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BTM5IRM Introduction to Research methods critical review

May 26, 2025 · 24 min read · By adminPro

📋 Table of Contents

    Module Assignment Guide

     

    Programme:

    Business & Tourism Management

    Level:

    Level 5

    Module Title:

    Introduction to Research methods

    Module code:

    BTM5IRM

    Module leader/s:

     

    Assignment No:

    Choose an item.

    Assignment Type:

    Critical Review

    Assignment weighting %:

    100%

    Assignment Word Count: (or equivalent)

    4000 words

    Summative Submission Due Date:

    Tuesday
    27 May 2025 14:00

    BTM5IRM_SEP22: Critical Review – First Submission
    Inbox | Global Banking School

    Penalties

    All
    penalties that are listed at the end of this document in the Table of
    Penalties.

     

    Assignment
    Guide – Critical Review

    Overview

    1.    Students are required to develop a critical
    review of published studies business management or business-related topics in
    the tourism sector
    , either within the UK or the global tourism market

    2.    This Critical Review will be
    presented in a structured document using the
    tentative
    structure explained in detail in the Assignment Guide and
    be the equivalent of 4000 words, excluding the Table of
    contents, References and Appendices. Possible deviation for the word count is
    10%, i.e. the minimum word count is 3600 words, and the maximum word count is
    4400 words of the main text.

    3.    This assignment is designed to prepare
    students
    for conducting individual research at Level 6 and beyond
    in their careers. It aims to provide students with knowledge in
    business research,

    4.    Successful
    completion of this assignment will demonstrate student’s ability to
    understand and interpret information relevant to the research methodology

    and student’s
    practical
    skills for identifying research problems in the tourism field, critically
    evaluating previous studies and methodologies, and developing a critical
    literature review to inform their own research design
    .

    5.    Conducting a critical review of the
    literature in the selected field will equip students to undertake
    empirical research, identify research gaps, establish research aims and
    objectives
    .

    6.    Students will cultivate the skill of
    synthesizing diverse sources in business and management studies pertinent to
    their research field and will learn to choose appropriate methods based on
    the research question. These skills are crucial for employability.

    7.    Critical review of the research
    literature will be submitted on Moodle as a Word Document file in due
    date anonymously – without the assessment front sheet. Page 1 will
    start with the Research Title followed by the Table of Contents (see
    below).

    8.    You must NOT state your name or
    Student ID
    anywhere in the text.

    9.    You should NOT name the
    submitted file as your name or Student ID

    Assignment task/s to be completed and
    presented in the written form

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Assignment task/s to be completed and presented
    in the written form

     

    a)    
    Students
    are encouraged to investigate needs in the jobs they occupy if they are
    related to tourism or examine the current need for research in the
    sector in the UK or internationally, select related published resources and
    analyse them in the form of Critical review
    which can further be used to conduct
    research according to the identified research question.

    b)    
    Students
    will use the Critical review Template and follow the suggested
    structure and word count of each section.

    c)     
    Page
    1 of the submitted Critical review
    will
    open with the Title of the research and will present its structure
    as follows
    :

    Contents

    1.       Introduction (400 words) 1

    1.1.        Background and Context 1

    1.2.        Problem Statement 1

    2.      Literature Review (3300 words) 2

    2.1.        Theoretical and
    Conceptual Frameworks of the Research
    (500 words) 2

    2.2.        Key Concepts,
    Theories and Studies
    (2650-2700 words) 3

    2.2.1.          Topic 1. 3

    2.2.2.          Topic 2. 3

    2.2.3.          Topic 3. (contextualising
    research)
    3

    2.2.4.          Topic 4
    (contextualising research)
    4

    2.3.        Key Debates and
    Controversies
    (optional) 4

    2.4.        Gap(s) in Existing
    Knowledge
    (100-150 words) 4

    3.      Research Question,
    Research Aim and Research Objectives
    (150 words) 4

    3.1.        Research Question. 4

    3.2.        Research Aim.. 4

    3.3.        Research Objectives. 4

    4.      Implications and
    contributions to knowledge
    (150 words) 5

    4.1.        Practical
    Implications
    . 5

    4.2.        Theoretical
    Implications
    . 5

    References. 5

     

    d)    
    Students
    will need to explore the theoretical background of the research problem,
    review research literature and verify if the research question they ask was
    responded in the previous research, or, alternatively, there is a gap in the
    research and no solution has been found yet. In the latter case, students
    will set the research aim, objectives, and develop research methodology,
    including research design, research methods, research instruments, and a
    feasible timeline.
     See details below.

