Dissertation Writing Service
There are five major stages in the dissertation writing process.
Stage I. Preparing the Way. The aim of the first stage is to orient you to the tasks ahead by: (1) Identifying resources that can help you in carrying out your project, and (2) Describing (a) how the professional literature can be of use and (b) how to survey the literature efficiently.
Stage II: Choosing and Defining Research Topics. The second stage involves: (1) Selecting the question or problem on which your project will focus,
(2) Deciding if you wish to create or adapt a theory as part of your project's contribution; and--if you do, indeed, plan to devise a theory - deciding how to go about it; and
(3) Clearly delineating your selected problem and creating a rationale that explains what sort of contribution your dissertation will make to the realm of knowledge within which it's located.
Stage III: Collecting and Organizing Information. Once your research proposal has been specified and its value explained, your next task is to select an effective way to gather the information needed for answering the question. This phase is presented as two substages - III-A and III-B . The two are typically pursued in parallel, because they are interdependent. That is, collecting data efficiently requires a plan for organizing the data and vice versa. Even though the tasks are performed simultaneously, for clarity of presentation we find it convenient to describe them separately.
Stage III-A: Collecting Information. The aim of the first data-collection stage is to describe a variety of the most useful approaches to gathering information. The purpose is not to inspect in detail the steps that comprise each method. Instead, the intention is to (a) sketch principal features of a method, (b) illustrate the sorts of research questions or problems for which it's well suited, and (c) point out the method's advantages and limitations. The approaches that are cited include historical accounts, case studies, ethnographies, experience narratives, surveys, correlation analyses, and experiments.
Students often encounter problems at the data-collection stage of their dissertation.
Stage III-B: Organizing Information. No matter what sort of information you gather to solve your research problem, you need to organize it in a way that enables you to draw comparisons and contrasts, to estimate causes and effects, or to identify trends. For this purpose you require a classification system, such as a chronology, typology, or taxonomy and a method of condensing the mass of data in an accurate, comprehensible form.
Stage IV. Interpreting the Results. At this stage you explain what your collection of classified, summarized information means. This is the "so what?" phase of your dissertation.
Stage V: Presenting the Finished Product. In this final stage, you are obliged to describe your completed dissertation to appropriate audiences. Your most immediate audience includes your major advisor and any other faculty members who are assigned to assess your work. Therefore, your first responsibility is to present them with a well crafted written account of your. Then, if you are also obliged to defend your dissertation before a committee in an oral examination session, your second responsibility is to fashion a convincing explanation of your research methods and findings.
Now why is this observation about academic-discipline domains important for doing theses and dissertations? We think it's significant for two reasons. The guidelines for conducting and writing research investigations in different academic departments are much the same, especially within the broad realm of the social sciences and such applied fields as education, social work, and business administration.
However, a number of students experience reasonable anxiety facing the need to write a dissertation that will sum up several years of intensive studies. On the one hand, writing such projects requires much time and effort put in research, while contemporary academic environment produces lack of both. On the other hand, a certain level of research and writing skills is required to be 100-percent sure that that final draft will meet the tutor’s requirements. Our experienced writers have time and skills to help our customers get rid of the anxiety and to produce a piece of work that will help the customer get the degree or pass the credit.
Our service can save you a large proportion of time, money and frustration.
We providing comprehensive, reliable, and expedited dissertation writing services to assist with:
- All Phases of Dissertation Research
- Project Development & Literature Review
- Database Construction & Data Collection
- Research Design, Data Analysis & Statistics
- Quality Improvement & Outcome Research
- Grant Writing & Educational Research
- Test Construction & Questionnaire Development
- Presentation of Results & Preparation of Reports
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