hypotheses, variables, sampling, methods, results and interpretation,
graphics and tables, etc. For each article: 1) Discuss the initial idea(s),
objectives and/or hypotheses of the paper. What is the applied and theoretical
significance of this work?; 2) Discuss the key variables involved. What scale of
measurement is used for each? Are the operational definitions clear or unclear?
Are there changes or improvements that you would suggest? ; 3) Discuss the
chosen spatial and/or temporal sampling strategies for evaluating study
variables in the context of a designated research question. Are they appropriate
to answering the chosen question? Is there anything you would do differently?;
4) What is your opinion of the research methods being used?; 5) Discuss the
instruments and techniques used to measure the variables. Discuss whether a
similar study would be feasible for a student like yourself considering cost,
personnel, training and other issues; 6) What were the main results of the
study? Does the interpretation seem valid based on the data and analysis?; 7)
What is your opinion of the graphics and tables? Discuss any other comments
about what you think the author(s) did well and what you think the author(s)
could have done better. How would you suggest improving the research study?
Include a copy of each article. Due Date: Week 8 meeting
The grading rubric is as follows: 20% article selection…did you find two
helpful research articles in refereed journals that can be used as models to
evaluate sampling, variables, graphics, tables, etc.; 20% ability to pick out
key ideas, objectives, hypotheses, and significance; 20% discussion of sampling
issues, instruments and techniques; 20% discussion of results, interpretation,
and graphics; 20% overall critical review, organization, grammar, and inclusion
of article copies 4
PROPOSAL SUBMISSION IN NSF FORMAT (35%)
Prepare a 10-12 page proposal with budget according to NSF guidelines for DDI
(2 pages of figures with minimal text can be added to the 10 pages of narrative,
font sizes, margins, etc.). As discussed in class, a good proposal begins with
passion and a good idea, responds to a fundamental need, is informed by the
literature, enunciates its goals clearly, poses research questions, has a
well-developed research design, speculates about outcomes, discusses
significance and relevance, portrays excitement and enthusiasm, follows a
coherent structure, and instills confidence. In addition, there should be a
1-page project summary with explicitly includes a section on intellectual merit
and broader impacts. The budget page and one page biosketch should be attached
and are not counted in the 12 page limit. Use subheadings, bold, italics, to
help organize the proposal as discussed in class on week 4. E-mail to me so it
can be posted on the class website. Your grade is based on my evaluation, not
that of your peers, although I will review their comments. Due Date: Week
12
The grading rubric is as follows: Intellectual Merit (20%.) Is the research
topic/problem clearly stated?; Is there enough specificity to understand the
nature of work planned?; Does it advance knowledge within field or across
different fields?; Are the hypotheses clear, concise and specific?; Are creative
and original concepts brought forwards?; Literature Review and References (20%)
Is the research placed within its proper context or perspective?; Are the
hypotheses adequately tied to previous research?; Is there sufficient literature
cited to understand the relevant theories?; Is the literature summary adequate
in scope, detail and clarity?; Are there at least 20 references from refereed
journals?; Organization and Structure (20%) Is the proposal logically organized
and structured?; Are bold and italics used to bring attention to key
statements?; Are subheadings used so that the reader can find important
components?; Are the different facets of the project tied together?
Methods and Variables (20%) Are both the variables and findings of previous
research clearly explained?; Are the variables and concepts of the planned
research clearly explained?; Where will the data come from (primary or secondary
sources)? How is/will each be measured?; Has the spatial framework been clearly
defined? Is it appropriate for the given problem?; Are special instruments
required? Are there contingency plans for breakdowns, etc.?; For
questionnaires…does each question have a clear purpose and relation to a
hypothesis?; What statistical tests and models will be used?;
What are the data requirements of the statistical techniques?; Budget,
Timetable and Background (10%) Is the proposed time framework adequate for the
completion of this research?; Does the detailed timeline seem reasonable for the
components involved?; Are there any confounding situations associated with the
planned time framework?; Is there a contingency plan if problems occur?; Are
different components of the budget (salaries, travel, equipment, expense)
itemized?; Does the budget seem reasonable? Does it follow guidelines (what NSF
requires)?; Does the biosketch support the competence of the researcher? ;
Broader Impacts (10%) Does this promote teaching, training, and learning?; Does
this broaden the participation of underrepresented groups?; Does this enhance
the infrastructure for research and education? ; Will it be disseminated broadly
to enhance scientific and technological understanding?; Are the benefits to
society clearly stated?
