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Writing in the Wild: Research Proposal Guidelines

Research proposals can do many things, but most importantly, as the word itself suggests, they "propose"; that is, they outline the possible directions that the writer of a research project would like to take. You will improve your chances of overall success with such a project if you begin with thoughtful questions and ideas that can direct your research, and writing this proposal will help you
do so. This completed proposal must be 400-500 words long, and include a title, your name, the course title, and the date published. The rough draft must be linked to the appropriate section of your assignment index by the beginning of class on Friday, September 27, at 5 p.m. The proposal needs two main sections; do not merely answer the questions below in a list-like way--answer as many as you can, but do so in writing that stands on its own and reads well, with its own unity and coherence:

1.The who/what/where: First of all, consider your audiences--your teacher, your classmates, and possibly others (remember, it’ll be on the web!). Most members of your audience know very little about your research worksite and the writer you plan to study. Provide for us a kind of introductory portrait of your worksite and your writer that answers such basic introductory questions as these (you don't need to answer all of them): what do we as readers of your proposal need to know in order to understand the basics of the research you plan to do? What is your writer’s name and position? What kind of work does your writer do? (lawyer, coach, nurse, professor?) Where is your worksite situated, and what does it look and sound like? Is it a large single room in an old house or a series of small offices in a large modern building? What kind of product or service is produced at your worksite? How long has the worksite existed and how long has it been at its present location? What do you know so far about the background of your writer in terms of age, class, race, and gender? What are the varieties of writing that he or she creates (memos, e-mail, brochures, contracts, reports)? Who does he or she work with in a general sense, and more specifically, collaborate with? In what senses do they collaborate? Who are his or her reading audiences? In what way or ways do these audiences have backgrounds similar to that of your writer? In what ways do they not?

2.The topics/ideas/hypotheses: Soon we will have read two authors (with more to come) whose ideas you might incorporate into your proposal and research, and ultimately into your final report. In the second section of your proposal, provide a paragraph summarizing the ideas and questions we have been discussing in class, particularly in terms of how you might be able to investigate these areas at your writer's worksite. What strikes you as especially interesting or puzzling, or possibly accurate or inaccurate, about hooks’ and Kleimann’s central themes and concepts? Kleimann, for example, examines differing models of how working writers interact, and suggests that we may well be both overstating our tendency to compete and understating our desire to cooperate; hooks examines how the “bourgeois values” of the classroom affected her as a student from a “non-materially privileged” family. How might you investigate these ideas in the context of your research worksite and writer? As far as you are able to determine at this point, do you find your worksite to be primarily individualistic, collaborative, hierarchical, or some combination of both? In what specific senses? How might these ways of interacting (or not interacting) shape the writing process or the texts your writer produces? Do you find your worksite seems to confirm or contradict hooks’ notions of “bourgeois values”? In what ways? From what you know so far, how might your writer’s social and economic background impact her or his work in general, and writing in particular?

Finally, remember that while your proposal must be a well-written, easily understood text, one that introduces your research project to us and suggests possible investigative paths, the ideas that you use here are not meant to be fixed in stone. Over the course of the semester, we will be reading other writers and discussing other ideas that you can also incorporate into your work, and you will need to incorporate others from your own outside research (more on that later). Be as specific and as detailed as you can here—we want to know about your particular project and your particular ideas—but also remember that your ideas will change and develop as you do more reading and discussion, and as you gather more information through interviews, observations, and close examination of texts.