Top Navigation

REQUEST A FREE QUOTE

 

SUBMISSION FORM

You may also submit using the cut-and-paste option below.

Remember to attach your draft and any committee comments.

Answer all questions completely to prevent delays.

2013@DissertationWriting.com

Alternate: DissertationProposals@gmail.com

Home

(01) Your name:

(02) E-mail addresses:
(Servers are quirky, and e-mails often bounce. Please provide secondary e-mail address.)

(03) Day/evening phone numbers
(in case the response to your e-mail bounces or the editors need clarification regarding the scope of service needed, deadline, etc.):

(04) City, State, Country (or time zone):

(05) Which of our services do you need?

  • Rewriting (for example, for language clarity, help incorporating committee suggestions)
  • Developmental editing / content advisement / organizing presentation of research
  • Research guidance, review of research
  • Statistical analysis
  • Indexing
  • General consultation / defense
  • Copyediting / formatting

Ethical Limits: Our editors will not perform research or write original content for students, and our statisticians will not answer homework or test questions.

(06) Is this the proposal or the final thesis/dissertation?

(07) What is your hypothesis, topic, and thesis statement?

(08) What is your college/university and academic department?

(09) When is your deadline for this portion? When is your deadline for the completion of the entire project?

(10) Currently, how many pages have you completed? How many pages are required for your final product?

(11) Does your work need to be in a particular format (e.g., Chicago, Turabian, APA, MLA)?

(12) What are your needs with regard to figures/tables/charts?

(13) Will your advisor be working with you from scratch or from a prior draft?

(14) What is your budget for the entire project/consulting arrangement?

(15) The name(s) of the advisors(s) you'd like to contact:

(16) How did you learn about our service? (e.g., name of website, name of search engine)

Attach a writing sample. Your name must appear in the document you submit, or it can be the name of the document (e.g., joesmith.doc).


Once your e-mail is received, the coordinator will forward it (plus any attached files) to the advisor(s) you selected. If no selection is made, the coordinator will send your submission to advisor(s) in your field of study or to advisors/editors who provide the services you have requested. If you require copyediting and formatting, your submission may be rerouted to an affiliated network of academic editing specialists.

Please allow the consultants a few hours to respond if you sent your request before 5pm US eastern time. Allow a longer response time if you sent your request after U.S. business hours or during the weekend.

If you do not get a response within 3 hours (during business hours), please use the chat button or page the network coordinator at: 469-789-3030.

The chat/voicemail system is not intended for initial submissions. The coordinator can confirm if a submission was/was not received. The coordinator cannot quote prices and turnaround times for the freelance consultants listed on this site.

Any service agreement entered into is with your consultant, not with the network as a whole or its coordinator.

THESIS AND DISSERTATION
WRITING CONSULTANTS
AND EDITORS

  • Lynetta Campbell: SPSS, SAS, JMP, R, logistic regression, exploratory data analysis, engineering data analysis, linear modeling, quantitative modeling, quantitative forecasting, hierarchical modeling, regression methods, qualitative survey data, linear model analysis
  • B Collins: applied social psychology, research methods and assessments, communications, criminal justice, culture/ethnicity, empirical research, ethics/morality, health, interpersonal processes, organizational behavior, person perception, social influence, prejudice/stereotyping.
  • Margaret Eaton: theology, classical Hebrew; Old Testament, Koine Greek, New Testament.
  • Debra Fisher: distributed learning, higher education, instructional technology, distance learning.
  • Val Gerard: medical copywriter, biology, botany, chemistry, ecology, environmental policy, environmental science, evolutionary biology, geography, geology, marine science, medicine, oceanography, physiology, veterinary medicine, zoology, and related scientific fields.
  • Tom Granoff: multivariate statistics, behavioral sciences, data processing, marketing research, forensic psychology, research design, SPSS, survey research, medical research, web-based surveys, quantitative methods, focus groups, interviewing techniques, qualitative methods, correlational analysis, research methodologist, ANOVA, MANOVA, logistic regression, multiple regression, discriminant function analysis, factor analysis, methods chapter editing, final oral examination preparation.
  • Jeff Karon: English, rhetoric, literature, composition, philosophy, critical thinking, logic, literary studies.
  • Vicki Lawrence: biostatistics, research methodologies, public health, epidemiology research, data set management, NHANES.
  • Gary Michaels: Sociology, Criminal Justice, Criminology, Deviance, Social Control, Juvenile Delinquency, Social Problems, Qualitative Methods, Law Enforcement and Victimology.
  • Julie Ohlander: demography, criminology, psychology, sociology, urban planning.
  • Elizabeth Pearman: educational psychology, educational program evaluation, education research methods.
  • Wes Russell: Statistical Data Analysis, Mathematical Statistician, Business Data Analyist, Research Statistician, Analysis of Data, Statistical Consulting for Graduate Students.
  • Chris Tomei: Slavic studies, humanities, computational linguistics, linguistic theory, Russian, comparative literature, folklore, modernism and women's studies, international relations, comparative culture, indexer of scholarly books.
  • Barbara von Diether: research strategies, scholarly writing, education administration, education technology, secondary education, curriculum development, needs assessment, education leadership, instructional design, instructional media, advertising, business administration, business management, business and educational leadership training and development, communications.

