College of Arts and Social Sciences [Department of Information Studies] Course Portfolio INFO4130 Graduation Project Period: [Semester1, spring -2015] [25-04-2015] Course File I. COURSE FILE SUMMARY 1. COURSE INFORMATION College/Institute/Centre COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SOCIAL SCIENCES Department Information Studies Program Title BA Semester\Year Semester 1 (spring), 2015 Program Code Course Title English Arabic Course Code Graduation Project INFO4130 Course Type Major Requirements Pre Requisites INFO4150 Teaching Language Arabic Credit Hours 3 Hours Lecture Teaching Hours Teaching Weeks 3 (Weekly) مشروع التخرج Total 3 30 Number of students Lecture Practical/Fieldwork Number of Student dropped 30 - 1 2. COURSE DESCRIPTION ENGLISH COURSE DESCRIPTION ARABIC COURSE DESCRIPTION In this course, students choose a project subject and define the objectives of the project under the supervision of a faculty member. Students will prepare the proposal of their Graduation Project based on what they have learned in Research methods Course (Pre Requisites). This will includes: defining the statement of the problem, problem definition, development of an approach to the problem, research design formulation, data collection, data preparation and analysis, and report preparation and presentation. Students should present the project at the end of the semester, grading will be obtained by oral examination to be held by a committee from faculty members. Students will be allowed to work individually or in groups. The graduate project normally is conducted after completion of all core, specialization, and elective coursework. . 3. COURSE AIM This unit helps students to plan, implement, and evaluate a project consistent with the student’s academic and/or career goals and acceptable to the student’s advisor. 4. COURSE OBJECTIVES Enable students to choose subjects and areas to be researchable Enable students to formulate a study problem Enable students to select the appropriate research methods that suitable to their research Enable students to collect and analyze research data Enable students to design data collection tools 5. COURSE INTENDED LEARNING OUTCOMES After completing this course, the student will have skills to: Deal with a real life project. Define the statement of the problem. Define research requirements. Perform a study. Learn how to make a time table, and follow up strictly its content. Develop skills in oral presentation. Prepare research paper 2 6. LECTURES SCHEDULE WEEK 1-3 4-7 8-10 11-12 13-14 15 Students Tasks Phase 1: Initiating and planning Phase 2:Literature Review Phase 3:Research Design Phase4: Finding/analysis Phase5: Discussion Phase6:Final writing and presentation 7. TEACHING STRATEGIES AND TECHNOLOGY APPLICATION Teaching Method Teaching Media PowerPoint Meeting ( weekly) 8. GRADING AND ASSESSMENT Points Project Form Project quality Oral Presentation Organization and Structure Language use clarity of the report References, Sources and style Introduction and study background Research Problem Statement, objectives and significance Review of the literature Data Analysis and Interpretation Conclusion and Recommendation Handing and clarity Use of voice and Communication skills Ability to answer any question 20 60 20 9. COURSE RULES Attendance Attendance at class is mandatory. Course Instructors should keep attendance records. An "absentee warning notice" will be issued if a student is absent for: • More than 10% in courses with less than 75 total contact hours. • More than 5% in courses with 75 or more total contact hours. An "absentee withdrawal notice" will be issued and the student will be deemed to have withdrawn from the course with an 'FW' grade if a student is absent for: • More than 20% in courses with less than 75 total contact hours. • More than 15% in courses with 75 to 150 total contact hours. • More than 10% of total contact hours for courses with more than 150 total contact hours. 3 10. INSTRUCTIONAL MATERIALS Berg, B. L., Lune, H., & Lune, H. (2004). Qualitative research methods for the social sciences (Vol. 5). Boston, MA: Pearson. Bernard, H. R., & Bernard, H. R. (2012). Social research methods: Qualitative and quantitative approaches. Sage. Blanche, M. J. T., Blanche, M. T., Durrheim, K., & Painter, D. (Eds.). (2006). Research in practice: Applied methods for the social sciences. Juta and Company Ltd Denzin, N. K., & Lincoln, Y. S. (2009). Qualitative research. Yogyakarta: PustakaPelajar. Denzin, N. K., & Lincoln, Y. S. (Eds.). (2008). Collecting and interpreting qualitative materials (Vol. 3). Sage. Lee, M. H. (2002). Recent trends in research methods in library and information science: Content analysis of the journal articles. Journal of the Korean Society for Library and Information Science, 36(3), 287-310. Padgett, D. K. (2008). Qualitative methods in social work research (Vol. 36). Sage. Tashakkori, A., & Teddlie, C. (Eds.). (2010). Sage handbook of mixed methods in social & behavioral research. Sage. Taylor, S. J., & Bogdan, R. (1998). Introduction to qualitative research methods: A guidebook and resource . John Wiley & Sons Inc. Zikmund, W., Babin, B., Carr, J., & Griffin, M. (2012). Business research methods. Cengage Learning. 4