TY - BOOK AU - Greetham,Bryan TI - How to write your undergraduate dissertation T2 - Palgrave study skills SN - 9781137389763 U1 - 808.066 GRE PY - 2014/// CY - Basingstoke PB - Palgrave Macmillan KW - Dissertations, Academic KW - Authorship KW - Academic writing N1 - Previous edition: 2009; Includes bibliographical references (page 389) and index; Examiners and supervisors. Examiners: What are they looking for? -- Working with your supervisor -- Generating and developing original ideas. What activities suit you best? -- Types of research -- What interests you most? -- Generating your own ideas 1: using trigger questions -- Generating your own ideas 2: Perspectives and levels -- Developing your ideas 1: Causal relations -- Developing your ideas 2: Conceptual relations -- Original questions and hypotheses 1: Using analogies -- Original questions and hypotheses 2: Working with your structures -- Deciding on your project. Searching the literature 1: Knowing what to look for -- Searching the literature 2: How to search -- Choosing the topic -- Organizing your work. Planning your research -- Managing your time -- Your retrieval system -- Reading -- Note-taking -- Doing your research. Qualitative and quantitative research -- Secondary sources -- Primary sources 1: Quantitative research -- Primary sources 2: Designing and distributing your questionnaire -- Primary sources 3: Qualitative research- interviews and focus groups -- Primary sources 4: Qualitative research- case studies and observations -- Planning your dissertation. The main components and introduction -- The literature review -- Research methods, findings, conclusion and appendices -- Organizing your thinking. Developing consistent arguments 1: The components -- Developing consistent arguments 2: The connections -- Using evidence 1: Describing it -- Using evidence 2: Drawing inferences -- Using evidence 3: Creating causal connections -- Using language 1: Clarity- jargon -- Using language 2: Clarity-manipulative words -- Using language 3: Clarity- consistency -- Writing your dissertation. The first draft -- Style 1: Finding your own voice -- Style 2: Simplicity and economy -- Plagiarism, referencing and bibliographies. Plagiarism -- Referencing and bibliographies -- Editing. Revision 1: The structure -- Revision 2: The content N2 - Unlike any other book this teaches students how to generate their own ideas and develop them into original research projects. Using examples from all disciplines, it not only teaches students how to plan and research using all the qualitative and quantitative techniques and instruments, but also how to construct arguments and use evidence and language consistently. Throughout it emphasizes that writing is the most difficult form of thinking and dissertations are a test of our ability both to think and write clearly ER -