    The detailed structure of the Critical
    review

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    The detailed structure of the Critical
    Review

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    The detailed structure of the Critical
    Review

     

    ·       
    Start
    your Critical Review with a strong title, which includes relevant
    key words, indicates your research approach and contains a research question
    .

    ·       
    The
    title must be ONE PHRASE only.

    ·       
    The
    word count in the following guidelines is given approximately to help
    students keep the proportions withing Critical Review volume. Each section
    divided into subsections might require different word count, however, the
    biggest section is the Literature Review, which will require elaborated
    approach and more specific details.

    Follow the structure and suggestions
    in the Critical review Template
    :

    1.                   
    Introduction (400 words)

    The introduction should draw from
    either industry or business reports or academic sources and include the
    following:

    1.1.              
    Background
    and Context.

    Lead the
    reader into the topic and scope of your research, explain why this research
    has value and why it will be original, and why the research is required.

    1.2.              
    Problem
    Statement.

    Describe the theoretical or
    practical research problem that you want to address.

    What is already known about the
    problem? What is missing from current knowledge?

    Briefly refer to 2-3 main
    policies/reports/frameworks that introduce the reader into the context and
    specify the contradiction/problem that still exists and needs a solution.
    Here you will use relevant terminology: relate to the key concepts, theories,
    and empirics (reports/statistics which reveal the problem)

    2.           
    Literature Review (3300 words)

    The literature review summarises,
    compares and critiques the most relevant scholarly sources on the topic.
    There are many different ways to structure a literature review, but it should
    explore:

    Students either divide the
    Literature review as suggested into subsections
    :

    2.1. Theoretical and Conceptual
    Frameworks of the Research
    (500 words)

    Compare, contrast, and establish the theories and concepts that will
    be most important for your project. These should be divided into topics. You
    must provide evidence of using at least with 3-5 sources to outline your
    Theoretical framework, but will also incorporate some of the sources in
    literature review in your Conceptual Framework.

    2.1.1.     
    Theoretical
    Framework
    (300
    words)

    Name, cite and explain theories and their relevance to your
    research. How do these theories inform research methodology? Do not draw a
    Theoretical Framework in this section
    . Only describe it as suggested in
    the text.

    2.1.2.     
    Conceptual
    Framework
    (200
    words)

    Name, cite and explain concept
    and their relevance to your research. How do these theories inform
    research methodology? You may present a conceptual Framework based on cited
    sources. This figure must be Numbered, Titled and have notification of the
    authorship.

    You are encouraged to use EBSCO Concept Map tool available o EBSCO
    website via GBS library. There is a video tutorial how to create your
    Conceptual Framework in the Critical Review Template.

    2.2. Key Concepts, Theories and Studies (2650-2700 words).

    There will be three main subtopics
    mentioned in the Literature Review, usually in the synthesised ways:

                          
    Key
    Concepts, Theories and Studies (and include three topics there under
    headings).

                          
    Key
    Debates and Controversies (optional for undergraduate research)

                          
    Gap(s)
    in Existing Knowledge

    Important: Students are free to organise their
    Literature review in one of two ways:

    2.2.1.         
    Topic
    1.

    2.2.2.         
    Topic
    2.

    2.2.3.         
    Topic
    3.

    2.2.4.         
    Topic
    4.

    2.3. Key Debates and Controversies
    (optional for undergraduate research)

    Identify
    points of conflict and situate your own position as for any controversies or
    conflict research/academic opinions you might find in the literature related
    to the research topic.

