The Evergreen State College
Master in Teaching Program
Project Guidelines: Conference Paper
MIT 2006-08 Cohort
Conference Paper Guidelines
General Schedule for Completion
·Year 1, Fall: Define the research topic and collect peer-reviewed, relevant studies or bodies of research. Organize research and begin reference section using American Psychological Association (APA) style. Initial draft of the “Literature Review” including citations and references.
·Year 1, Winter: Initial and revised drafts of the “Title,” “Introduction,” “Conclusion,” and revised draft of the “Literature Review” including citations and references.
·Year 1, Spring: Initial and revised drafts of the “Recommendations for Practice,” and an “Abstract” including citations and references. Copy-edited and revised final version of the conference paper.
·Year 2, Winter: Prepare poster and presentation of the conference paper. Present at the MIT conference which will be open to the public and hosted by The Evergreen State College.
The MIT Program Completion Policy
The completion and presentation of your conference paper and the award of credit for your work is expected to occur during the Winter quarter of your second year in the program, as described in the MIT program covenant (see Student Guidebook to College & Program Policies & Procedures) which you received during the first week of the program.
Avoiding Plagiarism
The Master in Teachingprogram covenant (2006) describes the Requirement of Academic Honesty:
All forms of academic dishonesty, including cheating, fabrication, facilitating academic
dishonesty, and plagiarism are violations of the Evergreen Social Contract. Plagiarism is
defined as representing the works or ideas of another as one’s own in any academic exercise.
It includes, but is not limited to, copying materials directly, failing to cite sources of
arguments and data, and failing to explicitly acknowledge joint work or authorship of
assignments (see also “Evergreen’s Social Contract” regarding “Intellectual freedom and
honesty”). The MIT faculty also place cultural appropriation without appropriate
acknowledgment and/or permission as a form of academic dishonesty. (p. 10)
APA (1994) explains how to avoid plagiarism:
Quotation marks should be used to indicate the exact words of another. Summarizing a
passage or rearranging the order of a sentence and changing some of the words is
paraphrasing. Each time a source is paraphrased, a credit for the source needs to be included in the text…. (p. 292)
When in doubt, cite; over-citation is an error, but under-citation is plagiarism. (Howard, 1995, p. 800)
Conference Paper Structure
Title Page:
(See example on p.8)
Abstract:
(120 words max.)
Concise summary of the contents, including findings and conclusions.
Introduction:
(2-3 pages)
1. Define the research problem or topic.
2. Give a brief overview of the problem or topic.
3. Explain why this topic is important to investigate (rationale for the paper).
Literature Review:
(15 pages max.)
Conclusions:
(2-3 pages)
1. Briefly revisit the topic overview and rationale as you present a composite description of the topic.
2. State conclusions (major findings) justified by the literature review.
3. Major findings may be tabulated or presented in a chart (see APA). If many researchers had similar
findings, this may also be presented in a chart for emphasis.
Recommendations for Practice:
(2-3 pages)
1. What does the literature suggest for appropriate courses of action to solve the problem or further
explain the topic? Recommendations may be presented in a chart.
2. Consider school and classroom level applications or implications presented in the research.
References:
List all work referenced in the paper.
The following pages describe the expectations used by the faculty to evaluate the development of your research paper. All parts of the paper must be “fully developed” to meet the MIT program requirement for successfully completing the MIT Conference Paper. The goal is to have a complete, copy-edited paper by June 2007 so you can focus on finishing your endorsement courses during the summer and prepare for student teaching.
Use the expectations and rubric to guide your work:
Evaluation Key
3 = Fully Developed
2 = Needs Development
1 = Needs Rethinking/Reframing
3 The paper meets all APA style requirements for:
· Citations and Quotes
· References
· Tables and Figures
· Margins
· Title Page
· Titles and Subtitles
· Pagination
2 The paper meets most APA style requirements.
1 The paper does not consistently follow APA style requirements.
Abstract
The abstract is a concise summary of the contents of your paper, including the findings and conclusions. A good abstract is (a) accurate, (b) self-contained, and (c) concise and specific. It accurately reflects the purpose and content of your paper. It is self-contained with all abbreviations and unique terms defined for the reader. It is concise and specific by making each sentence maximally informative, particularly the first sentence. Begin with the most important information; the purpose/thesis and conclusions. Also include the most important concepts, findings, or implications. Abstracts are limited to 120 words.
3 The abstract is accurate, self-contained, concise and specific, and 120 words or less.
2 The abstract is in need of refinement for clarity and accuracy.
Introduction
Begin with a rationale or explanation about why the topic is important and worth researching. Provide a literature base, as opposed to a critique of the research, for exploring the topic. In the introduction, define your terms and abbreviations, as appropriate, and state the limitations you are placing on your research.