PROPOSAL PANELIST (20%)
Everyone will be assigned 3 proposals to review. Make copies of each review
and e-mail an electronic version to the instructor. A good proposal review
summarizes the proposed project in a few sentences, notes strengths and
weaknesses in the fundamental ideas, literature review, data available or to be
collected, spatial and/or temporal sampling, methods, proposed analysis and
writing. It provides constructive suggestions and specific helpful comments
that, if addressed, will improve the proposed project or gives clear advice and
ratings in such a way that the author is not deluded about any shortcomings or
concerns. Each proposal review should be about one page in length, and written
using criteria and ratings discussed in class developed by the NSF (including
intellectual merit and broader impacts). A sample form will be disseminated
electronically. Panelists will participate on an in-class panel where each
proposal author leaves the classroom while their project is being discussed by
reviewers. One of those reviewers (assigned by instructor) will write the panel
summary. Reviewers will not be identified on the comments given back to the
proposal authors, and the ratings will be grouped by the instructor to maintain
confidentially. Due Date: Week 14 meeting 5
WEEKLY AGENDA AND READINGS
7 January: Week 1
INTRODUCTION TO RESEARCH -- 6-slide
Handout of presentation
Introduction to the class, semester and syllabus
Background ideas on research
Good and bad practices in research: A card game
READINGS: Read the list for each week in advance of class (see Week 2). For
this week, read Firestein, S. 2012. Ignorance: How It Drives Science. Oxford
University Press, Oxford, UK. 195 pp.
14 January: Week 2 RESEARCH
QUESTIONS, SUBFIELDS, LITERATURE SEARCHES IN GEOGRAPHY -- 6-slide
Handout of Presentation.
How to start developing a good research question.
Discussion about readings
Effective literature searches and key words
Writing a literature review
Secondary data sources
READINGS:
Hillel, D., 1987, On the tortuous path of research: Soil Science, v. 143(4),
pp. 304-5.
Chapter 1, Thinking About Research, pp. 1-28 in Kitchin, R. and Tate, N.J.,
2000, Conducting Research in Human Geography: Theory, Methodology and Practice,
Prentice Hall/Pearson Education Ltd., Harlow, England, 330 pp. (ISBN
0-582-29797-4).
Chapter 1 (Thinking about Research, pp. 1-20) and Chapter 4 (Reading for
Research, pp. 92-116), in Blaxter, L., Hughes, C., and Tight, M., 2006, How to
Research, Open University Press, Buckingham, UK.
Chapter 12 (References in Detail: How Many and How Recent?) in Friedman and
Folt. 2009. Writing Successful Science Proposals. 2ndEd. Yale
University Press
Reading from http://www.criticalthinking.org/ (How to Read); begin with http://www.criticalthinking.org/pages/critical-thinking-the-art-of-close-reading-part-one/509.
Randolph, J. 2009. A Guide to Writing the Dissertation Literature Review.
Practical Assessment Research & Evaluation, 14(13). Available
online: http://pareonline.net/getvn.asp?v=14&n=13.
Chapter 3 (Section 5), Obtaining and Using Secondary Data, pp. 60-69 in
Kitchin, R. and Tate, N.J., 2000, Conducting Research in Human Geography:
Theory, Methodology and Practice, Prentice Hall/Pearson Education Ltd., Harlow,
England, 330 pp. (ISBN 0-582-29797-4).
Coffin
2007 - a dissertation literature review that was also a publishable journal
article.