    2.4. Gap(s) in Existing Knowledge (around 50 words within 800 of
    Literature review)

    Show what
    is missing and how your project will fit in.

    Alternatively, students may have four
    subsections, Topic 1; Topic 2; Topic 3, Topic 4 and include
    in each of them
    Key Concepts, Theories and
    Studies; Key Debates and Controversies (optional for undergraduate research)
    and Gap(s) in Existing Knowledge.

    2.1.    
    Topic
    1 (
    including Key
    concepts, theories, debates, and a gap).

    2.2.    
    Topic
    2 (
    including Key
    concepts, theories, debates, and a gap).

    2.3.    
    Topic
    3 (
    including Key
    concepts, theories, debates, and a gap).

    2.4.    
    Topic
    4 (
    including Key
    concepts, theories, debates, and a gap).

    There must be at least three topics
    with 4-5 resources minimum for each of topic
    . The resources must be synthesised.
     Topics present key theories and concepts
    definitions, reflect previous research and analysis.

    Generally, in your Literature Review
    you will:

           
    Compare
    and contrast the main theories, methods, and analyse the debates and
    controversies;

           
    Critically
    analyse the strengths and weaknesses of different approaches;

           
    Show
    how your research fits in with the previous research and/or the issues of the
    economic activities of the tourism enterprise, destination, etc. How will you
    build on, challenge or synthesise the work of others?

           
    Fill
    in a gap in the existing body of research and explain why you consider your
    research idea innovative.

    3.                   
    Research Question, Research Aim and Research Objectives (150 words)

    3.1.     
    Research
    Question.

    State the specific question that you
    aim to answer.

    One research question is enough for
    the undergraduate degree. However, these may be two or more related
    questions. The more specific questions you ask, the wider the scope of the research
    will be, usually at higher levels of scientific research.

    3.2.     
    Research
    Aim.

    Make it clear what
    new insights you will contribute.

    Formulate a clear
    research aim in one line, e.g.

          The aim of this study is to
    determine…

          This research aims to explore…

          This research aims to investigate…

    3.3.     
    Research
    Objectives.

    Define
    research objectives (at least three). Justify a major approach you will take
    (general methodology to achieve these aims). Your last research objective might
    be aimed at providing recommendations to resolve some issues.

    Each
    objective will be formulated in one line.

    Start
    using active verbs, e.g.

        To
    discover current research surrounding the topic of dark tourism.

        To
    evaluate the motivations of travellers visiting destinations associated with
    dark tourism.

        To
    use focus groups to examine whether tourist perspectives are influenced by
    dark tourism.

    OR include specific details
    HOW you will achieve these objectives, e.g.

        To
    measure …… using quantitative methods.

        To
    analyse … by means of …. analysis.

        To test (e.g. customer brand awareness).

    DO NOT REPEAT THE VERBS!

    Note.
    Verbs will differ depending on your research methodology.

    If you
    apply quantitative methodology, you will
    need to formulate quantitative research
    objectives
    , using verbs like determine,
    measure, assess, quantify, analyse…metrics/score, investigate (indices),
    examine effects, assess influence, determine the correlation between X and Y,
    predict… rates
    , etc. see Verbs for research objectives on Lecture
    Week 1 slides)

    If your
    research approach is qualitative, you will
    need verbs for qualitative
    research objectives
    , like determine, predict, assess, investigate, explore,
    understand, uncover, capture, delve into, explain, explore
    , and
    the like, see Verbs for research objectives on Lecture Week 1 slides)

    For mixed methods you will probably need both.

     

    4.                   
    Implications and contributions to knowledge (150 words)

    This section should
    emphasise why your proposed project is important and how it will contribute
    to practice or theory.

    4.1.    
    Practical
    Implications.

    Explain if your
    research findings will help to improve a process, inform policy, or make a
    case for concrete change. State in one sentence who will benefit from your
    research findings /solution of the problem (the audience).

    4.2.    
    Theoretical
    Implications.

    Explain
    if your research findings will help to strengthen a theory or model,
    challenge current assumptions, or create a basis for further research. How?