3 The introduction provides all of the following:
· A succinct explanation of the importance of the topic.
· A discussion and balanced overview (not skewed towards one point-of-view) of the importance of the topic to the educational community.
· A description of existing controversies or conflicts that your paper will address.
· A statement of limits of the scope of your research.
· Clear definition of terms and abbreviations.
2 The introduction provides only the following:
· An explanation of the personal relevance of the problem.
· A discussion of the relevance to the professional community based on your opinion, not the professional literature.
· General references to the literature but with few APA citations.
· A partially developed description of existing controversies and conflicts or a skewed presentation of the current status of the problem.
· An incomplete literature-based discussion of the importance of the topic to the educational community.
· Definition of terms and abbreviations and statement of limits.
1 The introduction is based on personal opinion with little or no reference to the literature
and to existing conflicts and controversies. Definitions of terms are not provided.
Literature Review
Begin with a historical overview of the issues and/or controversies. Present the current state of knowledge concerning your topic, including a critical analysis and summary of the recent research.
3 The literature review provides all of the following:
· Begins with a discussion which specifies particular, significant historical bases for your topic.
· Historical overview is connected to the social, cultural, and/or political contexts related to your topic.
· A description and categorization of the major points of view on your topic, as revealed in your search of the professional literature. Must include the landmark studies and theorists on your topic.
· An analysis and thoughtful discussion of the current state of knowledge on your topic, based on information available in the professional literature, referenced with citations in APA style.
· A critical analysis and review of the research that
(a) compares and contrasts major arguments
(b) analyzes whether the research used to support the argument is sufficient.
· Makes connections from one set of findings to the next according to themes or concepts.
2 The literature review provides only the following:
· A discussion of perspectives about the topic but with few citations from the
professional literature to support the claims.
· Limited number of peer-reviewed sources included in the review.
· A descriptive summary of specific studies and/or strategies but with little or no critical review of their strengths and weaknesses.
· An incomplete discussion of the research and professional literature.
· Lacks clear connections and logical progression.
1 The material in this section is based on personal opinion or on professionals’ opinions with few references to research. The review includes lists of suggestions/strategies drawn from the literature with little or no critical assessment of the research upon which these recommendations are based.
Conclusions
Present a composite description of the topic as known to date and with conclusions justified by the literature review. Implications for further research are also presented in this section.
3 Conclusions section provides all of the following:
· A clear discussion of how the findings in the current research relate to the historical background of the topic.
· A description and/or chart of the major findings from the literature review.
· If a chart is used, it has preceding and following supporting descriptions.
· Identification of aspects of the topic that are still unanswered or unclear in the research, and that suggest areas for future research.
2 Conclusions section provides only the following:
· A partially developed discussion of how the findings in the research relate to the historical background of the topic.
· An uneven or incomplete discussion of the major findings from the literature review.
· APA style not consistently followed for any charts or tables presented.
· A missing or incomplete discussion of aspects of the topic that are still unanswered or unclear in the research.
1 Conclusions section is based on personal opinion and/or has few connections to the research or to existing conflicts and controversies revealed in literature review. Unanswered questions and implications for future research are not identified.
Recommendations for Practice
Based on the critical analysis presented in the literature review, make recommendations for school or classroom level practice. Consider the “best practices” and present them as examples or suggestions.
3 Recommendations for Practice section provides all of the following:
· Recommendations for school or classroom strategies that are clearly linked to the research.
· Description of “best practices” identified in the researchand/or cautions/avoidance of specific practices.
2 Recommendations for Practice section provides only the following:
· Presentation of the implications of current research for the classroom practices you recommend, but without the support of a critical review of the literature.
· an incomplete description of literature-based recommendations.
1 Recommendations for Practice section is based on personal opinion or has few references to the literature.
References
The reference list at the end of your paper documents all materials cited in your text and provides the information necessary to identify and retrieve each source. References cited in the reference list must be cited in the body of your text; conversely, each reference cited in the text must appear in the reference list. You should choose references judiciously and must include only the sources that were used in the research and preparation of you paper. In contract, a bibliography cites works for background or for further reading. APA style requires “reference” lists, not bibliographies.
References
American Psychological Association (2001). Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association
(5 th ed.). Washington, DC: Author.
Howard, R. M. (1995). Plagiarisms, authorships, and the academic death penalty. College English, 57(7):
788-806.
Master in Teaching Program(2006). Student Guidebook to College & Program Policies & Procedures. The
Evergreen State College Washington.
Addressing Methodological Issues with the Assessment of
Immigrant and ESL Preschool Learners
Rachel Holmes
Conference Paper Submitted to the Faculty of
The Evergreen State College
In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements
for the degree
Master in Teaching
2007