Syllabus

Doctor of Education in Educational Leadership (Ed.D.)

EDU 807: Enacting Educational Leadership Through Research — Summer A 2018

Credits - 3

Description

This writing intensive course covers the foundations of enacting leadership content gained thus far in the program for the purpose of locating, developing, analyzing, synthesizing and constructing a sound literature review consistent with the research on the student’s chosen research topic. This course provides students with opportunities to develop skills that are essential for conducting research and completing a dissertation, with particular focus on reviewing literature and composing a literature review chapter.  Students will demonstrate the ability to discriminate among alternative research viewpoints, differentiate constituent parts of the review, assess and comment on theories, thoughts, and ideas, concept proposals and relevant literature, and construct a cogent and compelling literature review.

Materials

Bloomberg, L.D. & Volpe, M. (2015). Completing your qualitative dissertation: A road map from beginning to end, (3rd Ed.) Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.

Creswell, J. W. (2015). Educational research: Planning, conducting, and evaluating quantitative and qualitative research, (5th ed.). Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson.

Roberts, C. (2010). The dissertation journey. (2nd Ed). Corwin Press.

Williams, J. (2016). Style lessons in clarity and grace. (12th Ed). New Jersey: Pearson.

Supplementary Texts:

  • Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association. (6th ed., 2nd printing).
  • Creswell, J. (2013). Qualitative inquiry and research design: Choosing among five approaches. Newbury Park, CA: Sage Publications
  • The OWL website at Purdue University 
  • Additional articles as assigned

Learning Objectives and Outcomes

Course Objectives:

  1. To develop a conceptual and theoretical framework for effectively locating and utilizing relevant research.
  2. To identify appropriate resources and relevant materials for the literature review.
  3. To develop a conceptual and theoretical framework for writing of the literature review.
  4. To focus the purpose of your study.
  5. To write a preliminary literature review.

Course Outcomes:

This course is designed to provide students with opportunities to develop skills that are essential for conducting research and completing a dissertation, with particular focus on reviewing literature and composing a literature review chapter. Students should demonstrate an ability to discriminate among alternative research sources and viewpoints. Students should demonstrate exemplary ability to differentiate constituent parts; assess and comment on theories, thoughts, and ideas, concept proposals and relevant literature; and construct a cogent and compelling literature review.

Student Learning Outcomes

Upon completion of the course, learners will: 

  1. Demonstrate the ability to locate current literature that informs their proposed research topic.
  2. Enact their beliefs on transformative leadership by collecting and analyzing relevant research.
  3. Synthesize and apply the theories of transformative leadership through discussions and class activities.
  4. Construct an annotated bibliography.
  5. Build a bibliography of high-interest pieces and format the bibliography of the pieces consistent with APA so they are ready to be inserted into their dissertation.
  6. Develop a system for managing electronic and hard copy resources for extracting the information needed to conduct a literature review.
  7. Analyze, reflect and compare and contrast relevant literature sources related to their research topics.
  8. Synthesize relevant literature in a structured, logical and coherent manner.
  9. Compose a maximum 20 page Literature Review based on at least 20 relevant articles, two dissertations and one book.
  10. Construct research journal entry to keep track of what they’ve done, when, and how they are thinking about things.

Assignments

Discussion Boards: Online discussions provide you with additional opportunities to make meaning of new theory, key concepts, and applications of theory to practice. Participants contribute to the intellectual and theoretical development of the cohort through offering insights, synthesizing understandings, and responding to the postings and work of others.

Introduction Paragraph: The introduction paragraph allows an opportunity to think about your topic area and to inform others about the relevance and primary reason to research.

Practice Citing and Annotating Scholarship Exercise: This exercise is intended to give you practice with the habits of mind and writing involved in APA citation and effective annotation. This practice will help you prepare your annotated bibliography, due in Week 3.

Annotated Bibliography: Prepare an annotated bibliography for your chosen topic; it will be the topic you are exploring for your dissertation. Find at least 10 new resources that relate to your topic.

Preliminary Literature Review Outline: For this assignment, you construct an outline for your literature review. The assigned outline will form the foundation for your literature review.