    References.

    Include at least 20 references here (These sources are highlighted in green throughout the
    template).

    Please,
    include only the resources that you used for:

           
    contextualising
    your research topic,

           
    analysing
    the previous research in the Literature Review

           
    regulating
    your research procedures, especially Ethical Considerations.

    Do NOT use
    bullet points or numbering!

    Ways how to present statistical data in
    text and refer to Appendices (Appendices are optional)

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Ways how to present statistical data in
    text and refer to Appendices

    1.   
    There
    will be NO Figures or Tables in the body of the Critical review. There
    is no need for this, as all data will be incorporated into academic text. However,
    you can have one figure – Conceptual Framework, that will be numbered,
    titled, and cited
    , and which authorship will be named
    if this is created by the student, e.g. Fig. 1. Conceptual Framework
    for … research (created by author based on (Name, year; Name, year; Name,
    year).
    In brackets you will list the sources you used to create the
    framework.

    2.     
    In
    case students refer to statistical data to support problem statement
    or justify their research, they must refer to the resource (e.g. a report, a
    survey or a database), discuss the statistical data in the text, give an
    in-text citation and include the resource in the references. E.g.:

    Rectangle: Rounded Corners: The 2022 Environmental Performance Index (EPI) evaluates the sustainability efforts of 180 countries worldwide. It uses 40 performance indicators across 11 issue categories to rank countries based on their environmental performance. These categories include climate change performance, environmental health, and ecosystem vitality (Wolf, et al., 2022). Notably, the United Kingdom achieved the second-highest score globally, with 77.90 points (Wolf, et al., 2022).
References:
Wolf, M. J., Emerson, J. W., Esty, D. C., de Sherbinin, A., Wendling, Z. A., et al. (2022). 2022 Environmental Performance Index. New Haven, CT: Yale Center for Environmental Law & Policy. Available at: https://epi.yale.edu/ (Accessed: 26 July, 2024)

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     


    3.     
    Therefore,
    no additional tables or figures are needed in appendices. However, if
    you are planning to use some technique developed by a different author
    mentioned in the critical literature review, you may mention it in your
    objective, and include it in the Appendices, e.g. Appendices A, Appendix B
    (example 1 below)

    4.     
    You
    may include your questionnaire as a tool to collect primary data in
    appendices as well (example 2 below).

    5.     
    The text
    of the literature review/ research objectives will refer to the Appendices

    and appendices will help to explain the text. There are different ways
    to do it, e.g.:

    Rectangle: Rounded Corners: Research objective 1. To measure life satisfaction of utilising Life Satisfaction Index A (LSIA) developed by Neugarten, et al. (1961) (see Appendix A)” when the research instrument was developed by another researcher. To collected the data participants will be offered to complete the survey (see Appendix A)…”
Research objective 2. To evaluate the motivations of travellers visiting destinations associated with dark tourism “Structured/Semi-structured interviews will be conducted based on the question list created by the author (see Appendix B)” or “The data collection will consist predominantly of individual semi-structured interviews with…(see Appendix B)”
1)

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     


    Additional resources to create the Critical
    Review

           
    There
    are additional resources for writing Critical Review and research proposals,
    where a Literature Review is one of the major parts, in the Module Handbook,
    references to all lectures in the corresponding sections, Formative
    activities 1-4, and the Critical Review Template
    .

           
    Additional
    resources for reading

    include four Samples of Critical Review of the literature in academic
    articles, research proposals and a dissertation, which may be used as
    examples to formulate different parts of your Critical Review.

           
    Critical
    Review Template

    is available on Moodle and may be used to draft each section in Formative
    activities 1-4, can be edited and then saved under the title “Critical Review”
    and submitted anonymously as a complete assignment.

     

    Mandatory Referencing and Research Requirements

    Referencing Style

    CCCU Harvard Referencing Style harvard available
    in pdf format

    CCCU Harvard Referencing Guide ·
    CCCU Harvard citation (updated Jul 23 2024) · Citationsy

    Mandatory Sources to be included in the
    Assignment

           Assignment Brief contains a list of
    resources in section Learning Materials/Resources that you might use
    for your Critical review and reflect the same resources in your presentation.

