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Wednesday, July 10, 2019
Tuesday, July 9, 2019
Wednesday, July 3, 2019
CAPSTONE PROJECT GUIDELINES
Part 1 – Introduction to the Capstone Project
To nurture a culture of respect for
the scientific method, research and evidence-based practice within
the profession of chiropractic, the University Of Bridgeport College
Of Chiropractic has instituted a graduation requirement of a written
Capstone Project. There are two approved plans leading to completion
of the Capstone requirement: A Senior Paper and a Research Thesis.
A Senior Paper is the minimum research writing requirement for
graduation from the University of Bridgeport College of Chiropractic
Doctor of Chiropractic (D.C.) program. A Research Thesis is a
special type of Capstone Project and can be any type of original
investigative research (e.g., survey, case-control study, cohort
study, clinical trial or basic science study).
Suitable For Publication
All Capstone Projects must be
suitable for publication.
Suitable for publication in the
context of a U.B.C.C Capstone Project means that a manuscript must be
in the format and style (see Appendix A – Good Scientific Writing)
that a peer-reviewed, indexed, scientific publication, for example
the Journal of Manipulative and Physiological Therapeutics (JMPT)
would reasonably consider for publication.
In an effort to ensure that the
Capstone Project prepares future doctors to become contributors to
the profession’s knowledgebase, these guidelines include sections
from the Instructions for Authors from JMPT. (1) This material is
copyrighted and appears with permission of JMPT. Part 4 of these
guidelines is edited from JMPT’s Instructions for Authors. Part 4
is applicable to all Capstone Projects.
Senior Paper
A Senior Paper is the work of a single
student and can be a literature review, case report or case series.
The literature review must be on a
professionally relevant topic. This will be in the form of a critical
narrative review, but a systematic review can be attempted with
agreement of the student’s advisor.
Clinical case report or case series
can be derived from case(s) from the U.B.C.C Health Sciences Center,
affiliated doctor’s practices or affiliated institutions.
Research Thesis
In order to qualify to start a
Research Thesis a student must have, by their 4th
semester, a minimum cumulative Graduate Point Average of 3.25 (or
permission of the College Research/Scholarship Committee (RSC). A
Research Thesis may be conducted with a research team of up to four
students. Completion of a Research Thesis is the first of the
requirements for a student to earn the Distinction in Research
designation on their diploma.
Part 2 – Advisors
All Capstone Projects
If the topic for the Capstone Project
was suggested by a faculty member, that faculty member will serve as
the student’s advisor.
Projects generated by students will be
assigned an advisor by the Capstone Projects Subcommittee of the
Research/Scholarship Committee with first preference given to the
faculty the student requests. Any faculty can be requested by
students to serve as advisor.
Students submit the Capstone Advisor
Assignment Form (Appendix B) which will be used by the Projects
Subcommittee of the Research/Scholarship Committee to assign an
advisor.
Research Thesis Committee
A student or team of up to four
students conducting a Research Thesis will, in addition to their
advisor (as discussed above) recruit at least two other faculty to
join their thesis committee. Thus, a thesis committee will have
three members. The Advisor shall chair the Thesis Committee.
Students are encouraged to invite the
members of their thesis committee from other academic units of the
University or from other educational institutions.
When a faculty member agrees to serve
on the student’s thesis committee, the student should give them the
Thesis Committee Invitation Acceptance Form (Appendix C) to sign. The
completed form must be submitted to the Research/Scholarship
Committee Chair. Students should note that faculty may elect not to
accept their invitations to serve on their thesis committee.
The two additional members of the
thesis committee will review and suggest changes to the thesis only
after the research has been completed and the Advisor has approved
the draft of the thesis.
Part 3 – Grading and Completion Policies
Capstone Project Completion Contract
All students and their advisors will
produce a Capstone Completion Contract (for a Senior Paper –
Appendix D, for a Research Thesis – Appendix E). This will detail
what tasks will be accomplished at the end of each semester or summer
break. For a Research Thesis the tasks will be assigned to each
member of the group working on one thesis.
Successful completion of the student’s
semester tasks will result in a grade of “Satisfactory” for that
semester’s Capstone Project course. If the tasks are not
completed, the student will receive an “Incomplete”. Incomplete
work must be completed according to College of Chiropractic academic
policy or a grade of F will be earned. Failing grades can prevent
normal progression towards graduation.
Completion Deadline
The expected completion date for any
type of Capstone Project is the 12th week of the 7th
semester. Completion after the deadline may delay graduation.
Binding and final submission
Submission of the student’s Capstone
Project, and acceptance of it by the student’s Advisor and the
Chair or the designate of the RSC is a requirement for graduation
from the University of Bridgeport College of Chiropractic.
