In all research it is essential to know what the other researchers have done in areas, which are close to one´s own research questions. However, it is also important to have a good overview of the research field as a whole. This allows positioning one´s research in the field, and understanding similarities and differences between one´s own and others´ research.
This unit aims at building an overall understanding of the Engineering Education Research (EER) literature, and gives guidelines where to look for relevant information, as well as, where to publish papers and how to build successful collaboration with peer scholars.
It is recommended that the course participants have passed the Units A (Introduction to EER) and B (Introduction to research methodologies) in the EER research course before entering the course. If not, they should prepare a research plan that includes the following:
All participants must meet the general entry conditions for the EER research course.
After the unit the participants should have a broad view of EER literature, including subfields of EER, related fields, different research approaches applied in the field, what kind of research is carried out, and where the results are published.
The participants will augment their research plan by positioning their research in the EER field, and listing and analyzing relevant related work concerning their own research. The outcome could also include a substantial part of the literature survey in the student´s doctoral thesis
Prof. Lauri Malmi
, Helsinki University of Technology, Espoo, Finland
Helsinki University of Technology, Espoo, Finland
Part 1 (August 25-27, 2010)
Day 1:
Day 2:
Day 3:
Between the two parts, the participants will carry out independent survey of literature to identify:
They also write a substantial part of a literature survey relevant to their research. This
will be sent to some others in the group to peer review and getting feedback.
Part 2 (Oct 18-19, 2010)
Day 4:
Day 5: