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SISAT
School of Information Systems and Technology
Faculty of Informatics
Subject Outline
Autumn Session 2007
Head of School –Associate Professor Peter Hyland, Student Resource Centre, Tel: (02) 4221 3606
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Subject Co-ordinator: |
Associate Professor Peter Hyland |
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Co-ordinator’s Telephone Number: |
(02) 4221 3759 |
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Email: |
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Location: |
39.150F |
Peter Hyland’s Consultation Times During Session:
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Day |
Time |
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Tuesday |
10.30am - 12.30pm |
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Wednesday |
10.30am – 12.30pm |
These times are subject to variation. If they are permanently altered, students will be notified in lectures.
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Session: |
Autumn Session, Wollongong Campus |
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Credit Points: |
6 credit points |
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Contact hours per week: |
2 hours workshop/seminar |
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Lecture Times & Location: |
Lecture Monday 16:30 - 18:30, 19.1001 |
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Tutorial Time &Location |
No tutorials for this subject |
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Associated subjects |
All students enrolled in this subject MUST be enrolled in IACT950 (see coordinator) |
This subject covers the purpose of research, formulating a research question, conducting a literature review and writing a research proposal. Students will learn how to design an appropriate research plan. Requirements for scholarly writing will also be discussed and the process of undertaking a research project will be analysed.
Upon completion of the student will be able to:
Attendance Requirements
It is the responsibility of students to attend all lectures/tutorials/labs/seminars/practical work for subjects for which you are enrolled.
Attendance and participation in lectures, tutorials and web-mediated activities is a requirement for the successful completion of this course. Failure to do so may result in a fail grade being recorded. A good indicator of satisfactory attendance is approximately 80% of the allocated contact hours. Attendance per se is not an assessable component of the course.
It should be noted that according to Course Rule 003{Interpretation Point 2 (t)} each credit point for a single session subject has the value of about two hours per week including class attendance. Therefore, the amount of time spent on each 6 credit point subject should be at least 12 hours per week, which includes lectures/tutorials/labs etc
Satisfactory attendance is deemed to be attendance at approximately 80%* of the allocated contact hours. Attendance rolls may be kept for lectures. If you are present for less than 80%* you need to apply for special consideration, otherwise a fail grade may be recorded.
The subject coordinator may invite guest speakers to present specialised topics as part of the lecture schedule. To accommodate these guest speakers and other unforeseen events, the lecture schedule below may change from time to time. Students will be notified of any such changes either on the UOW e-Learning site for this subject, in tutorials or both.
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Week |
Date |
Topic |
Comments |
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1 |
26 Feb |
Introduction to subject Research as a process & annotated bibliography |
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2 |
5 Mar |
Research Concepts & Library Resources |
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3 |
12 Mar |
Research Concepts & Literature Review - Structure |
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4 |
19 Mar |
Ethics |
Annotated Bibliography |
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5 |
26 Mar |
Methods 1 |
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6 |
2 Apr |
Methods 2 |
Research Proposal Due |
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R e c e sS: 9 April - 13 April |
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7 |
16 Apr |
Methods 3 |
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8 |
23 Apr |
Literature Review - Peer review |
Literature Review Due |
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9 |
30 Apr |
Writing up your thesis |
Methodology Due |
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10 |
7 May |
Presentation Skills |
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11 |
14 May |
First Student Presentations - Your Project to-date |
Presentations commence |
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12 |
21 May |
Second Student Presentations - Your Project to-date |
Paper review |
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13 |
28 May |
Final Student presentations & Summing Up |
Final submission due |
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STUDY RECESS: 4 June – 8 June |
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A series of lectures/workshops will be conducted on research methodology. An outline of topics covered is presented below including information relating to assessment. Further details will be provided in tutorials and on the UOW e-Learning site for this subject.
Subject Materials
Robert Y. Cavanna; Brian L. Delahaye; Uma Sekaran. Applied business research: qualitative and quantitative methods. Australian edition. Milton, Qld.: John Wiley, 2001.
David Evans. How to write a better thesis or report. Carlton, Vic.: Melbourne University Press, 1995.
These readings/references are recommended only and are not intended to be an exhaustive list. Students are encouraged to use the library catalogue and databases to locate additional readings
This subject has the following assessment components:
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Assessment Items & Format |
Percentage of Final Mark |
Due Date |
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1. Annotated Bibliography |
10% |
19 March |
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2 Research Proposal (Introduction) |
20% |
2 April |
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3 Literature Review |
20% |
23 April |
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4 Methodology |
20% |
30 April |
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5 Student presentation |
10% |
14 May – 28 May |
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6 Research Paper Review |
10% |
21 May |
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7. Final submission - Introduction (NOT a research proposal) - Literature Review - Methodology Chapter - Bibliography |
10% |
28 May* |
* See the note on Timing of Assessment Tasks below
This subject is intended to assist with the writing of the first three chapters of IACT950 Research Reports or other thesis. By concurrently working on the content (product) as well as the process, it is hoped that the underlying research methodologies will become apparent to each student either directly (by experience) or indirectly (by the lectures and presentations).