    INDEXER

  • Madge Wallace is a professional freelance indexer. She creates indexes found at the back of nonfiction books. When an index is done according to generally accepted indexing standards, it performs flawlessly. The reader finds what he is looking for and doesn’t give the index a second thought. On the other hand, if the index is poorly done, the reader becomes frustrated and will likely move on to the next book. Worse yet, a nonfiction book published without an index may not be taken seriously by the publishing industry. In short, a good index enhances the value of a book to readers, reviewers, librarians, instructors, and researchers. It is a mark of a serious book.

 CAPSTONE, THESIS, DISSERTATION WRITING

DATA ANALYSTS - RESEARCH STATISTICIANS

THESIS AND DISSERTATION EDITORS:
APA WRITING STYLE -- APA EDITING

ARTICLES

Surviving a Bad Advisor

Language Evolution: Scholarly and Academic Writing

Business Writing 101

Dissertations, Theses, Research Proposals: The Literature Review

Does Your Editor Need to Be an Expert in Your Field?

Getting Published in Peer-Reviewed Journals

How to Write a Doctoral Dissertation

Buying Custom Papers—Plagiarism: It's Kidnapping

Steps in Writing a Science Thesis or Dissertation

Using Qualitative Methods in Sociology, Criminal Justice and Criminology Inquiries

Dissertation Writing in Criminal Justice and Criminology

 

Our consultants assist students to focus on a specific gap in the knowledge and meet
the requirements in this chapter needed to defend the choice of that gap.

Chapter 1, with a highly focused review of the literature, and is normally the “prospectus” that a committee approves before the “proposal” to start research is approved.  After the prospectus is approved, some of the review of literature may be moved into Chapter 2, which then becomes part of the proposal to do research.  

Chapter 1 is the engine that drives the rest of the document, and it must be a complete empirical argument as is found in courts of law.  It should be filled with proofs throughout.  It is not a creative writing project in a creative writing class; hence, once a word or phrase is established in Chapter 1, use the same word or phrase throughout the dissertation.  The content is normally stylized into five chapters, repetitive in some sections from dissertation to dissertation. A lengthy dissertation may have more than five chapters, but regardless, most universities limit the total number of pages to 350 due to microfilming and binding considerations in libraries in those institutions requiring hard copies.

Use plenty of transitional words and sentences from one section to another, as well as subheadings, which allow the reader to follow the writer’s train of thought.  Following is an outline of the content of the empirical argument of Chapter 1. Universities often arrange the content in a different order, but the subject matter is the same in all dissertations because it is an empirical “opening statement” as might be found in a court of law. (Note that a dissertation could also be five pages of text and 50 pages of pictures of dragonfly wings and qualify for a Doctor’s degree in entomology.)

Introductory Paragraph

State the general field of interest in one or two paragraphs, and end with a sentence that states what study will accomplish. Do not keep the reader waiting to find out the precise subject of the dissertation.

Background of the Problem

This section is critically important as it must contain some mention of all the subject matter in the following Chapter 2 Review of the Literature 2 and the methodology in Chapter 3. Key words should abound that will subsequently be used again in Chapter 2. The section is a brief  two to four page summary of the major findings in the field of interest that cites the most current finding in the subject area. A minimum of two to three citations to the literature per paragraph is advisable. The paragraphs must be a summary of unresolved issues, conflicting findings, social concerns, or educational, national, or international issues, and lead to the next section, the statement of the problem. The problem is the gap in the knowledge. The focus of the Background of the Problem is where a gap in the knowledge is found in the current body of empirical (research) literature.

Statement of the Problem

Arising from the background statement is this statement of the exact gap in the knowledge discussed in previous paragraphs that reviewed the most current literature found. A gap in the knowledge is the entire reason for the study, so state it specifically and exactly. Use the words “gap in the knowledge.” The problem statement will contain a definition of the general need for the study, and the specific problem that will be addressed.