Papers should not be bound until
approved by both the advisor and the Research/Scholarship Committee.
All costs for binding will be borne by the student. Manuscripts will
be bound using heat-sealed Velo™ binding with a clear front cover
and black vinyl back cover (currently available at Kinko’s
Printing).
Final submission
Final submission to the Dean of the
College of Chiropractic of the following:
- Three copies of the manuscript signed by the advisor, thesis committee (for Research Thesis) and the Research/Scholarship Committee representative
- A CD-ROM containing a copy of the manuscript in MS Word or RTF format
- A turnitin.com report on the manuscript
Distinction In Research
Students completing a Research Thesis
may qualify to receive their Doctor of Chiropractic degree with
Distinction In Research. The minimum standards for this academic
honor are:
- A successful defense of the student’s thesis (majority vote by thesis committee). A Research Thesis that is not successfully defended can qualify a student for graduation as a Senior Paper
- For a Research Thesis with more than one student investigator, each student shall defend the thesis independent of one another. Each member of a Research Thesis team need not attempt or successfully defend a thesis. Only those members who successfully defend their thesis shall be qualified to receive Distinction in Research.
- Presentation to the faculty and student body of the research
- Submission of the thesis for hard binding though the UB Magnus Wahlstrom Library in addition to the Velo™ bound copies and CD-ROM noted above.
If submission,
defense and presentation of a Research Thesis is after the 12th
week of the 7th semester, the student can choose to
receive a Certificate of Distinction in Research instead, or bear the
cost of re-issuing the diploma with this designation.
Ethics Policies
Copyright compliance
It is the
author's responsibility to secure all copyright permissions and
permission to state names or institutions in the acknowledgements and
provide these to the U.B.C.C. Research/Scholarship Committee.
Illustrations or content from other publications (print or
electronic) must be submitted with written permission from the
publisher (and author if required) and must be acknowledged in the
manuscript. (1)
Turnitin
To verify that
all material in a student’s manuscript complies with copyright law,
all manuscripts will be submitted to turnitin.com for an analysis of
the content’s originality. Students will obtain access to Turnitin
from their advisor.
Human subjects
U.B.C.C. endorses
the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE)
guidelines and the Declaration of Helsinki, and all related
conditions regarding the experimental use of human subjects and their
informed consent will apply. All Research Projects must be approved
by the University of Bridgeport Instructional Review Board (IRB) and
shall clearly include this statement in the Methods section. Projects
that report the results of experimental investigations with human
subjects must include a statement that informed consent was obtained
(in writing, from the subject or legal guardian) after the
procedure(s) had been fully explained. Written informed consent for
publication must to be obtained from patients for case reports, case
series, and retrospective designs. (1)
Affiliated institutions
Research conducted at affiliated
institutions must also comply with the IRB requirements of those
institutions.
Patient anonymity
It is the
authors' responsibility to maintain appropriate records as well as
protect patients' identity. Ethical and legal considerations require
careful attention to the protection of the patient's anonymity in
case reports and other publications. Identifying information such as
names, initials, actual case numbers, and specific dates must be
avoided; identifying information about a patient's personal history
and characteristics should be disguised. Photographs or artistic
likenesses of subjects are publishable only with their written
consent or the consent of legal guardian; the signed consent form,
giving any special conditions (i.e., eyes blocked off), must
accompany manuscript. (1)
Part 4 – Senior Paper
Types of papers
Case reports and case series
Case reports reflect accounts of the
diagnosis and treatment of unusual, difficult, or otherwise
interesting cases that may have independent educational value or may
contribute to better standardization of care for a particular health
problem when correlated with similar reports of others. Case series
are retrospective comparative assessments of the diagnosis and
treatment of several cases of a similar condition, i.e., the
comparative evaluation of two or more (perhaps hundreds) of case
reports. Consent for publication in print and electronic format must
be obtained from patients and be made available to the editor upon
request. Authors should include a statement in the text that the
patient(s) gave consent to have personal health information published
without divulging personal identifiers. For more information about
HIPAA as it relates to obtaining patient consent for publication,
please refer to http://privacyruleandresearch.nih.gov/faq.asp (1)
Literature review
Assessments of current knowledge of a
particular subject of interest that synthesize evidence relevant to
well-defined questions about diagnosis, prognosis, or therapy with
emphasis on better correlation, the demonstration of ambiguities, and
the delineation of areas that may constitute hypotheses for further
study. (1)
Guidelines
A Senior Paper should generally
contain:
- Twenty five pages of text
- Thirty to fifty references
Note: The final judge of what is the
appropriate breadth and depth of a Senior Paper is the faculty
advisor.