Preliminary Literature Review: Using the feedback from your peer(s), the assignment rubric (in the syllabus and embedded in the assignment), and the checklist on pages 109-110 in the Roberts text, revise your draft preliminary literature review on your emergent topic of interest.

Research Journal Synthesis: Looking over the research journal you kept in this course, reflect on your journey in a concise 500-word essay.

 

Note:The University of New England provides students, staff and faculty with free access to RefWorks, a fantastic tool for collecting and managing references and making style-correct citations. Access the tool through the link on the left navigation bar. For instructions and tutorials in setting up your account and getting started, visit http://success.une.edu/blackboard-support/refworks/.

Grading Policy

Your grade in this course will be determined by the following criteria:

Grade Breakdown

AssignmentsWeight
5 Threaded Discussion Boards (2 points each)10 points
Introduction Paragraph10 points
Practice Citing and Annotating Scholarship Exercise5 points
Annotated Bibliography20 points
Preliminary Literature Review Outline10 points
Preliminary Literature Review35 points
Research Journal Synthesis 10 points
Total100 Points

The criteria for all courses in the Ed. D. program are described in the modules and/or rubrics. Assignments will include guidelines with rubrics, descriptions of expectations, or examples, and include point values. Coursework will be assessed and graded using individual evaluation protocols that are provided for the three major assignments. Final “grades” will reflect the following schema:

  • High Pass (HP): Work that exceeds all or most of the criteria of the respective assignment. To receive a high pass the work must demonstrate exceptional command and display of all or most required elements;
  • Pass (P): Work that meets all requirements and expectations as specified in assignments, and is fully satisfactory in every respect;
  • Low Pass (LP): Work is deemed unsatisfactory.

Grade Scale: 95 = HP; 80-94 = P; 70-79 = LP

Note** The instructor will determine if an assignment may be revised and resubmitted for rescoring. Candidates may proceed to subsequent courses in the curriculum with one LP grade, and although there is no failing grade, a second LP course grade results in termination from the doctoral program.

All assignments are to be completed in a timely manner with appropriate accuracy, detail, thought and reflection fitting of doctoral-level degree candidates. All assignments (done in writing or with other media applications) are graded on the basis of faculty assessment of your ability to accurately apply concepts from readings, organization, and mechanics. See the appendices for grading rubrics. Please note that you must save all submitted documents in Microsoft Word in order for them to transmit successfully. All work must be properly identified and include author(s)’ name(s). Submit all written work in APA style (Refer to the APA Publication Manual for guidance; Purdue OWL is an excellent, user-friendly resource).

Schedule

 

Week

Assignments

Due Date

Product

Submission location

1

5/2 – 5/6

Readings:

  • Roberts: Chapter 9- Reviewing the Literature, pgs. 85-110
  • Bloomberg and Volpe: Annotated Bibliographies, pgs. 116-117
  • Rubric: Annotated Bibliography

Sunday, 5/6 at 11:59 PM ET

 

Threaded Discussion

Initial Post: Friday, 5/4 at 11:59 PM ET

Reply Post: Sunday, 5/6 at 11:59 PM ET

Small Group Discussion Board

Research Journal

Sunday, 5/6 at 11:59 PM ET

(Not submitted)

Blackboard Assignment: Introduction Paragraph

Sunday, 5/6 at 11:59 PM ET

Blackboard Assignment

2

5/7 – 5/13

 

 

Readings:

  • Roberts: Chapter 10- Mastering the Academic Style, pgs. 111-121
  • Williams: Part One: Style as Choice, pgs. 1-26
  • Creswell, 2015: Chapter 3

Sunday, 5/13 at 11:59 PM ET

 

Research Journal

Sunday, 5/13 at 11:59 PM ET

(Not submitted)

Blackboard Assignment: Practice Citing and Annotating Scholarship Exercise

Sunday, 5/13 at 11:59 PM ET

Blackboard Assignment

Threaded Discussion

Initial Post: Wednesday, 5/9 at 11:59 PM ET

Reply Post: Sunday, 5/13 at 11:59 PM ET

Small Group Discussion Board

3

5/14 – 5/20

 