           In addition to 15+
    resources for 3-4 topics in the Literature Review, you must use more resources
    for the Theoretical Framework and Conceptual Framework to explain key
    theories and concepts and justify the research problem.

           Overall, your Critical
    Review will refer to more than 20 academic and business resources.

           Please, be aware that you CANNOT USE
    books on RESEARCH METHODS as resources for Literature review on Tourism or
    Theoretical or Conceptual Framework. Please, see the suggestion of the
    resource distribution in your paper in the Assignment Guide for the Critical
    Review.

     

    Format of your submission and how your assignment
    will be assessed

         
    I.   
    Format. Please ensure that your work has
    been saved in an appropriate file format (Microsoft Word).

        
    II.   
    Critical review undergoes anonymous marking;
    therefore, you must NOT name yourself or include your Student ID anywhere in
    the text or the title of the submitted Critical review.

      
    III.   
    There is no limitation to pages, but
    all content should be presented clearly, and the text should not exceed the
    required word count.

      
    IV.   
    If it is appropriate to the format
    of your assignment and your subject area, a proportion of your marks will
    also depend on your use of academic referencing conventions.

    Pay
    attention to the Table of Penalties applied to all assessments (see Appendix A)
    .

     

    Marking Scheme / Rubric – The Marking
    Scheme (otherwise known as a rubric) is available on the Module Assessment
    Tab on Moodle. 

     

    Submission Requirements

    Submission Platform

    This assignment should be submitted electronically using Moodle to the
    Module Submission link

    Submission Date &Time

    All submission & resubmission dates and
    time are as stated at the beginning of this Assignment brief.

    You should submit your Assignment for all
    deadlines earlier than 2:00pm on the date stated. 

    Late submissions can be accepted for
    Summative Submissions only up to a maximum of 2 working days after the
    submission deadline. This does not apply to resubmission deadlines. A 10 mark
    deduction will be made by CCCU for all late submissions.

    Work submitted more than two working days
    after the deadline will not be accepted and will be recorded as a
    non-submission.

    Assignments submitted to the Resubmissions
    deadlines will be capped at 40 by CCCU.

    If you are affected by events which are
    unexpected, outside your control and short-term in nature (i.e. lasting one
    to two weeks), under the exceptional circumstances procedure you may be
    eligible for:

    ·       
    A seven day extension to your coursework
    (via self-certification request).

    ·       
    A 14 day extension to your coursework (via
    evidence-based request).

    ·       
    To defer your exam or time-constrained
    assessment if you have not yet submitted/attempted it (via self-certification
    or evidence-based request).

    ·       
    To re-take an exam/time-constrained
    assessment, if you feel your performance on your first attempt was negatively
    impacted (via impaired performance request).

    Please note students are only eligible to
    have a maximum of 2 self-certification requests per academic year.

    You can make a self-certification request
    up to 14 calendar days before your deadline:

    ·       
    for coursework it must be no later
    than 2pm on the deadline date

    ·       
    for exams and time-constrained assessments,
    the request must be submitted no later than the start time of the
    assessment.

     

    How this task prepares you for Level 6
    and Professional activities

    This assessment is a
    Critical Review of Literature in Business and Tourism Management that
    presents student’s ability to select relevant sources and analyse them
    critically, synthesise sources, evaluate applied methodologies, define the
    research problem and research gap, set research aim and objectives and effectively
    communicate the idea. The students are expected to logically substantiate
    theoretical and conceptual framework for preliminary research and clearly
    outline expected research outcomes.

    Depending on the
    context, Critical review of published information might be required in a
    range of situations either in the employment in tourism sector or in an
    academic setting, where students will need to solve a theoretical and/or
    practical problem.

    Critical
    review is the final assignment in Level 5, and logically prepares students to
    undertaking a dissertation at Level 6. By presenting this assignment,
    students must demonstrate they have achieved their learning outcomes.