Part 5 – Research Thesis
Types of research
Descriptive Research
- Survey
- Correlational Research
- Retrospective – Case Control Study
- Prospective – Cohort study
Experimental research
- Reliability Study
- Validity study
- Randomized controlled trial
The thesis proposal
A complete thesis proposal must be
submitted and approved by the Advisor prior to presentation to the
University of Bridgeport IRB. A proposal shall include the following
sections of the manuscript: Introduction, review of the literature
and methods
Research Thesis Budget
Tentative Budget is to be submitted
with initial thesis proposal. Clearly indicate how much funding one
is requesting to execute the study (budget usually cannot exceed $800
per project and is dependent on RSC approval). The budget should
include a description of each expense, and dollar amount of each
Kinds of expenses covered:
- Printing and mailing costs for surveys although most surveys can be conducted on-line with Surveygizmo. (see Research/Scholarship Committee Chair)
- Incentives/refreshments for subjects
- Supplies or equipment needed for the study
Kinds of expenses not covered
- Payments for student’s services
- Typing costs of the proposal/thesis
- Copying
- Binding
Reimbursement of Approved Expenses
The Request for Reimbursement is to be
submitted after acceptance of the thesis (unless an earlier payment
plan is approved by the Research/Scholarship Committee. The Request
must include a summary of all pre-approved budget expenses. All of
the original receipts must be submitted for reimbursement to occur.
Indication in writing the one group member to whom the reimbursement
check should be made out, and this individual will be responsible for
dividing the money among the other group members
UBCC Student Research Awards
The Research/Scholarship Committee may
grant up to three monetary awards to three students’ theses at
graduation.
Eligibility and Submission
Any Research Thesis which has been
approved by the student’s Thesis Committee and the RSC and
submitted to the RSC before the deadline of the 12th week
of the 7th semester is eligible for the University of
Bridgeport College of Chiropractic Student Research Awards.
Award Amounts:
- $1000
- $500
- $250
Award Criteria:
- Quality of the research
- Originality of the study design
- Quality of the submission of the research (i.e., thesis)
- Quality of the presentation of the research on Research Day
Part 6 – Manuscript preparation – All Capstone Projects
All manuscripts will be submitted on
standard 8½ in. x 11 in. white standard photocopy/laser printer
paper. Printing will be in black ink with 12 point Times Roman or
equivalent typeface. Margins will be 1in. on all sides.
Manuscripts must be prepared in
accordance with the Declaration of Vancouver "Uniform
Requirements for Manuscripts Submitted to Biomedical Journals"
(available from www.icmje.org). The manuscript should be in
double-spaced format. Do not break any words (hyphenate) at the end
of any line and do not insert hard page breaks. (1)
Page numbering
Except for the title page, all pages
in a Capstone Project will be numbered on the bottom center of each
page. The front matter (see below) will be numbered using lower case
Roman numerals (e.g. i, ii, iii, iv, etc.). Although it will not be
seen the title page is page i. The manuscript body will be numbered
using Arabic numerals (e.g., 1, 2, 3,etc.). The initial page will be
number one.
Terminology
Standard spelling and terminology
should be used whenever possible. Avoid creating new terms or
acronyms for entities that already exist. Technical terms that are
used in statistics should not be used as non-technical terms, such as
"random" (which implies a randomizing device), "normal,"
"significant" (which implies statistical significance), and
"sample." (1)
Units of Measurement
The International System of Units (SI)
is the standard.
Abbreviations and symbols
Use only standard abbreviations for
units of measurement, statistical terms, biological references,
journal names, etc. Avoid abbreviations in titles and abstracts. The
full term should precede its abbreviation for the first use in the
manuscript, unless it is a standard unit of measurement. For standard
abbreviations, consult the following:
- Uniform requirements for manuscripts submitted to biomedical journals (Ann Intern Med 1997;126:36-47);
- American Medical Association manual of style. 9th ed. Baltimore: Williams & Wilkins; 1997;
- Scientific style and format, the CBE manual for authors, editors, and publishers. 6th ed. Cambridge (UK): Cambridge University Press; 1994;
- O'Connor M, Woodford FP. Writing scientific papers in English: an ELSE-Ciba Foundation guide for authors. Amsterdam: Elsevier-Excerpta Medica; 1975. (1)
Front Matter
- Title Page (See Appendix F)
- Signature Sheet (See Appendix G)
- Separate Table of Contents
- Separate Abstract Page
Abstract
The structured abstract should be no
more than 250 words. Structured abstracts are required for all
original data reports, reviews of the literature, clinical
guidelines, and case reports/series. The abstract should consist of 4
paragraphs, labeled: Purpose, Methods (includes study design and
statistical methods), Results, and Conclusions. (1)
Key words
Provide approximately 4-6 key indexing
terms that will assist indexers in cross-indexing your article and
that may be published with the abstract. These terms should come from
the Index Medicus Medical Subject Headings (MeSH). (1)
Senior Paper
Literature review
Introduction
Provides reader with necessary
background and setting to put the problem in proper context. It
allows the reader to see the basis for the literature review. An
introduction should be factual – contains cited research, facts and
statements, also opinions and points of view. It should provide a
logical lead into a clear and concise problem within the literature.