Readings:

  • Roberts: Chapter 9- page 109
  • Callahan (link in Blackboard)

Sunday, 5/20 at 11:59 PM ET

 

Research Journal

Sunday,5/20 at 11:59 PM ET

(Not submitted)

Blackboard Assignment: Annotated Bibliography

Sunday, 5/20 at 11:59 PM ET

Blackboard Assignment

Threaded Discussion

Initial Post: Wednesday, 5/16 at 11:59 PM ET

Reply Post: Sunday, 5/20 at 11:59 PM ET

Small Group Discussion Board

4

5/21 – 5/27

 

Readings:

  • Bloomberg and Volpe: Chapter 6
  • Roberts: Chapter 10
  • Callahan: (link in Blackboard)

Sunday, 5/27 at 11:59 PM ET

 

Research Journal

Sunday, 5/27 at 11:59 PM ET

(Not submitted)

Threaded Discussion

Initial Post: Wednesday, 5/23 at 11:59 PM ET

Reply Post: Sunday, 5/27 at 11:59 ET

Small Group Discussion Board

Blackboard Assignment: Preliminary Literature Review Outline

Sunday, 5/27 at 11:59 PM ET

Blackboard Assignment

5

5/28 – 6/3

 

Writing Week

Sunday, 6/3 at 11:59 PM ET

 

Research Journal

Sunday, 6/3 at 11:59 PM ET

(Not submitted)

Small Group File Exchange: Share your completed draft preliminary literature review with members of your group.

Students meet this week and/or next and discuss their work.

Sunday, 6/3 at 11:59 PM ET

Small Group Discussion Board: File Exchange

6

6/4 – 6/10

 

Readings

  • Bloomberg and Volpe: Chapter 6
  • Roberts: page 109-110
  • Callahan (link in Blackboard)

Sunday, 6/10 at 11:59 PM ET

 

Research Journal: Reflect on your practice.

Sunday, 6/10 at 11:59 PM ET

(Not submitted)

Threaded discussion: Peer Review

Initial Post: Wednesday, 6/6 at 11:59 PM ET

Reply Post: Sunday, 6/10 at 11:59 PM ET

Small Group Discussion Board

7

6/11 – 6/17

 

 

Readings

  • Williams: Part Two, pgs. 27-92

Sunday, 6/17 at 11:59 PM ET

 

Research Journal: Reflect on your practice.

Sunday, 6/17 at 11:59 PM ET

(Not submitted)

Threaded Discussion

Initial Post: Wednesday, 6/13 at 11:59 PM ET

Reply Post:

Sunday, 6/17 at 11:59 PM ET

Small Group Discussion Board

Blackboard Assignment: Preliminary Literature Review

Sunday, 6/17 at 11:59 PM ET

Blackboard Assignment

8

6/18 – 6/24

Blackboard Assignment: Research Journal Synthesis

FRIDAY, 6/22 at 11:59 PM ET

Blackboard Assignment

Student Resources

Online Student Support

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Online Peer Support

Togetherall is a 24/7 communication and emotional support platform monitored by trained clinicians. It’s a safe place online to get things off your chest, have conversations, express yourself creatively, and learn how to manage your mental health. If sharing isn’t your thing, Togetherall has other tools and courses to help you look after yourself with plenty of resources to explore. Whether you’re struggling to cope, feeling low, or just need a place to talk, Togetherall can help you explore your feelings in a safe supportive environment. You can join Togetherall using your UNE email address.

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ITS Contact: Toll-Free Help Desk 24 hours/7 days per week at 1-877-518-4673.

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The Career Ready Program provides tools and resources to help students explore and hone in on their career goals, search for jobs, create and improve professional documents, build professional network, learn interview skills, grow as a professional, and more. Come back often, at any time, as you move through your journey from career readiness as a student to career growth, satisfaction, and success as alumni.

