Evidence-Based Project, Critical Appraisal Of Research

Assignment: Evidence-Based Project, Part 4: Critical Appraisal of Research
Realtors rely on detailed property appraisals—conducted using appraisal tools—to assign market values to houses and other properties. These values are then presented to buyers and sellers to set prices and initiate offers.
Research appraisal is not that different. The critical appraisal process utilizes formal appraisal tools to assess the results of research to determine value to the context at hand. Evidence-based practitioners often present these findings to make the case for specific courses of action.
In this Assignment, you will use an appraisal tool to conduct a critical appraisal of published research. You will then present the results of your efforts.
To Prepare:

  • Review the Resources and consider the importance of critically appraising research evidence.
  • Reflect on the four peer-reviewed articles you selected in Module 2 and analyzed in Module 3.
  • Review and download the Critical Appraisal Tool Worksheet Template provided in the Resources.

The Assignment (Evidence-Based Project)
Part 4A: Critical Appraisal of Research
Conduct a critical appraisal of the four peer-reviewed articles you selected and analyzed by completing the Evaluation Table within the Critical Appraisal Tool Worksheet Template.
Part 4B: Critical Appraisal of Research
Based on your appraisal, in a 1-2-page critical appraisal, suggest a best practice that emerges from the research you reviewed. Briefly explain the best practice, justifying your proposal with APA citations of the research.

Guidelines and Potential Topics for Research Paper

Guidelines and Potential Topics for Research Paper
 
 
Performance and Scalability

  • Future of the web, in terms of scale and architecture
  • Architectures and approaches for highly scalable web applications
  • Caching
  • Comparative evaluation for performance, context, or platform

 
Web Application Components and Platforms

  • Web browsers and possible extensions
  • Web servers, application servers, etc
  • New trends: languages, techniques, environments, etc.
  • Infrastructure
  • Improvement in application development tools, e.g., debugging – taxonomy of errors

 
Security and Privacy of Web Applications

  • Web application security issues – nature of problems and vulnerabilities and possible causes
  • Web application design for security – solutions for possible problems and potential security models
  • Privacy issues (from technical perspective – not just ethical)
  • Managing users

 
Web Standards

  • Future standards
  • Transforming current pages for compliance
  • Accessibility standards and implementations
  • Web Protocoles
  • Security of web-based application (e.g., OWASP – Open Web Application Security Project)

 
Mobile and Ubiquitous Devices

  • Models for ubiquitous platforms
  • Software and hardware components for ubiquitous environment.
  • Issues related to mobile-specific environment

 
Multimedia and Content Management Systems

  • Modeling and representation, formats, processing, and display of multimedia content
  • Content models and architectures, especially over the web
  • Metadata related to the content
  • Copyright protection techniques on the web

 
Web Search Process and strategies

  • Web site design for search optimization (for traditional search engines)
  • Web site SEO (search engine optimization)

 
Web Page Classification and Description

  • Content based
  • URL based
  • Hybrid approaches
  • Temporal dimension for dynamic and volatile content

 
Applications and Product Specific Topics

  • Issues related to specific application and domains
  • Product-specific related research

 
Internationalization and Localization

  • Issues related to the internationalization, localization, or specific language issues
  • Character encoding ,Unicode, and product support
  • Impact on content harvesting and web mining

 
New Web-based business models

  • Emerging new business models over the web (from technical perspective)
  • Technical bottleneck for new business models

 
 
 

Scholarly Research And Writing – Research Question For A Study

Competency

Create a research question for a study that will help fill a gap and provide benefits in a field.

Scenario

You are a first-year graduate student. You are taking a graduate course on research and writing. In this assignment, your professor has asked that you create a research question for a topic you are interested in and that you also perform an initial literature review.

Instructions

In a paper, do the following:

  • Explain the research question you would like to pursue and why you chose it. It should be researchable, feasible to pursue in the time span of a school term, and of interest to you.
  • Explain what type of research will be most appropriate to answer your research question.
  • Perform a literature review to help identify how your research study will contribute to current knowledge about the topic. Include at least ten (10) scholarly sources from the last five years that are relevant to your research question. In your literature review, you should analyze the content of the articles reviewed, compare findings in different articles, and integrate the literature into an organized discussion.

Resources

For assistance on a writing literature review, please visit the Rasmussen College Answers page.
Library databases such as the following are great resources for this project:

Another database that you may be interested in knowing about is ProQuest Dissertations & Theses Global.  You can view original research, view research design, data gathering techniques, etc.

Scholarly Research And Writing – Research Question For A Study

Competency

Create a research question for a study that will help fill a gap and provide benefits in a field.