Concluding the introduction is a statement of the purpose of the
review.
Literature review
A critical assessment of the research
that has been conducted on the topic. The review should be organized
into categories (e.g. those in support of a particular hypothesis,
those against, and those offering alternative hypotheses entirely).
Summarize the individual papers with as much or as little detail as
each deserves depending up on its relative importance in the overall
literature on the topic.
Discussion
The strengths or weaknesses in the
methods of the studies reviewed should be highlighted. As one
discusses the relevant similarities and differences between papers.
A conclusion should then state clearly
the main conclusions of the review and give a clear explanation of
their importance and relevance.
Case Report
Background
This section gives an introduction to
the case report. The condition should be explained as one would to a
health care provider who is not a specialist in the area. This must
include a literature review of the condition. There should be a
concluding statement about what is being reported in the paper.
Case presentation
This section presents all the details
about the case. It should include demographic information but cannot
include enough detail that might lead to the identification of the
patient. The relevant medical history of the patient, signs and
symptoms, all tests that were carried out, and a description of any
treatment or intervention in a chronological order. This section may
be broken into subsections with appropriate subheadings.
Discussion
The discussion should explain what is
important about the case. It should discuss how this case is similar
or different than what is reported in the literature. Any
recommendations as a result of the findings in this case should be
made. Finally the main conclusions of the case report and give a
clear explanation of their importance and relevance.
Consent
This section should provide a
statement to confirm that the patient has given their consent for the
case report to be published. "Written informed consent was
obtained from the patient for publication of this case report and any
accompanying images.” If the patient has died then consent must be
obtained from the executor of the estate. If the patient is a minor,
or cannot give consent for other reasons, consent must be provides by
the parents or legal guardians of the patient. In these cases, the
statement in the 'Consent' section of the manuscript should be
appropriately rewritten.
Research Thesis
The text of observational and
experimental articles are usually divided into sections with the
headings: Introduction, Methods, Results, and Discussion. Longer
articles may need subheadings within some sections to clarify or
break up content. Other types of articles such as case reports,
reviews, editorials, and commentaries may need other formats. (1)
Introduction
Clearly state the purpose of the
article. Summarize the rationale for the study or observation. Give
only pertinent references and do not review the subject extensively;
the introduction should serve only to introduce what was done and why
it was done. State the specific purpose, research objective, or
hypothesis tested by the study (typically found at the end of the
introduction section). (1)
Methods
The selection and description of
participants, technical information, and statistics used should be
reported in this section. Describe the selection of the observational
or experimental subjects (patients or experimental animals, including
controls). Papers of a specific study design should follow current
and relevant guidelines (e.g., CONSORT, MOOSE, QUOROM, STARD, TREND,
etc.) and include appropriate materials in the text. Identify the
methods, apparatus (manufacturer's name and address in parentheses)
and procedures in sufficient detail to allow others to reproduce the
work for comparison of results. Give references to established
methods, provide references and brief descriptions for methods that
have been published but may not be well known, describe new or
substantially modified methods and give reasons for using them and
evaluate their limitations. When reporting experiments with human
subjects, indicate the procedures used in accordance with the ethical
standards of the Committee on Human Experimentation of the
institution in which the research was conducted and/or were done in
accordance with the Helsinki Declaration of 1975. Clearly indicate
the ethics review board or IRB that approved the study. When
reporting experiments on animals, indicate whether the institution's
or the National Research Council's guide for the care and use of
laboratory animals was followed. Do not use patient names, initials,
or hospital numbers or in any manner give information by which the
individuals can be identified. The author may be requested to provide
the editor documentation from the ethics board and methods used to
review the work. (1)
Statistics
Describe the statistical methods in
enough detail that would allow a knowledgeable reader with access to
the original data to verify the results. Findings should include
appropriate indicators of measurement error or uncertainty, such as
confidence intervals. (1)
Examples of statistical details that
should be included in the methods section are: the eligibility of
experimental subjects, details about randomization, methods for
blinding, complications of treatment, numb of observations, dropouts
from a clinical trial, the statistical programs used. In the results
section, state the statistical methods used to analyze the results.
All statistical terms, abbreviations, and symbols should be defined.
(1)
Include numbers of observations and
the statistical significance of the findings when appropriate.