21 JANUARY - HOLIDAY
28 January: Week 3 TOPIC
SELECTION AND EARLY CONSIDERATIONS; SECONDARY DATA; 6-slide
handout of presentation pdf
Discussion about readings
Early considerations in research
Topics: scope, feasibility, assumptions
Research hypotheses and conceptual models
READINGS:
Chapter 2 (Getting Started, pp. 21-52) and Chapter 3 (Thinking about Methods,
pp. 53-98) and Chapter 4 (Reading for Research, pp. 99-131) in Blaxter, L.,
Hughes, C., and Tight, M., 2006, How to Research, Open University Press,
Buckingham, UK, 260 pp.
Chapter 2, Planning a Research Project, pp. 28-44 in Kitchin, R. and Tate,
N.J., 2000, Conducting Research in Human Geography: Theory, Methodology and
Practice, Prentice Hall/Pearson Education Ltd., Harlow, England, 330 pp. (ISBN
0-582-29797-4).
Chapter 1: Obtaining Scientific Information, pp. 1-31, Valiela, I., 2009,
Doing Science: Design, Analysis and Communication of Scientific Research, Oxford
University Press, Oxford, UK, 352 pp.
Theory, Background and History, Research Question (From U. California
Berkeley) 6
3 February: Week 4 SCIENTIFIC ETHICS
Class discussion of on selecting and developing topics (discussion of Asst.
1)
Guo
topics and research questions
Hernandez
topics and research questions
Mueller
topics and research questions
Nekorchuk
topics and research questions; Nekorchuk
references
Rundel
topics and research questions
Tang
topics and research questions
Yao
topics and research questions
ASSIGNMENT due (Topic selection and development)
Begin discussion about scientific ethics.
READINGS:
National
Academies of Science, Engineering and Medicine, 2009, On Being a Scientist: a
Guide to Responsible Conduct in Research. Third Edition, Committee on Science,
Engineering, and Public Policy (COSEPUP), free download available for
personal use.
University of Florida draft,
proposed regulations on research misconduct.
Use this week to read and research about your likely research topic, and to
select, refine and/or revise your research questions and approaches.
11 February: Week 5 PROPOSALS: AN INSIDE PERSPECTIVE
Discussion about readings - scientific ethics.
Where to look for funding
Presentations created by NSF Program Officers: Gholz: The
Nitty-Gritty: Tips for a Better NSF Proposal; Bauer
and Baerwald: Proposal Development and Evaluation. {NOTE THAT WE WILL
GO OVER THIS PRESENTATION IN CLASS}
NSF
Proposal and Award Policies and Procedures 2013 (formerly the Grant Proposal
Guide);
NASA
ROSES (Research Opportunities in Space and Earth Sciences) via NSPIRES (NASA Solicitation and
Proposal Integrated Review and Evaluation System); NOTE: This is for ROSES
2012. ROSES 2013 is scheduled for release on 14 February 2013.
Review DSR FYI & other sources of announcements: UF Office of Research; UF Division of Sponsored
Research; UF Research
Program Development Office; Proposal Processing and
Pre-Award Services;
Proposal Development
Proposal Evaluation
The tasks of panelists and panels
READINGS:
Chapter 7 (Section 3, The Proposal): Other Means of Scientific Communication,
pp. 174-185, Valiela, I., 2009, Doing Science: Design, Analysis and
Communication of Scientific Research, Oxford University Press, Oxford, UK, 352
pp.
