Description

Book Synopsis

Your Undergraduate Psychology Project: A Student Guide has been designed with the needs of the student in mind. Packed with hints and tips, and written in a simple, informal style, this ''second supervisor'' is designed to ease students further into the world of research.

The second edition has been completely revised and updated with new material on focus groups and ethics and a new section entitled How to Lose Marks Instantly.



Table of Contents

Preface xi

Acknowledgements xiii

1. Planning Research 1

Choosing a Research Topic 1

The textbook method 2

The television method 3

The pub chat or coffee bar method 4

The internet method 5

The lecturer method 5

Think again! 5

Self-interest 6

Replication versus Novelty 7

Pure versus Applied Research 8

Researching the Project: Finding Literature 9

Using internet search engines 10

Snowballing and searching via citations 10

Using electronic databases 12

Boolean operators 12

Narrowing searches 13

How many references? 15

Statistics on the internet 16

Choosing a Method 16

Single-case designs 17

Case studies 17

Choosing qualitative methods 18

Differences or relationships? 21

Primary or secondary data? 22

Observational methods 23

Protocol analysis 24

Multiple methods 25

Control Groups 25

Matching Methods to Analysis 26

Power Analysis 27

To Pilot or Not to Pilot 28

Developing Materials 29

Experimental stimuli 29

Questionnaires 31

Looking professional 35

Interviews 36

Cross-cultural studies and translation of materials 39

‘Borrowing’ Materials 40

The Internet as a Research Tool 40

Managing Time: Keeping on Track 42

Start early 42

Match the project to the time available 42

Overplanning 43

Plan B 43

Response rates 45

Your supervisor’s time 46

Project milestones 46

Tips on managing time 47

Writing a Proposal 51

Research Ethics 52

Informed consent 53

Undue pressure 55

Deception 55

Protection of participants from harm and ‘acceptable’ risk 55

Incentives 56

Withdrawal 56

Confidentiality 56

Debriefing 57

Personal safety 57

Obtaining Ethical Clearance 58

Getting Started 59

2. Doing Research: Collecting Data 61

Student–Supervisor Relations 62

Pilot Studies 65

Dealing with People 66

Being an ambassador 67

Working with participants 70

When participants don’t understand or make mistakes 75

Conducting Interviews: The Practicalities 76

Focus Groups 77

Observational Studies 78

Relying on Equipment 81

Making Back-ups 81

Adjusting Your Project Milestones 82

Taking Part Yourself 82

Revisiting Data 83

Transcribing Interviews 84

The Paper Trail 85

Knowing When to Stop 86

Data Preparation 86

Conducting Statistical Analyses 87

3. Writing Up Research 91

An Overview 92

Notes on Style 93

A Note on Plagiarism 94

Section by Section 96

Title 96

Abstract 99

Introduction 100

Method 103

Replicability 112

Results 113

Discussion 120

Generalising your findings 123

References 124

Appendices 128

Qualitative Reports 129

The first person 129

Introduction 130

Methods 130

Results/Analysis/Discussion 131

First, Second and Third Drafts 132

Common Mistakes 133

Affect and effect 134

Data 134

Experiment and study 134

Joining words together 134

Incorrect apostrophes 135

Incorrect sentences 136

Latin phrases and other borrowings 137

Non-significant 137

Number and amount 137

Prefixes 138

Presenting numbers 139

Proof 139

Reporting probabilities 140

Separating words 140

Significant diff erences 141

Spelling IV and DV 141

When It’s All Over 143

4. How To Lose Marks Instantly 145

List of Things NOT to do! 145

Go it alone and ignore your supervisor’s advice 145

Be precious about your work 146

Ignore the required format 146

Conduct research with no point to it 146

Bite off more than you can chew 147

Ignore relevant literature, or fail to look hard enough for it 147

Run out of time 147

Use the wrong reference format 148

Argue yourself out of a perfectly good result 148

Plagiarise 149

Conduct the wrong analysis 149

Collect data without ethical approval 149

Set out the entire project with a massive design flaw in it 150

The Moral of the Tale 150

References 151

Further Reading 153

Index 155

Your Undergraduate Psychology Project

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    RRP £55.95 – you save £2.80 (5%)

    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Tue 7 Jul 2026.

