2011/2012 KAN-CBL_RMWS Research Methods and Writing Strategies
English Title | |
Research Methods and Writing Strategies |
Course Information | |
Language | English |
Point | 7,5 ECTS (225 SAT) |
Type | Mandatory |
Level | Full Degree Master |
Duration | One Semester |
Time Table | Please see course schedule at e-Campus |
Study Board |
Study Board for BSc og MSc in Business, Language and Culture |
Course Coordinator | |
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Main Category of the Course | |
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Last updated on 29 maj 2012 |
Learning Objectives | |||||||||||||||||
Each course session will present material to enhance student knowledge, understanding and insight regarding the domains specified above. Thus, by the end of this course students should be able to
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Course Content | |||||||||||||||||
This required course (hereafter, “RMWS”) ensures that students pursuing their Master’s course of studies have ample opportunity to learn, review, refine and, if need be, remediate the insights and skills needed to craft, conduct, complete, and successfully defend research for a Master’s thesis written in English at Copenhagen Business School (CBS). Because the degree aims at practical career success, the role, function, and evaluation of the consulting endeavor is also introduced and rehearsed. Research and communications strategies are grounded in research methods. The course design acknowledges the methods instruction given in the undergraduate research-oriented participatory education programs of Asian Studies (ASP) and Business, Language, and Culture (BLC) of Copenhagen Business School. Through this, we hope to build upon the undergraduate studies experience of all Master’s students. If students come to their Master’s studies from other undergraduate programs, we will incorporate diverse undergraduate studies experience as a matter of course. The skills sets for the course can be grouped as follows: 1. Research methods skills: concern knowledge, insight, and judgment regarding the philosophical and social scientific grounds for conducting valid and reliable research. This grounding provides the reflective and reflexive ability to assess research issues and craft appropriate qualitative and quantitative means for their assessment. Qualitative and quantitative skills: These are part of our approach to research methods and concern the ability to validly and reliably assess the numerical, qualitative, and even ethical - aesthetic aspects of research issues and concepts. Issues of generalization will, in respect to quantitative variables, involve a correct understanding of sampling, the grounds for making statistical inference, and a discerning knowledge of the various statistical procedures in common use, including multiple regression. 2. English language research-oriented communications skills: address the ability to successfully consider, discuss, and craft research issues, engage in consultative discourse and planning, and report research outcomes for both academic and consulting ends. 3. Consulting skills: involve the practitioner’s ability to both conduct and evaluate external investigations for organizational goals. This ability involves knowledge of research methods deployed in a particular, focused manner that necessarily raise ethical and other evaluative questions and norms. | |||||||||||||||||
Teaching Methods | |||||||||||||||||
Written language and content feedback: A particular evaluative feature of the course is the opportunity for individual feedback on the quality of one’s submitted English. Class and specialization (BADS/LMS) feedback session are in the schedule to address common language and content issues as instructors discover them. In addition, two rounds of individual feedback about written language performance are allotted, each to take approximately 15 minutes per student. > Individual feedback queries on specific matters of content can be taken up by scheduling an appointment with the appropriate course instructor or coordinator. | |||||||||||||||||
Literature | |||||||||||||||||
Required and recommended readings:
> This is the central, most important text for the course. Each lecture should be evidently grounded in the assigned readings from this text and build upon that material when appropriate. The statistics section, in particular, is sufficient for the skills competency stated earlier in this Course Description.
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