Hengl, T. and Gould, M., 2002. Rules of thumb for writing research articles.
http://www.slideshare.net/alena_romanenko/hengl-gould-2002-rules-of-thumb-of-writing-a-research-article
Examples of reviews (of DDIG proposals): Pricope
NSF DDIG Proposal; Pricope
NSF Context Statement; Pricope
NSF Panel Statement; Pricope
Review 1; Pricope
Review 2; Pricope
Review 3
Example of reviews (of complicated, collaborative proposal by senior
scientists): Cambodia-Mekong_2010_Proposal;
Panel
Statement 1, Panel
Statement 2, Review
1, Review
2, Review
3, Review
4, Review
5, Review
6, Review
7, Review
8
18 February: Week
6 More on Proposals and then VARIABLES
More about Proposals from NSF Program Directors
Discussion about readings
Variables and levels of measurement
Conceptual and operational definitions
Accuracy, precision, validity, reliability
Data categorization and classification
Cause and effect, dependence/independence
RELATED READINGS:
Chapter 2: Elements of Scientific Data and Tests of Questions, pp. 32-51,
Valiela, I., 2009, Doing Science: Design, Analysis and Communication of
Scientific Research, Oxford University Press, Oxford, UK, 352 pp.
Chapter 3, Section 2, Classifying data types and measurement scales, pp.
45-47, in Kitchin, R. and Tate, N.J., 2000, Conducting Research in Human
Geography: Theory, Methodology and Practice, Prentice Hall/Pearson Education
Ltd., Harlow, England, 330 pp. (ISBN 0-582-29797-4).
Concepts
and Terminology, Research Design (From U. California Berkeley) 7
25 February: Week 7 PROJECT PLANNING AND SAMPLING
Discussion about readings
Project components and tasks
Spatial geographic concepts and sampling issues
Temporal sampling issues in geography
Instruments, sampling tools and techniques
RELATED READINGS:
Chapter 5, Managing Your Project, pp. 117-140 in Blaxter, L., Hughes, C., and
Tight, M., 2006, How to Research, Open University Press, Buckingham, UK.
Chapter 4: Principles of Research Design, pp. 84-105, Valiela, I., 2009,
Doing Science: Design, Analysis and Communication of Scientific Research, Oxford
University Press, Oxford, UK, 352 pp.
Chapter 3, Section 4, Sampling, estimation, and distribution, pp. 53-61, in
Kitchin, R. and Tate, N.J., 2000, Conducting Research in Human Geography:
Theory, Methodology and Practice, Prentice Hall/Pearson Education Ltd., Harlow,
England, 330 pp. (ISBN 0-582-29797-4).
4 MARCH SPRING BREAK
11 March: Week 8 QUESTIONNAIRES AND HUMAN CHARACTERISTICS
Titles: Good, Bad, and Ugly
ASSIGNMENT due (Research Paper Reviews)
Discussion about readings
Presentation:
Human subjects and IRBs
Interviewing strategies and pitfalls
Questionnaire issues
Reviewing
a sample questionnaire
RELATED READINGS:
Chapter 6 (Collecting Data, pp. 152-172) and Chapter 7 (Analyzing Data, pp.
173-206) in Blaxter, L., Hughes, C., and Tight, M., 2006, How to Research, Open
University Press, Buckingham, UK.
Chapter 3, Section 3, Generating Primary Quantitative Data, pp. 47-53 in
Kitchin, R. and Tate, N.J., 2000, Conducting Research in Human Geography:
Theory, Methodology and Practice, Prentice Hall/Pearson Education Ltd., Harlow,
England, 330 pp.
18 March: Week 9 DATA PRESENTATION, STATISTICS AND INTERPRETATION
Discussion about readings
Presentation:
Figures: Graphs and charts, maps and other diagrams, Descriptive statistics;
Inferential statistics and hypothesis testing
RELATED READINGS:
Chapters 8-10: Presenting Data in Tables, Presenting Data in Figures, Case
studies of Graphical Data Presentation (pp. 187-273) and Chapter 3: Statistical
Analysis (pp. 52-83) in Valiela, I., 2009, Doing Science: Design, Analysis and
Communication of Scientific Research, Oxford University Press, Oxford, UK, 352
pp.