     

    Appendix A

     

    Table
    of Penalties

    Issue
    with the Assignment

    Penalty
    to be Applied

    Suspected
    Academic Misconduct or Breach of Academic integrity

    The
    Assignment will be graded zero. Written feedback will be ‘This assignment has
    been identified as potential Academic Misconduct/Breach of Academic
    Integrity. You will be invited to a meeting to discuss’.

    You
    will be invited to a meeting with an academic Misconduct reviewer. When you
    attend the meeting if Academic Misconduct or the breach of Academic Integrity
    is upheld you will be asked to rewrite the section of the assignment it
    applies to and re-submit the assignment. 

    Do not upload any assignments to the AMC
    submission links before the meeting otherwise it will be removed.

    Failure
    to attend the meeting means the assignment will remain graded at zero and you
    will be unable to pass the module until you have attended the meeting.

    The
    assignment is more than 10% over the prescribed wordcount i.e. for 3,000
    words, if 3,400 is submitted excluding the cover page, table of contents,
    references and appendices.

    A
    10-mark deduction applied to the overall grade that is manually entered by
    the Lecturer. This deduction is capped at 40%, which means an assignment
    cannot get less than 40% if a deduction has to be made.

    For
    example, if the mark for the assignment was 60. The lecturer would deduct 10
    marks and the mark will be 50.  Written
    feedback will also state ‘This assignment is 10% over the wordcount and 10
    marks have been deducted’.

    Where
    assignments are more than 10% less than the prescribed wordcount and
    lecturers cannot identify if the learning outcomes have been met.

    This
    assignment will be graded below 40.

    Where a
    student submits a .pdf instead of a word document.

    This
    assignment will be graded a Fail.

    The
    lecturer will grade as 1 and the written feedback will state ‘This is a pdf
    submission and is not allowed. All submissions should be in Microsoft Word
    format’.

    Students
    not working in their groups as agreed by the lecturer.

    This
    assignment will be graded a Fail. 

    The
    lecturer will grade as 1 and the written feedback will state ‘This submission
    was not completed in the designated group’.

    Please note: Where a student has asked the lecturer to
    move from their original group and the lecturer has agreed this does not
    apply.

    For a
    presentation assignment that requires oral delivery, and the student does not
    present in person.

    The
    Oral rubric criteria is not moved, and the oral criteria will remain at zero.

    For a
    presentation assignment and the student does not upload a converted PPT To
    Word File with speaker notes.

    The
    communication rubric criteria is not moved, and the communication criteria
    will remain at zero.

    For a
    presentation assignment that requires oral delivery, and the student did not
    present on the day or upload the presentation to a Word document with speaker
    Notes.

    This
    assignment will be graded a Fail.

    The
    lecturer will grade as 1 and the written feedback will state ‘There was no
    Oral presentation in class and the submission was not converted to Microsoft
    Word’.

    For a
    presentation assignment the student uploads a file that contains no slides
    and is simply continuous text.

    This
    assignment will be graded a Fail.

    The
    lecturer will grade as 1 and the written feedback will state ‘There are no
    slides present in the assignment submission’.

    If the
    assignment is group work and the resubmission is not changed to individual
    work.

    If a group
    assignment is failed then the resubmitted work must be changed by a minimum
    of 25% to make it an individual piece of work.

    This means
    if a Group Presentation is 12 slides a minimum of 3 must be different to the
    group submission. If the assignment is a Group Poster with 6 text boxes then
    a minimum of 2 of them must be different to the Group Poster.

    This
    assignment will be graded a Fail.

    The
    lecturer will grade as 1 and the written feedback will state ‘This
    resubmission should be individual and a minimum of 25% of the assignment has
    not changed’.

    Where a
    written assignment has text that is unable to be read by Turnitin because it
    is either a graphical image (excluding Presentations & Posters); for
    example, a screenshot or the assignment is written within text boxes on each
    page.

    This
    assignment will be graded 0 and the written feedback should state ‘This
    assignment is unreadable by Turnitin and cannot be checked for Academic
    Misconduct. It has been referred for an AMC meeting’.