Scenario

You are a first-year graduate student. You are taking a graduate course on research and writing. In this assignment, your professor has asked that you create a research question for a topic you are interested in and that you also perform an initial literature review.

Instructions

In a paper, do the following:

  • Explain the research question you would like to pursue and why you chose it. It should be researchable, feasible to pursue in the time span of a school term, and of interest to you.
  • Explain what type of research will be most appropriate to answer your research question.
  • Perform a literature review to help identify how your research study will contribute to current knowledge about the topic. Include at least ten (10) scholarly sources from the last five years that are relevant to your research question. In your literature review, you should analyze the content of the articles reviewed, compare findings in different articles, and integrate the literature into an organized discussion.

Resources

For assistance on a writing literature review, please visit the Rasmussen College Answers page.
Library databases such as the following are great resources for this project:

Another database that you may be interested in knowing about is ProQuest Dissertations & Theses Global.  You can view original research, view research design, data gathering techniques, etc.

HazMat (Research Paper)

OSHA issued the Process Safety Management of Highly Hazardous Chemicals Standard (PSM)
(29 CFR 1910.119) which contains requirements for the safe management of chemicals for
companies that exceed OSHA’s threshold quantities for highly hazardous substances. This
standard requires the establishment of a management program that includes conducting process
hazard analyses, establishing detailed operating procedures, and includes other important
requirements to mitigate the possibility of a serious, chemical related incident occurring at the
facility.
For this assignment, suppose you are a safety manager at a chemical manufacturing facility that
manufactures concentrated nitric acid. You have heard that employees who load nitric acid into
rail tank cars have been checking the pre-inspection checklist from the rail shipping office instead of actually inspecting the vehicles with the checklist in hand as required by the operating
procedure. This has not been the first time the shipping crew has been lax about process safety
related work rules. Based on this scenario, please compose a research paper which includes the
following information:
Identify the chemical properties, uses, and primary hazards associated with common oxidizers
including concentrated nitric acid.
Identify important occupational exposure limits (OELs) associated with at least 3 common
oxidizers.
Identify PSM requirements that would be useful for preventing or minimizing the consequences
of a significant oxidizer related incident.
Using the OSHA Standard and your own experience, justify and validate the importance of the
PSM standard to your facility (if it stores and processes highly hazardous materials) or a facility
that may impact your community or a near-by community. Examples might include a water
treatment facility that utilizes liquefied chlorine gas, a coal fired power plant that utilizes liquefied
chlorine gas for water treatment, a food processing plant with a large ammonia refrigeration
system, a fertilizer manufacturing or storage facility, a chemical manufacturing facility, etc..
Your research paper must be at least two pages in length. You are required to cite the OSHA
Standard 29 CFR 1910.119 in your response as well as at least two other sources, one of which
must come from the CSU Online Library. All sources used, including the textbook, must be
referenced. Paraphrased and/or quoted materials must have accompanying citations in APA
format.

Research Paper – The role of mental processes—perception, thinking, and memory

Cognitive  The role of mental processes—perception, thinking, and memory—that underlie behavior  The student does not use effective learning strategies such as the SQ3R method.

Research Paper – The role of mental processes—perception, thinking, and memory

Cognitive  The role of mental processes—perception, thinking, and memory—that underlie behavior  The student does not use effective learning strategies such as the SQ3R method.

Research Paper – The role of mental processes—perception, thinking, and memory

Cognitive  The role of mental processes—perception, thinking, and memory—that underlie behavior  The student does not use effective learning strategies such as the SQ3R method.

Evidence Based Practice studies – professional nursing practice

PURPOSE
To encourage critical thinking, problem solving, and collaboration through the use of Evidence Based Practice studies.
COURSE OUTCOMES
This assignment enables the student to meet the following course outcomes.
1. Examine the sources of knowledge that contribute to professional nursing practice.
2. Apply research principles to the interpretation of the content of published research studies.
3. Identify ethical issues common to research involving human subjects.
4. Evaluate published nursing research for credibility and clinical significance related to evidence-based
practice.
5. Recognize the role of research findings in evidence-based practice.

