| ”
Purpose. This project is the largest collaborative learning activity for the course. Class members will work in teams of three people to work with or study a real organization. The team will choose an organization to work with. The project requires you to examine a problem or issue of concern in a real organization. The purpose of the project is to give your team an opportunity to apply what has been learned in the course (through course lectures, readings, and discussions) to problems in an organization of your team’s choice. Your team should identify a public, private, or not-for-profit organization (or part of one) to study. This must be an organization, not a learner group. You may select an organization in which one or more of the team members has worked or been a member. I advise you to be selective in choosing an issue or problem within an organization, as a lack of depth in the issue itself will not be an acceptable excuse for lack of depth in the analysis. There are three broad goals for this assignment: To meet these broad goals, your team should answer the following questions in the assignments detailed below. THE GENERAL FORMAT FOR YOUR WRITING PROJECTS The required research projects allow you to pursue important topics of organizational behavior in depth. Structure your papers in the following way: 1. Title Page: There are two parts to the title page. A). Identifying Information. The title page should identify who wrote the paper and what the paper is about. Include the title of paper, your name, & identification number. B) Executive Summary. An Executive Summary is a brief, one-paragraph statement of the issue being researched, what you did, what you found, and what should be done about your findings. 2. Introduction and Overview (1 page). The introduction tells the reader what you doing in the paper and how you are going to do it. 3. Body. (10-15 pages). The body of the paper provides the purpose of your research, the details of the issue being researched, your hypotheses (if appropriate), what you did, and what you found in your research. (Be concise. A long paper is not more impressive than a brief one.) 4. Discussion. (1-2 pages). There are three parts to a conclusion. First, give a very concise summary of your main points. Second, concisely state the conclusions your have deduced from your research. Third, give your recommendations for future actions that can be taken based on your research. State clearly what you want the reader to do now that s/he has read your research. 5. References. If you need to give references, use whatever format you are familiar with. We presume that you know how to use the reference materials in the library. If not, consult with a reference librarian. Length of papers. On most projects the suggested length is 15-20 pages of text (with 12 point type and 3/4 inch margins all around), exclusive of title page, tables, and references. (Do not play games with font sizes in order to stretch or shrink the apparent size of your paper. The real issue is the quality of your report, not its length.) Grading Criteria: The criteria used by the Instructors to assess your projects are spelled out explicitly on the attached sheet. The sheet gives points for well-written, well-structured reports – so take the effort to use good business reporting techniques. It gives points for creativity -so give it some personal flair. It gives points for substantiating your claims, so present a rationale for your assertions. Integrity. Your paper must reflect your own work. When the thoughts of others are used they must be cited and identified as such. Plagiarism involves taking the work of others as your own. Plagiarism is a serious breach of ethics, and will result in a failure for the course. |
Use the order calculator below and get started! Contact our live support team for any assistance or inquiry.
[order_calculator]