Policies

AI Use

The Graduate Programs in Education holds the position that Grammarly and other AI writing and generative technology should not be used when completing course assignments, unless explicitly permitted by course faculty and assignment instructions. These tools do not support a student’s personal and direct capacity to develop and hone skills in creativity, logic, critical thinking, analysis, evaluation, theorization, and writing, which are central to graduate-level rigor, assessment, and research. Use of these tools when not explicitly permitted may result in an academic integrity infraction.

Turnitin Originality Check and Plagiarism Detection Tool

The College of Professional Studies uses Turnitin to help deter plagiarism and to foster the proper attribution of sources. Turnitin provides comparative reports for submitted assignments that reflect similarities in other written works. This can include, but is not limited to, previously submitted assignments, internet articles, research journals, and academic databases.

Make sure to cite your sources appropriately as well as use your own words in synthesizing information from published literature. Webinars and workshops, included early in your coursework, will help guide best practices in APA citation and academic writing.

You can learn more about Turnitin in the guide on how to navigate your Similarity Report.

Technology Requirements

Please review the technical requirements for UNE Online Graduate Programs

Course Evaluation Policy

Course surveys are one of the most important tools the University of New England uses for evaluating the quality of your education, and for providing meaningful feedback to instructors on their teaching. In order to assure that the feedback is both comprehensive and precise, we need to receive it from each student for each course. Evaluation access is distributed via UNE email at the beginning of the last week of the course.

Information Technology Services (ITS)

ITS Contact: Toll Free Help Desk 24 hours/7 days per week at 1-877-518-4673

Late Policy

Assignments: Late assignments will be accepted up to 3 days late; however, there is a 10% grade reduction (from the total points) for the late submission. After three days the assignment will not be accepted.

Discussion posts: If the initial post is submitted late, but still within the discussion board week, there will be a 10% grade reduction from the total discussion grade (e.g., a 3 point discussion will be reduced by 0.3 points). Any posts submitted after the end of the Discussion Board week will not be graded.

Please make every effort ahead of time to contact your instructor and your student support specialist if you are not able to meet an assignment deadline. Arrangements for extenuating circumstances may be considered by faculty.

Attendance Policy

8 week: Students taking online graduate courses through the College of Professional Studies will be administratively dropped for non-participation if a graded assignment/discussion post is not submitted before Sunday at 11:59 pm ET of the first week of the term. Reinstatement is at the purview of the Dean's Office.

16 week: Students taking online graduate courses through the College of Professional Studies will be administratively dropped for non-participation if a graded assignment/discussion post is not submitted before Friday at 11:59 pm ET of the second week of the term. Reinstatement is at the purview of the Dean's Office.

Student Handbook Online - Policies and Procedures

The policies contained within this document apply to all students in the College of Professional Studies. It is each student's responsibility to know the contents of this handbook.

UNE Online Student Handbook

UNE Course Withdrawal

Please contact your student support specialist if you are considering dropping or withdrawing from a course. The last day to drop for 100% tuition refund is the 2nd day of the course. Financial Aid charges may still apply. Students using Financial Aid should contact the Financial Aid Office prior to withdrawing from a course.

Academic Integrity

The University of New England values academic integrity in all aspects of the educational experience. Academic dishonesty in any form undermines this standard and devalues the original contributions of others. It is the responsibility of all members of the University community to actively uphold the integrity of the academy; failure to act, for any reason, is not acceptable. For information about plagiarism and academic misconduct, please visit UNE Plagiarism Policies.

Academic dishonesty includes, but is not limited to the following:

  1. Cheating, copying, or the offering or receiving of unauthorized assistance or information.
  2. Fabrication or falsification of data, results, or sources for papers or reports.
  3. Action which destroys or alters the work of another student.
  4. Multiple submissions of the same paper or report for assignments in more than one course without permission of each instructor.
  5. Plagiarism, the appropriation of records, research, materials, ideas, or the language of other persons or writers and the submission of them as one's own.

Charges of academic dishonesty will be reviewed by the Program Director. Penalties for students found responsible for violations may depend upon the seriousness and circumstances of the violation, the degree of premeditation involved, and/or the student’s previous record of violations. Appeal of a decision may be made to the Dean whose decision will be final. Student appeals will take place through the grievance process outlined in the student handbook.