Detailed statistical analyses, mathematical derivations, and the like
may sometimes be suitably presented in the form of one or more
appendixes. (1)
Results
Present your results in logical
sequence within the text, tables, and figures. Do not repeat findings
in multiple places (e.g., do not include the same data in both text
and tables). Emphasize or summarize only important observations, do
not discuss findings in this section. (1)
Discussion
The discussion should emphasize the
important aspects of the study and include conclusions that follow
from these observations. Do not repeat data presented in the Results
section and do not include information or work that is not directly
relevant to the study. State new hypotheses when indicated, but
clearly label them as such. Statements that are unsupported, that
generalize, or that over extrapolate the findings should not be
included. Limitations to the study, including bias, should be clearly
stated. (1)
Conclusions that may be drawn from the
study may be included in the discussion; however, they may be more
appropriately presented in a separate section. The principal
conclusions should be directly linked to the goals of the study.
Unqualified statements and conclusions not supported by your data
should not be included. Avoid claiming priority or referring to work
that has not been completed or published. State new hypotheses when
warranted but clearly label them as such. Recommendations (for
further study, etc), when appropriate, may be included. (1)
Tables and Figures
Tables
Tables should be numbered as they
appear in the text (e.g., Table 1). Identify statistical measures of
variation, such as standard deviation and standard error of mean. If
data are used from another source, the author should acknowledge the
original source in the text and include the written permission from
the copyright holder to reproduce the material with the submission.
(1)
Using Arabic numerals, number each
table consecutively (in the order in which they were listed in the
text in parentheses) and supply a brief title to appear at the top of
the table above a horizontal line; place any necessary explanatory
matter in footnotes at the bottom of the table below a horizontal
line and identify with footnote symbols *, , , §, , , **, , etc. (1)
Do not submit tables as photographs.
Avoid as much as possible the use of too many tables in relation to
length of the text, as this may produce difficulties in layout of the
pages. Avoid the use of tables that do not fit in the 'portrait'
layout. Table contents and number of tables may be subject to
editing. (1)
Figures
Figures should be numbered as they
appear in the text (eg, Fig 1). Illustrations (including lettering,
numbering and/or symbols) must be of professional quality and of
sufficient size so that when reduced for publication all details will
be clearly discernible; rough sketches with freehand or typed
lettering are not acceptable. All illustrations (including x-rays)
must be sent as at least 300 dpi resolution in TIF format. Do not
place titles or detailed explanations in the illustration; such
information should be given in the figure legends. Original data for
graphs or charts may be requested by the editor if the submitted
figure is not clear or of poor quality for printing. (1)
Each figure should be saved using the
figure number in its file name (eg, Fig1) and sent as separate files.
Do not imbed images in the manuscript files and do not send in
PowerPoint format. Typically no more than eight figures are
acceptable (eg, Fig 1A and Fig 1B are considered two figures). (1)
If photographs of persons are used,
the subjects must not be identifiable or their pictures must be
accompanied by signed written permission to publish the photographs.
(1)
If a figure has been previously
published, acknowledge the original source and submit written
permission from the copyright holder to reproduce the material.
Permission is required, regardless of authorship or publisher, except
for documents in the public domain. (1)
Table And Figure Legends
Type legends for tables and figures at
the end of the text after the reference section. Identify each legend
with Arabic numerals in the same manner and sequence as they were
indicated in the text in parentheses (i.e., Figure 1). Do not type
legends within or include in images. (1)
When symbols, arrows, numbers or
letters are used to identify parts of the illustrations, identify and
explain each one clearly in the legend. (1)
Acknowledgments
Acknowledge only those who have made
substantive contributions to the study itself; this includes support
personnel such as statistical or manuscript review consultants, but
not subjects used in the study or clerical staff. Clearly state what
each contributor has provided. Authors are responsible for obtaining
the written permission (to be included with the submission) that is
required from persons, institutions, or businesses being acknowledged
by name because readers may infer their endorsement of the data and
conclusions. (1)
References
Authors are responsible for accurate
reference and citation information, especially accuracy of author
names, journal titles, volume numbers, and page numbers. References
should be numbered consecutively when they are first used in the
text. Reference citation in the text should be in superscript format
and after punctuation (eg, The quick fox jumped over the dog.1).
References should be listed in numeric order (not alphabetically)
following the text pages. The original citation number assigned to a
reference should be reused each time the reference is cited in the
text, regardless of its previous position in the text: do not assign
it another number. References should not be included in abstracts.
References that are only used in tables or figure legends should be
numbered in the sequence established by the first use of the
particular table or figure in the text. (1)
Only references that provide support
for a particular statement in the text, tables, and/or figures should
be used. Reference or referring to unpublished work should be
avoided. Excessive use of references should be avoided. (1)
Authors are responsible to verify
references against the original document and not from reading the
abstract alone. Care should be taken to accurately represent the
original work and not misconstrue the original meaning of the paper.