Chapters 4-6 (Chap 4: Preparing, exploring and describing quantitative data;
Chap 5: Analysing and interpreting quantitative data; Chap. 6: Spatial
analysis), pp. 70-210, Kitchin, R. and Tate, N.J., 2000, Conducting Research in
Human Geography: Theory, Methodology and Practice, Prentice Hall/Pearson
Education Ltd., Harlow, England, 330 pp. (ISBN 0-582-29797-4). 8
25 March: Week 10 WRITING
AND ORAL PRESENTATION IN GEOGRAPHY
Discussion about readings
Preparing graphics for oral presentation
Good qualities in an oral presentation
Good
scientific poster design from Cornell
Scientific writing
Journal quality and rankings
The tasks of reviewers and editors
Discuss of current status of individual projects
RELATED READINGS:
Chapter 8 (Writing Up, pp. 226-254) and Chapter 9 (Finishing Off, pp.
255-279) and Chapter 7 in Blaxter, L., Hughes, C., and Tight, M., 2006, How to
Research, Open University Press, Buckingham, UK.
Chapter 7 : Other Means of Scientific Communication, pp. 163-186, Chapter 5:
Communication of Scientific Information: Writing, pp. 107-137, and Chapter 6:
Communicating Scientific Information: The Scientific Paper, pp. 138-161,
Valiela, I., 2009, Doing Science: Design, Analysis and Communication of
Scientific Research, Oxford University Press, Oxford, UK, 352 pp.
Chapter 10, Writing-up and dissemination, pp. 270-289 in Kitchin, R. and
Tate, N.J., 2000, Conducting Research in Human Geography: Theory, Methodology
and Practice, Prentice Hall/Pearson Education Ltd., Harlow, England, 330 pp.
(ISBN 0-582-29797-4).
Schulman,
E. R. 1996, "How to Write a Scientific Paper, Annals of Improbable Research,
Vol. 2, No. 5 (1996).
Hengl, T. and Gould, M., 2002. Rules of thumb for writing research articles.
http://www.slideshare.net/alena_romanenko/hengl-gould-2002-rules-of-thumb-of-writing-a-research-article
Reading from http://www.criticalthinking.org/ (How to Write)
1 April: Week 11 POLISHING THE PROPOSAL
Meeting
for final proposal submission: Questions and Answers presentation
Grant
Proposal Guide: Proposal Preparation Instructions pp II-1 to II-41
Continued discussion of last week’s readings
Biosketches
and Budgeting from NSF GPG 2013
Timeline
and Budgeting
(From U. California Berkeley)
UF
F&A (indirect costs) agreement
Example
budget justification (beware - this is more complicated than you will
use)
8 April: Week 12 PROPOSAL REVIEW
ASSIGNMENT due (Proposals with Biosketches)
At home: Read and review 3 proposals based on instructor’s assignment
Merit
Review Principles from NSF Grant Proposal Guide
DO NOT DISCLOSE YOUR ASSIGNMENTS/OPINIONS TO OTHERS
DO NOT DISCUSS PROPOSALS OUTSIDE THE CLASSROOM
15 April: Week 13 PROPOSAL EVALUATION: QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
NSF
Guide to Proposal Reviewers
Reviewer
Guidelines for Class (from NSF and stuff you have been seeing in the
presentations)
Proposal
Reviewer Form
Presentations
slides on how to be a reviewer and a panelist
22 April: Week 14 IN-CLASS PANEL REVIEW-PART I
ASSIGNMENT due (Proposal Reviews)
ASSIGNMENT due (Log of weekly readings and research task lists)
Additional Information
Honor Code: Students are expected to abide by the UF honor code and ethical
conduct, listed on the following website:
http://www.dso.ufl.edu/studentguide/studenthonorcode.php
Students with disabilities: Students requesting classroom accommodation must
first register with the Dean of Students Office. The Dean of Students Office
will provide documentation to the student who must then provide this
documentation to the Instructor when requesting accommodation.
Other Concerns: Please be aware that the University Counseling Center
(392-1575), the Student Health Care Center (392-1161) and Student Mental Health
(392-1171) can assist students as they work through personal, academic and
social issues. Please take care of your health and watch for swine flu symptoms
and other contagious diseases. Provide advance notice and obtain documentation
for excused absences where possible. Please keep your cell phones off during
class time.