Hi!
This is for current first years as well as those who have been through it. For the end of first year review/upgrade process, those of you who are submitting/have had to submit a near 10,000 word document (in the form of a proposal usually), what sections did you make sure you had?
There are departmentl guidelines, and this greatly varies from individual to individual, but any insights on the structure?
Also when you are asked to provide a work plan, what all do you usually provide in this?
best
Bug
I've been through this interim assessment, and, based on my experience, I think that the document you produce is very individual. If you like, I can send you a good example of an interim assessment for a qualitative research PhD. Just PM me for further details. Thanks.:-)
we were given guidance that it had to be divided under headings like introduction (3000 words) methods, results, plan of investigation, future work... and possibly some other things. For the plan of investigation I cut and pasted my protocol direct from my NRES (ethics) application. For future work I included a 1 page flow chart of what I planned to do over the next few months.
To get an idea of what to put where I looked at someone elses first year report form the year before. Is it possible for you to do this? Despite her being in a very differnt field, it gave me an idea of what to put in each section.
Whilst I don't know exactly what else I'll need to put in, the focus of mine will be a 'chapter' ie. one area that I'm working on at the moment and will write up as though part of the thesis as a whole. The area I'm addressing (beginnings and endings in the work of the poet I'm currently looking at, the first of two) was suggested by my supervisors following a piece of work I did earlier in the year. I need to have a draft of this done by week two of term... :-(
Here it is slightly different in that you have to submit a longer and more detailed proposal, including the ethics bit (there are some good examples of the kind of thing you need to write here on some university websites ) your chapter outlines and your plan of action (Work plan). This is easily produced using excel, just put all the dates along the top, chapters and sub chapters down the side, fill in the boxes starting at the 'finish' put in blocks for final review, review of chapters, writing up for each chapter, when you will start each one etc. - with overlaps of course, use different colours for researching, draft chapters writing up etc. it looks quite impressive! Here this part has to be done within about 6 months for full time, 8 months for part time, although this can be longer because the boards do not meet regularly. The next hurdle is to have two chapters done, at least in a suitable state, as obviously these will be revised later, plus you have a viva, but both these are with your supervisor and someone else from your department. You also have to produce a document setting out why you think you should be allowed to continue, which is the only thing that goes to the board, the structure is set out in our guidelines, and here the senior admin person in the post grad block is the one to talk to if you are stuck, he knows what is and what isn't expected - maybe you have someone like that?
At the moment myupgade review seems like this terifying thing which is claked in mystery.
Supervisor doesn't want me to do much of a literature review, so I am guessing I need to make an attempt at an analytical chapter. I have producedn a couple of informal reports for him throught the year which will go in. The impression that I get from asking my supervisor is that it will be a big folder of crap collected throughout the year.
This isn't very helpful, sorry!
Wish I could find that nail - and of course the hammer to go with it! The process has, I think, been made more complicated by the grading process for post grad work at universities that goes on now, they have to show they are 'helping' you through the process, and have strict signposts along the way, instead of letting you get on with it. I found the first bit here rather a waste of time because they don't seem to really know what they want. They ask for a brief outline, so you give them that, and then they say it isn't detailed enough, so you put more in, but then it goes way over their word count they want, so you have to cut it back and stick in loads of endnotes, plus with them not meeting during the summer, the whole process is delayed... It is really just like a little game, so find out the rules, - as I said the secretary of the post grad school is probably your beat bet - follow them and you should be OK. I like to think of it as getting my money's worth out of them! :-)
Hi, sorry for staying away from my own post for so long. Yes, so there are discrepancies. I think, in my case they call it a 10,000 word proposal and my truly fantastic sup will have aread and then we will have 2 supervisions before its is submitted, and then 2 more before the viva with her and the committee.
I am thinking of it in two ways: A) the structure: this I find it useful to derive from grant proposals that scholars write for funding, these things do need to have a solid coherent and comprehensive structure, which works fine for me in it sinclusion sof rationale, objectives, expected data, project management plan and B) the intellectual content within this structure in which case I am inclined to use the essays I've written for the fortnightly supervisions over the term.
I have a draft which looks ok, and in the appendices I include works cited, an indicative bibliography and the fieldwork instruments (in prep).
Comments welcome!
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