Purpose of the Study

The Purpose of the Study is a statement contained within one or two paragraphs that identifies the research design, such as qualitative, quantitative, mixed methods, ethnographic, or another design. The research variables, if a quantitative study, are identified, for instance, independent, dependent, comparisons, relationships, or other variables. The population that will be used is identified, whether it will be randomly or purposively chosen, and the location of the study is summarized. Most of these factors will be discussed in detail in Chapter 3.

Significance of the Study

The significance is a statement of why it is important to determine the answer to the gap in the knowledge, and is related to improving the human condition. The contribution to the body of knowledge is described, and summarizes who will be able to use the knowledge to make better decisions, improve policy, advance science, or other uses of the new information. The “new” data is the information used to fill the gap in the knowledge.

Primary Research Questions

The primary research question is the basis for data collection and arises from the Purpose of the Study. There may be one, or there may be several. When the research is finished, the contribution to the knowledge will be the answer to these questions. Do not confuse the primary research questions with interview questions in a qualitative study, or survey questions in a quantitative study. The research questions in a qualitative study are followed by both a null and an alternate hypothesis.

Hypotheses

A hypothesis is a testable prediction for an observed phenomenon, namely, the gap in the knowledge. Each research question will have both a null and an alternative hypothesis in a quantitative study. Qualitative studies do not have hypotheses. The two hypotheses should follow the research question upon which they are based. Hypotheses are testable predictions to the gap in the knowledge. In a qualitative study the hypotheses are replaced with the primary research questions.

Research Design

In Chapter 1 this is a summary of the methodology and contains a brief outline of three things: (a) the participants in a qualitative study or thesubjects of a quantitative study (human participants are referred tyo as participants, non-human subjects are referred to as subjects), (b) the instrumentation used to collect data, and (c) the procedure that will be followed. All of these elements will be reported in detail in Chapter 3. In a quantitative study, the instrumentation will be validated in Chapter 3 in detail. In a qualitative study, if it is a researcher-created questionnaire, validating the correctness of the interview protocol is usually accomplished with a pilot study.  For either a quantitative or a qualitative study, using an already validated survey instrument is easier to defend and does not require a pilot study; however, Chapter 3 must contain a careful review of the instrument and how it was validated by the creator.

In a qualitative study, which usually involves interviews, the instrumentation is an interview protocol – a pre-determined set of questions that every participant is asked that are based on the primary research questions.  A qualitative interview should contain no less than 10 open-ended questions and take no less than 1 hour to administer to qualify as “robust” research. 

In the humanities, a demographic survey should be circulated with most quantitative and qualitative studies to establish the parameters of the participant pool. Demographic surveys are nearly identical in most dissertations. In the sciences, a demographic survey is rarely needed.

Theoretical Framework

The theoretical framework is the foundational theory that is used to provide a perspective upon which the study is based. There are hundreds of theories in the literature.  For instance, if a study in the social sciences is about stress that may be causing teachers to quit, Apple’s Intensification Theory could be cited as the theory was that stress is cumulative and the result of continuing overlapping, progressively stringent responsibilities for teachers that eventually leads to the desire to quit. In the sciences, research about new species that may have evolved from older, extinct species would be based on the theory of evolution pioneered by Darwin.

Some departments put the theoretical framework explanation in Chapter 1; some put it in Chapter 2.

Assumptions, Limitations, and Scope (Delimitations)

Assumptions are self-evident truths.  In a qualitative study, it may be assumed that participants be highly qualified in the study is about administrators.  It can be assumed that participants will answer truthfully and accurately to the interview questions based on their personal experience, and that participants will respond honestly and to the best of their individual abilities.

Limitations of a study are those things over which the research has no control. Evident limitations are potential weaknesses of a study. Researcher biases and perceptual misrepresentations are potential limitations in a qualitative study; in a quantitative study, a limitation may be the capability of an instrument to accurately record data.

Scope is the extent of the study and contains measurements. In a qualitative study this would include the number of participants, the geographical location, and other pertinent numerical data. In a quantitative study the size of the elements of the experiment are cited. The generalizability of the study may be cited. The word generalizability, which is not in the Word 2007 dictionary, means the extent to which the data are applicable in places other than where the study took place, or under what conditions the study took place.

Delimitations are limitations on the research design imposed deliberately by the researcher. Delimitations in a social sciences study would be such things as the specific school district where a study took place, or in a scientific study, the number of repetitions.

Definition of Terms

The definition of terms is written for knowledgeable peers, not people from other disciplines As such, it is not the place to fill pages with definitions that knowledgeable peers would know at a glance. Instead, define terms that may have more than one meaning among knowledgeable peers.

Summary

Summarize the content of Chapter 1 and preview of content of Chapter 2.

 

 

Source: Barbara von Diether, EdD