- Introduction for Types of Dissertations
- Overview of the Dissertation
- Self-Assessment Exercise
- What is a Dissertation Committee
- Different Types of Dissertations
- Introduction for Overview of the Dissertation Process
- Responsibilities: the Chair, the Team and You
- Sorting Exercise
- Stages of a Dissertation
- Managing Your Time
- Create Your Own Timeline
- Working with a Writing Partner
- Key Deadlines
- Self Assessment Exercise
- Additional Resources
- Purpose and Goals
- Read and Evaluate Chapter 1 Exemplars
- Draft an Introduction of the Study
- Outline the Background of the Problem
- Draft your Statement of the Problem
- Draft your Purpose of the Study
- Draft your Significance of the Study
- List the Possible Limitations and Delimitations
- Explicate the Definition of Terms
- Outline the Organization of the Study
- Recommended Resources and Readings
- Purpose of the Literature Review
- What is the Literature?
- Article Summary Table
- Writing a Short Literature Review
- Outline for Literature Review
- Synthesizing the Literature Review
- Purpose of the Methodology Chapter
- Topics to Include
- Preparing to Write the Methodology Chapter
- Confidentiality
- Building the Components for Chapter Three
- Preparing for Your Qualifying Exam (aka Proposal Defense)
- What is Needed for Your Proposal Defense?
- Submitting Your Best Draft
- Preparing Your Abstract for IRB
- Use of Self-Assessment
- Preparing Your PowerPoint
- During Your Proposal Defense
- After Your Proposal Defense
- Pre-observation – Issues to consider
- During Observations
- Wrapping Up
- Recommended Resources and Readings (Qualitative)
- Quantitative Data Collection
- Recommended Resources and Readings (Quantitative)
- Qualitative: Before you Start
- Qualitative: During Analysis
- Qualitative: After Analysis
- Qualitative: Recommended Resources and Readings
- Quantitative: Deciding on the Right Analysis
- Quantitative: Data Management and Cleaning
- Quantitative: Keep Track of your Analysis
- The Purpose of Chapter 4
- The Elements of Chapter 4
- Presenting Results (Quantitative)
- Presenting Findings (Qualitative)
- Chapter 4 Considerations
- The Purpose of Chapter 5
- Preparing Your Abstract for the Graduate School
- Draft the Introduction for Chapter 5
- Draft the Summary of Findings
- Draft Implications for Practice
- Draft your Recommendations for Research
- Draft your Conclusions
- What is Needed
- What Happens During the Final Defense?
- What Happens After the Final Defense?

Elements of Chapter 4 Topic 1: Chapter 4
- In a qualitative study you will restate the research questions
- In a quantitative study you will present the hypotheses
- In a qualitative study the information to be reported is called findings . Findings are those themes that have emerged from or have been found in the data you collected. They are the product of your analysis.
- In a quantitative study the results of the quantitative analyses conducted may be presented on their own, without any accompanying connections to the larger literature.
- When quantitative data are presented without any accompanying explanation a discussion section is presented separately in order to explain the meaning of the results.

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CHAPTER IV: RESULTS. This chapter contains the results of the grounded theory methodology study conducted to answer the research questions:.
Quantitative. Qualitative. • Sample size. • Frequency and percentages of demographic variable. ➢ Males/females. ➢ Age groups.
For example, Nikitina and Furuoka (2006) performed factor analysis on the BALLI responses of 107 Malaysian students learning Russian as a foreign language and
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The sample selected comprised 18 nationalities who presented for treatment at the Al Ain Hospital from January 2002 to December 2003, as shown in table 4.1. The
The results are generally reported in Chapter 4 and then interpreted in Chapter 5. That is not possible for some modes of qualitative research, where analysis.
In a qualitative study the information to be reported is called findings. · In a quantitative study the results of the quantitative analyses conducted may be
CHAPTER II – LITERATURE REVIEW . ... Since this is a qualitative template,.
The results are generally reported in Chapter 4 and then interpreted in Chapter 5. That is not possible for some modes of qualitative research, where analysis
This chapter presents principal findings from the primary research. The findings can be divided into two groups: qualitative and quantitative results. Figure
Yes or No. VARIABLE. FREQUENCY PERCENTAGE. Yes. 116. 30,5. No. 264. 69,5. Total. 380. 100. TABLE 3: BLOOD TEST HIV. This table shows that of the total sample