(1)
Reference sources
Using only the abstract, referring to
"unpublished observations" and "personal
communications" should be avoided. Unpublished references
(submitted but not accepted) should not be listed as references.
Manuscripts that are accepted but not yet published may be included
in the references with the designation "in press." The
author should obtain written permission to cite these papers and may
be requested by the editor to provide documentation to verify the
paper was accepted for publication. For the most part, sources of
information and reference support for a bioscientific paper should be
limited to journals (rather than books) because that knowledge is
generally considered more recent and (in the case of refereed
journals) more accurate. (1)
Reference style
The style should be in accordance with
that specified by the US National Library of Medicine. Specific
examples of correct reference form for journal articles and other
publications can be found at:
http://www.nlm.nih.gov/bsd/uniform_requirements.html (1)
The format for at typical journal
article is as follows:
- Last name of author(s) and their initials in capitals separated by a space with a comma separating each author. (List all authors when 6 or fewer; when 7 or more, list only the first 6 and add et al.) (1)
- Title of article with first word capitalized and all other words in lower case, except names of persons, places, etc. (1)
- Name of journal, abbreviated according to Index Medicus http://www.nlm.nih.gov/tsd/serials/lji.html ; year of publication (followed by a semicolon); volume number (followed by a colon); and inclusive pages of article (with redundant number dropped, i.e., 105-10). (1)
Appendices
Appendix A – Good Scientific Writing
Used by permission of the authors (2)
Good Scientific
Writing: Advice from the Editors of Chiropractic & Osteopathy
Authors: Hartman S,
Cameron M, French SD, Perle SM, Walker BF
"A sentence should
contain no unnecessary words,
a paragraph no
unnecessary sentences,
for the same reason
that a drawing should have no unnecessary lines
and a machine no
unnecessary parts." [1]
Simply phrased, the goal of scientific
writing is the succinct, effective, written communication of facts
and ideas. Although numerous characteristics of style can contribute
to good writing, we will focus on what we think of as the big three:
submitted manuscripts must be complete, clear, and concise.
Complete:
Provide all information readers may
need to comprehend, interpret, and replicate your findings. Avoid
general terminology, in favor of words carrying all useful detail.
For example, in a case report:
The patient
expressed discomfort.
would carry less meaning than:
The patient complained of nausea and
dizziness.
Clear:
Clear writing yields a manuscript that
is unambiguous. We favor any element of style that supports this
objective. For example:
1) Use correct
grammar and punctuation to enhance clarity. Such rules of style help
writers assemble and arrange parts of speech to facilitate readers'
quick and accurate interpretation.
2) Use common or
simple words wherever possible. Familiar English usually leads to
quicker and more certain interpretation of ideas, than uncommon, more
complex language. This does not mean that fancy wording or jargon
cannot be useful in scientific writing, but try to use words that
will be understood by all.
3) Sequence
concepts logically, in an active voice. Even if you have used correct
words, clumsy ordering may jeopardize clarity, conceptual flow, or
even understanding. A "rule of thumb": the fewer
punctuational pauses required, the better. Writing with fewer commas,
semi-colons, and parentheses is usually more direct and naturally
flowing, helping readers interpret meaning more quickly and reliably.
For example:
She rinsed all bottles with a bleach solution, to sanitize them.
is more directly
(and succinctly) phrased as:
She sanitized all bottles with a bleach solution.
4) Write concisely.
You can enhance clarity by removing all words that do not help carry
your message.
Concise:
Readers of scientific writing are often
trying to maintain an up-to-date knowledge base, for their own
scholarly use, or to assist their clinical practice. When they read
your work, the more quickly they can digest your question(s),
protocol(s), results, and conclusions, the sooner they can move to
their next task. Except for words necessary to make your submission
complete and clear – the fewer, the better.
For example, please read the following
sentence for understanding:
These two
protocols produce different side effects that are important, and that
need to be taken fully into account when studies of the outcomes
following these two particular interventions are conducted.
Now, see if you agree that rendering
this sentence in 11 words (rather than 31) permitted you to make
sense of it more quickly:
When comparing
efficacies of these interventions, side effects must be considered.
Another "rule of thumb" for
good scientific writing: use as many words as you must to communicate
your idea clearly, and not one word more (or fewer). If we judge that
a word, phrase, or sentence does not help deliver your message, we
may require that you change or delete it.
* * *
Submission:
Even if your science seems good, if we
judge your submission incomplete, unclear, or wordy, we will return
it for cleansing—usually before peer review. To maximize the
likelihood that external reviewers and editors will receive your
submission with favor, we recommend the following protocol:
1) adhere strictly
to our Instructions for Authors [2];
2) as your
manuscript nears completion, scour it for grammatical and
punctuational flaws;
3) remove every
word that does not help carry a message;
4) use common
language, rather than terms possibly known only to English linguists
or content specialists (if you must use special terms, define them);
5) avoid general
terms, in favor of words that carry more meaning; and
6) move or change
words, passages, and paragraphs, to maximize clarity and conceptual
flow.