    A Paperback / softback by Mark Forshaw

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      View other formats and editions of Your Undergraduate Psychology Project by Mark Forshaw

      Publisher: John Wiley and Sons Ltd
      Publication Date: 19/04/2013
      ISBN13: 9780470669983, 978-0470669983
      ISBN10: 0470669985
      Also in:
      Psychology

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Your Undergraduate Psychology Project: A Student Guide has been designed with the needs of the student in mind. Packed with hints and tips, and written in a simple, informal style, this ''second supervisor'' is designed to ease students further into the world of research.

      The second edition has been completely revised and updated with new material on focus groups and ethics and a new section entitled How to Lose Marks Instantly.



      Table of Contents

      Preface xi

      Acknowledgements xiii

      1. Planning Research 1

      Choosing a Research Topic 1

      The textbook method 2

      The television method 3

      The pub chat or coffee bar method 4

      The internet method 5

      The lecturer method 5

      Think again! 5

      Self-interest 6

      Replication versus Novelty 7

      Pure versus Applied Research 8

      Researching the Project: Finding Literature 9

      Using internet search engines 10

      Snowballing and searching via citations 10

      Using electronic databases 12

      Boolean operators 12

      Narrowing searches 13

      How many references? 15

      Statistics on the internet 16

      Choosing a Method 16

      Single-case designs 17

      Case studies 17

      Choosing qualitative methods 18

      Differences or relationships? 21

      Primary or secondary data? 22

      Observational methods 23

      Protocol analysis 24

      Multiple methods 25

      Control Groups 25

      Matching Methods to Analysis 26

      Power Analysis 27

      To Pilot or Not to Pilot 28

      Developing Materials 29

      Experimental stimuli 29

      Questionnaires 31

      Looking professional 35

      Interviews 36

      Cross-cultural studies and translation of materials 39

      ‘Borrowing’ Materials 40

      The Internet as a Research Tool 40

      Managing Time: Keeping on Track 42

      Start early 42

      Match the project to the time available 42

      Overplanning 43

      Plan B 43

      Response rates 45

      Your supervisor’s time 46

      Project milestones 46

      Tips on managing time 47

      Writing a Proposal 51

      Research Ethics 52

      Informed consent 53

      Undue pressure 55

      Deception 55

      Protection of participants from harm and ‘acceptable’ risk 55

      Incentives 56

      Withdrawal 56

      Confidentiality 56

      Debriefing 57

      Personal safety 57

      Obtaining Ethical Clearance 58

      Getting Started 59

      2. Doing Research: Collecting Data 61

      Student–Supervisor Relations 62

      Pilot Studies 65

      Dealing with People 66

      Being an ambassador 67

      Working with participants 70

      When participants don’t understand or make mistakes 75

      Conducting Interviews: The Practicalities 76

      Focus Groups 77

      Observational Studies 78

      Relying on Equipment 81

      Making Back-ups 81

      Adjusting Your Project Milestones 82

      Taking Part Yourself 82

      Revisiting Data 83

      Transcribing Interviews 84

      The Paper Trail 85

      Knowing When to Stop 86

      Data Preparation 86

      Conducting Statistical Analyses 87

      3. Writing Up Research 91

      An Overview 92

      Notes on Style 93

      A Note on Plagiarism 94

      Section by Section 96

      Title 96

      Abstract 99

      Introduction 100

      Method 103

      Replicability 112

      Results 113

      Discussion 120

      Generalising your findings 123

      References 124

      Appendices 128

      Qualitative Reports 129

      The first person 129

      Introduction 130

      Methods 130

      Results/Analysis/Discussion 131

      First, Second and Third Drafts 132

      Common Mistakes 133

      Affect and effect 134

      Data 134

      Experiment and study 134

      Joining words together 134

      Incorrect apostrophes 135

      Incorrect sentences 136

      Latin phrases and other borrowings 137

      Non-significant 137

      Number and amount 137

      Prefixes 138

      Presenting numbers 139

      Proof 139

      Reporting probabilities 140

      Separating words 140

      Significant diff erences 141

      Spelling IV and DV 141

      When It’s All Over 143

      4. How To Lose Marks Instantly 145

      List of Things NOT to do! 145

      Go it alone and ignore your supervisor’s advice 145

      Be precious about your work 146

      Ignore the required format 146

      Conduct research with no point to it 146

      Bite off more than you can chew 147

      Ignore relevant literature, or fail to look hard enough for it 147

      Run out of time 147

      Use the wrong reference format 148

      Argue yourself out of a perfectly good result 148

      Plagiarise 149

      Conduct the wrong analysis 149

      Collect data without ethical approval 149

      Set out the entire project with a massive design flaw in it 150

      The Moral of the Tale 150

      References 151

      Further Reading 153

      Index 155

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