Proposal Argument With Research

Integrating Evidence from Research Name:
A good way to think about integrating any kind of research into your own paper is the analogy of planting a tree (from Mauk and Metz, The Composition of Everyday Life). When you plant a tree, you don’t just set the tree down on top of the grass and walk away. You dig a hole, preparing the earth for the tree by removing any large rocks or roots that are in the way. Then, you set the tree into the hole. Again, you don’t walk away to leave the tree to fend for itself in a hole. You connect the tree to the rest of the earth by backfilling the dirt, tamping it down, and watering the newly planted tree in the hopes that it will take root and flourish as part of the landscape.
When you work with research in your writing, you should make the same preparations. Writers use the following order to integrate their sources into their writing. Read these three elements and then review the examples below:
1. Introduce (dig hole & prepare soil): Prepare your paper for the piece of research by crafting an introduction or signal phrase that sets the tone or positions the research for readers. This is also a good time to consider what readers need to know or might want to know about the source, like where it’s from and what makes the source credible.
2. Add Source (set tree in hole): Insert the research by summarizing, paraphrasing, or quoting, and cite it correctly in MLA style with quotation marks if it’s a direct quote and an in-text citation that corresponds to a works cited entry on your works cited page.
3. Comment (backfill, tamp, & water): Conclude the integration by commenting on the research, explaining it (if it’s a particularly dense piece of writing), connecting it to your main point, reacting to it if it’s particularly shocking or insightful, comparing it to other sources, or synthesizing it.
Here is an excerpt from Guernsey’s article on the effects of screen time on literacy (to read the full article, click on the title of the Works Cited entry below). See how this source has been integrated, or planted, into the following color-coded examples:
“As analysts and experts parse the data in the months and years to come, new twists may emerge. But the larger picture painted by today’s statistics is hard to miss: Media is embedded in children’s lives and dominating hours of their days, while reading is trailing behind. The next trick is to tease out what I call the Three C’s: the content, context and the individual child. What kinds of media — what TV shows, which online games? Who’s with them as they read and play, and how is that experience integrated into what they are learning or interested in? And what ages and dispositions of children are drawn to what kinds of media for what reasons? Until we can answer these questions, we will continue to be in the dark about the impact of media and its complicated connection to literacy among the next generation.”
Guernsey, Lisa. “Screen Time, Young Kids, and Literacy: New Data Begs Questions.” The Huffington Post, 25 Dec. 2011, www.huffingtonpost.com/lisa-guernsey/kids-media-consumption_b_1029945.html. Accessed 28 May 2017.
Summary Example
In her Huffington Post article, “Screen Time, Young Kids and Literacy: New Data Begs Questions”, Lisa Guernsey, director of the Early Education Initiative at the New America Foundation, claims the evidence is clear on one point: children today spend far more time on screens than they do reading. In other words, we are raising a generation of people who will be computer and touchscreen literate. Will that be enough? After all, most tech devices today offer “read to you” applications. What is really lost if we are reading less than we have ever before?
Paraphrase Example
The trend in increased media time and decreased reading time is clear, but many questions remain about the effects of this trend. Lisa Guernsey, director of the Early Education initiative at the New America Foundation, suggests that exploring details about the study, like specific media used and links between a child’s media exposure and non-media activities will reveal much more about the way media effects literacy. We should also examine how media time is supervised or co-experienced, and how individual differences among children such as age or media preference impact literacy (Guernsey). Given Guernsey’s suggested questions at the end of her article, I am rethinking my role in refereeing media exposure and reading time in my own household with three young children. I decided to try to answer some of her questions for my own kindergartner’s media use.
Quotation Example
While the trend in increased media time and decreased reading time is clear, many questions remain about the effects of this trend, as Lisa Guernsey warns in her Huffington Post article, “Screen Time, Young Kids and Literacy: New Data Begs Questions”: “What kinds of media — what TV shows, which online games? Who’s with them as they read and play, and how is that experience integrated into what they are learning or interested in? And what ages and dispositions of children are drawn to what kinds of media for what reasons?” These questions force me to consider the answers in my own life as a parent of young children, and I am rethinking how I use our I-pad, the number of times each week all three of my kids are in front of the tv while I make dinner, and when reading competes with media in my household.
Integration Practice
Quote a section out of one of the sources you located for your own writing project. With the metaphor of planting a tree in mind, create an introduction before the quote and a comment after the quote:
Create an accurate works cited entry for this source:
Using one of your other sources, summarize a section you find interesting. Plant a tree using an introduction and comment:
Create an accurate works cited entry for this source:
Finally, plant a tree by paraphrasing a third source:
Create an accurate works cited entry for this source:
Reflection
How did your introduction or signal phrases differ as you moved from summary to paraphrase to quotation?
When are you more likely to use each of these integration strategies? Why?
Summary
Paraphrase
Quotation
How can you tell where the research ends, and where your comment begins in each of the examples you crafted above?
Describe your process for summarizing, and your process for paraphrasing information from a source. How do you ensure that you’re not plagiarizing?