Detailed requirements for each individual assessment task will be given during the weekly lecture/workshop series and will be posted on UOW e-Learning. The following general requirements apply to all assessment tasks:
· Task 2, 3 4 and 7 should be completed using the BInfoTech Honours Report guidelines
· One printed copy of each assessment task is to be submitted to the subject co-coordinator, a second should be given to your Project Supervisor. Electronic submission is not a suitable means of submission unless prior permission has been given by the subject co-coordinator
· Penalties may apply to all late work, except if special consideration is deemed necessary or unless an extension has been granted by the subject co-coordinator. Requests for extensions should be emailed to the subject co-coordinator, prior to the due date.
· See Honours handbook for further details of Assessment procedures.
Final Submission: The requirements for the Final Submission are that it should contain the following:
Chapter 1 - Introduction
Chapter 2- Literature Review
Chapter 3 - Research Method/Design
Bibliography
The final submission is a lengthy and complex document. Students need to be aware that it will take a significant time to prepare. However, the report will be based on assessment items 2,3 and 4 and the feedback received on those items; so, in the vast majority of cases, students will be revising, rather than re-writing, the final submission.
Student presentation: Each student is required to present a seminar on his or her research project. These student seminars will take place in weeks 11, 12 and 13, depending on the number research projects. Students will be allocated a week during which they must present their seminar; students will be notified of the date of their presentation within the first 4 weeks of semester, giving all students adequate time to prepare their seminars.
Research paper review: Students will be given one research paper and will be asked to write a critical review of the research presented in that paper, as they would if reviewing for a conference or journal.
Research Seminars are held regularly throughout the session by the school (The Colloquium) and by individual research groups. It would be very useful for students to attend some of these seminars both to gain an understanding of the research process and, potentially, to gather info about their own research project.
Timing of assessment tasks: For a significant proportion of the students, two or three of the final assessment tasks will be due within a week. Students must make sure they manage their time well to ensure that they can meet these deadlines. Students are strongly advised to begin work on these tasks as early as possible. At the discretion of the subject co-coordinator, the due date for one or both of these tasks may be extended for all students. If this occurs, all students will be notified beforehand.
Robert Y. Cavanna; Brian L. Delahaye; Uma Sekaran. Applied business research: qualitative and quantitative methods. Australian edition. Milton, Qld.: John Wiley, 2001.
[Available from the University Bookshop and one copy available in the Library.]
Recommended Reading:
David Evans. How to write a better thesis or report. Carlton, Vic.: Melbourne University Press, 1995.
Many other useful books will be found in the University Library.
Special consideration
Penalties will apply to all late work, except if special consideration is deemed necessary or unless an extension has been granted by your subject co-ordinator. Requests for extensions should be emailed to the co-ordinator, prior to the due date. See the Honours Handbook for detailed information about Special Consideration and the Final Submission.
Associated subjects
Under normal circumstances, students will NOT be allowed to enrol in this subject unless they have already identified a project supervisor and have enrolled in “Project subject” or a “Thesis subject”, such as IACT950, CSCI991, THES924, THES 912 etc. You MUST NOT continue in this subject unless you have enrolled in a Project or Thesis subject and have a project supervisor OR have special approval from the subject co-ordinator. If you have NOT met these conditions you must withdraw from this subject.
Additional Information
This outline should be read in conjunction with the Honours Handbook and the following documents:
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Code of Practice - Teaching and Assessment http://www.uow.edu.au/handbook/codesofprac/teaching_code.html |
Key Dates |
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Code of Practice - Students http://www.uow.edu.au/handbook/codesofprac/cop_students.html |
Information Literacies Introduction Program |
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Acknowledgement Practice Plagiarism will not be tolerated |
Student Academic Grievance Policy http://www.uow.edu.au/handbook/codesofprac/cop_supervision.html#8 |
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Special Consideration Policy http://www.uow.edu.au/handbook/courserules/specialconsideration.html |
Code of Practice-Honours |
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Non-Discriminatory Language Practice and Presentation |
Intellectual Property Policy http://www.uow.edu.au/research/researchmanagement/1998IP.html |
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Occupational Health and Safety http://staff.uow.edu.au/ohs/commitment/OHS039-ohspolicy.pdf |
SISAT Internet Access & Student Resource Centre http://www.SISAT.uow.edu.au/info/current/internet_access_and_resource.shtml |
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SISAT Computer Usage Rules http://www.itacs.uow.edu.au/info/current/support/labs/rules.shtml |
SISAT Style Guide for Footnotes, Documentation, Essay and Report Writing |
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SISAT Student Guide |
Informatics Faculty Librarian, Ms Annette Meldrum, phone: 4221 4637,ameldrum@uow.edu.au |
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SISAT Subject Outlines |
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