ABSTRACT

Graduate research is a complicated process, which many undergraduate students aspire to undertake. The complexity of the process can lead to failures for even the most brilliant students. Success at the graduate research level requires not only a high level of intellectual ability but also a high level of project management skills. Unfortunately, many graduate students have trouble planning and implementing their research.

Project Management for Research: A Guide for Graduate Students reflects the needs of today’s graduate students. All graduate students need mentoring and management guidance that has little to do with their actual classroom performance. Graduate students do a better job with their research programs if a self-paced guide is available to them. This book provides such a guide. It covers topics ranging from how to select an appropriate research problem to how to schedule and execute research tasks. The authors take a project management approach to planning and implementing graduate research in any discipline. They use a conversational tone to address the individual graduate student.

This book helps graduate students and advisors answer most of the basic questions of conducting and presenting graduate research, thereby alleviating frustration on the part of both student and advisor. It presents specific guidelines and examples throughout the text along with more detailed examples in reader-friendly appendices at the end. By being more organized and prepared to handle basic research management functions, graduate students, along with their advisors, will have more time for actual intellectual mentoring and knowledge transfer, resulting in a more rewarding research experience.

part one|22 pages

An introduction and overview to project management for research

chapter one|11 pages

Defining project management for research

chapter two|8 pages

Personal aspects of graduate education

part two|19 pages

Preplanning and exploration: What do you plan to do?

chapter three|6 pages

three Choosing your research topic

chapter four|4 pages

Choosing your advisor and committee

chapter five|7 pages

Research question

part three|29 pages

Planning: Making a schedule and getting organized!

chapter six|16 pages

Scheduling

chapter seven|11 pages

Organization

part four|35 pages

Project Execution and Control

chapter eight|11 pages

Time Management

chapter nine|11 pages

On the personal aspects of research

chapter ten|9 pages

Managing your research advisor

part five|17 pages

Project phase-out: When is research complete?

chapter eleven|15 pages

Communicating your work