7) After a long
enough break to permit a fresh perspective, read your manuscript
again. (Writing can be enjoyable, if you give yourself time to do it
right; repeat this step as often as necessary.)
Once satisfied that your manuscript is
as clean as you can make it,
8) share it with
one or more colleagues likely to notice remaining ambiguities or
grammatical flaws.
Finally, if English is your second
language (or you still are not confident that your manuscript is as
clear and concise as it can be), we strongly recommend that you
9) engage a
professional copyediting service.[3]
No BioMed Central journal editors
(including those of Chiropractic & Osteopathy) provide detailed
copyediting prior to publication. This important step is left to
authors.
Share with copy editors the preceding
items two through six, so they understand that you want them to
render your manuscript as clear and concise as possible. Also,
request that they make these alterations without concern for your
personal writing style or feelings.
If your work is properly reported when
submitted, the process leading to publication will be more enjoyable
for all (and months faster).
Sources:
1. Strunk W and White EB: The Elements
of Style (4th Ed.). New York: Longman; 2000:23.
[We recommend this classic because it
offers a concise, user-friendly perspective on what constitutes good
writing.]
2. For concise presentation of
conventions of style and formatting not specified in our
Instructions for Authors
(http://www.chiroandosteo.com/info/instructions/), see: The Cochrane
Collaboration: Cochrane Style Guide, 3.0; 2005
(http://www.cochrane.org/style/csg.htm).
3. For copyediting, use any service
that you know to be reliable. After testing several, we were most
pleased with BioScience (http://www.biosciencewriters.com) and
Lindsay Schuenke (http://www.schuenkecommunications.com).
Appendix B – Capstone Advisor Assignment Form
|
University
of Bridgeport
College of Chiropractic
Capstone
Advisor Assignment Form
|
This
form is for the preliminary approval of Capstone Project title and
for the assignment of an advisor. This is to be submitted to the
University Of Bridgeport College Of Chiropractic Research/Scholarship
Committee (R/SC) prior to substantive work on the Capstone Project.
This from must be completed electronically
Student’s
name:
|
|
||
Student
ID#:
|
|
Date:
|
|
Check
Choice of
Capstone Type |
Senior
Paper
|
Research
Thesis
|
|
Check
if this Capstone was proposed by a faculty member
If so submit only that faculty member’s name. Requested Faculty Advisors (3) for student generated topic |
|||
|
|||
|
|||
Capstone
Project
Working Title: |
|
Research/Scholarship
Committee
Approval
|
Pending
Committee Acceptance
|
|
|
Signature
of Research/Scholarship Committee Chair
|
Date
|
Deferred
Rejected |
|
|
|
Signature
of Research/Scholarship Committee Chair
|
Date
|
Reason:
|
|
|
|
|
|
Advisor:
|
|
Introduction
to this proposed Capstone (cite relevant research – at least 10
references):
|
|
Methods
and Techniques to be used: (include experimental design)
population and sample, instrumentation and/or methodology,
estimated cost) (Research Thesis only)
|
|
Data
Analysis (include statistical procedures.)( Research Thesis only)
|
|
Preliminary
Bibliography of at least Ten Sources (use Vancouver format)
|
|
Itemized
list of projected expenses (Research Thesis only)
|
|
Appendix B – Thesis Committee Invitation Acceptance Form
|
U.B.C.C
Capstone Research Project
Thesis
Committee
Invitation Acceptance Form |
__________________________
has asked me to be a member of his/her/their thesis committee for a
thesis tentatively entitled:
________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________
I
hereby agree to serve on this thesis committee.
________________________________________
Faculty Member Printed Name
________________________________________
________
Signature
Date
Please
return this for to the chair of the Research/Scholarship Committee in
order to ensure completed proposal acceptance.
Appendix D – Senior Paper Completion Contract
|
U.B.C.C
Capstone Project
Senior
Paper
Completion
Contract
|
||||||||
|
|
||||||||
Faculty Advisor’s Name: |
|
||||||||
Type
of Senior Paper:
Literature Review
Case Report
Other |
|
||||||||
Anticipated Date of Graduation:
December 20
|
|
May 20
|
|
|
|||||
|
|
COMPLETION
DEADLINE
|
|
(Circle
Appropriate Semester or Summer)
|
Task
|
S1
5 S2
6 S3
7
|
Introduction |
S1
5 S2
6 S3
7
|
Literature Review |
S1
5 S2
6 S3
7
|
Methods |
S1
5 S2
6 S3
7
|
Results |
S1
5 S2
6 S3
7
|
Discussion and Conclusion |
S1
5 S2
6 S3
7
|
Abstract |
S1
5 S2
6 S3
7
|
Approval from Advisor |
12th
week of
the
7th
semester
|
Final
submission
|
I
acknowledge that completion of each task or tasks listed above are
required to earn a satisfactory grade for each semester’s capstone
project course. I understand that failure to complete the assigned
task by the deadline agreed to above may delay my graduation from
U.B.C.C.
|
Student’s
Name
|
|
Signature
|
|
Date
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Appendix E – Research Project Completion Contract
|
U.B.C.C
Capstone Project
Research
Project
Completion
Contract
|
|||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
||||||
|
|
|
|
|
||||||
Faculty Advisor’s Name: |
|
|||||||||
Anticipated Date of Graduation:
December 20
|
|
May 20
|
|
|
||||||
|
|
COMPLETION
DEADLINE
|
|
|
(Circle
Appropriate Semester or Summer)
|
Task
|
Responsible
Student(s)
|
S1
5 S2
6 S3
7
|
Introduction |
|
S1
5 S2
6 S3
7
|
Literature review |
|
S1
5 S2
6 S3
7
|
Methods |
|
S1
5 S2
6 S3
7
|
IRB submission |
|
S1
5 S2
6 S3
7
|
Data collection |
|
S1
5 S2
6 S3
7
|
Results
|
|
S1
5 S2
6 S3
7
|
Discussion |
|
S1
5 S2
6 S3
7
|
Conclusion |
|
S1
5 S2
6 S3
7
|
Abstract |
|
S1
5 S2
6 S3
7
|
Approval from Advisor |
|
S1
5 S2
6 S3
7
|
Approval from Committee |
|
S1
5 S2
6 S3
7
|
Defense
|
|
S1
5 S2
6 S3
7
|
Presentation to College |
|
12th
week of the 7th
semester
|
Final
submission
|
I (we)
acknowledge that completion of each task or tasks listed above are
required to earn a satisfactory grade for each semester’s capstone
project course. I (we) understand that failure to complete the
assigned task by the deadline agreed to above may delay my (our)
graduation from U.B.C.C.
|
Student’s
Name
|
|
Signature
|
|
Date
|
1st |
|
|
|
|
|
2nd |
|
|
|
|
|
3rd |
|
|
|
|
|
4th |
|
|
|
|
|
Appendix F – Cover Page
↓ Margin 1”
TITLE
Margin 1 ½” Margin 1”
→
←
AUTHOR’S NAME
A Thesis Submitted to the Faculty of
the University of Bridgeport College of Chiropractic in
Partial Fulfillment of the requirements
for the Degree of
DOCTOR OF CHIROPRACTIC and accepted
this ________ day of ________________ , 20__.
(Remove the Underlines and
Titles and type inn the date
↑ Margin 1”
Appendix G – Signature Sheet
SIGNATURE SHEET (Example
Senior Paper)
Name of Author: “Author”
Place of Birth “City”
Title of Thesis
Degree Doctor of Chiropractic
Academic History
Baccalaureate
Degree “Institution” Date
“Other
Degrees” “Institution” Date
COMMITTEE
“Name of “Advisor (Type in name)
__________________________ __________
Advisor Signature of
Advisor Date
(Type names in proper
places and Add Committee Members as NEEDED)
CHAIR,
RESEARCH/SCHOLARSHIP COMMITTEE UBCC
(Chair’s name types)
____________________________ __________
Signature Date
SIGNATURE SHEET (Example Research Thesis)
Name of Author Ted Jones Name of
Author Frank Smith
Place of Birth Humorville, NY Place
of Birth Pleasantville, PA
Title of Thesis The Effects of This on
That
Degree Doctor of Chiropractic
Academic History: Ted Jones
Baccalaureate Degree Slippery Water
University Date 1824
Master of Science Southern Big
University Date 1903
Academic History: Frank Smith
Baccalaureate Degree Small
University Date 1824
COMMITTEE
John Doe,
D.C. __________________________ ______________
Advisor Signature of
Advisor Date
Jane Goodhands,
D.C. __________________________ _______________
Committee Member
Signature Date
George Badhands,
D.O. __________________________ _______________
Signature Date
CHAIR, RESEARCH /
SCHOLARSHIP COMMITTEE UBCC
___________________________ _______________
John A. Knowledge, D. C.
Signature Date
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Part 1 – Introduction to the Capstone Project To nurture a culture of respect for the scientific method, research and evidence-based...
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The Capstone Project is a two-semester process in which students pursue independent research on a question or problem of their choice, eng...