    The
    assignment will then be referred for Academic Misconduct investigation.

    An
    assignment that does not make use of any Mandatory references provided in the
    assignment brief/Module Handbook.

    The
    reference rubric criteria is not moved and that criteria will remain at zero

    An
    assignment has a reference list, but no citations.

    The
    reference rubric criteria is not moved and that criteria will remain at zero.

    Written
    feedback should state ’The reference criteria has been graded Zero as no
    citations have been used.  Please
    include citations in your assignment to support the academic points being
    made’.

    An
    assignment has no citations and no reference list.

    Foundation & Level 4 – The reference rubric
    criteria is not moved and that criteria will remain at zero.
    The written feedback will state
    ‘Please ensure that you use citations and references to support your
    assignment submission’.

    At Level 5 and Level 6 this would be graded as a Fail. The lecturer will grade as 1 and
    written feedback will also show ‘This assignment has no citations and no
    reference list’.

    Where False
    references are included in an assignment.

    This
    will be referred for Academic Misconduct.

    This
    assignment will be graded 0 and the written feedback should state ‘This
    assignment contains false references and has been referred for Academic
    Misconduct. You will be invited to attend an Academic Misconduct meeting’.

    Assignment
    is submitted after the Late Deadline or if it is a Resubmission, after the
    Resubmission deadline

    This
    assignment will be graded a Fail.

    The
    lecturer will grade as 1 and written feedback should state ‘This assignment
    was submitted after the deadline. Please resubmit at the next resubmission
    opportunity.’

     

    Generative AI

    CCCU and GBS have provided guidance on how students can use Generative AI to support their knowledge and education.  Please see the link below that provides further guidance on the topic and also includes some case studies that students should familiarise themselves with.

    Welcome to your generative AI guidance – Canterbury Christ Church University

     

    GenAI has a broad range of uses and a student may use GenAI tools for:

    ·        Time management

    ·        Planning an assignment

    ·        Generating ideas for a topic

    ·        Learning new concepts (check key facts with reputable sources)

    ·        Developing critical writing skills such as editing and proofreading

    ·        Self-directed study assistance

    ·        Creating revision materials.

     

    Students may NOT use GenAI applications as indicated below

    The use of an artificial intelligence tool/source/programme/platform, such as ChatGPT or any other GenAI software, to generate material which is submitted as if it is the student’s own work without clear referencing is not permitted.

    Generative AI should not be used to produce the original text required in summative assessments. This includes:

    ·        The summary and analysis of peer reviewed literature.

    ·        The summary and analysis of original data.

    ·        The synthesis of ideas, discussion or conclusions.

    ·        The generation of new findings or creation of graphs, charts or images.          

     

    English Proficiency and the use of GenAI.

    Students can make use of a spelling and grammar checker to correct misspelled words and to correct grammatical errors. However, if the GenAI offers to rewrite sentences or create sentences this may be seen as an unacceptable use of GenAI.

    Students must understand the sentences created including the overall meaning as well as the meaning of specific words

     

    Student Integrity and Academic Misconduct

    The values of student integrity expected by GBS and CCCU are:

    • Honesty – being clear about what is your work and where your ideas come from other sources.
    • Trust – others can have faith in you being open about your work and acknowledging others’ work.
    • Fairness – you do not try to gain an unfair advantage in using others’ work.
    • Responsibility – you take an active role in applying the principle of Academic Integrity to your work.
    • Respect – you show respect for the work of others.

    Peer-support:

    Students might choose to get support from their peers when preparing assessments, such as discussing the subject of the assessment, exchanging ideas, and receiving suggestions for improving the work. This is peer-support, and the GBS accepts this as a reasonable expectation when completing assessments. However, peers must not make any changes to anyone’s assessments as such actions could lead to allegations of academic misconduct.

    Use of English as the medium of assessment:

    Students cannot write an assessment in another language and subsequently translate their work into English or have it translated by any form of third-party. Use of translation software or third-party translators is a form of academic misconduct.

    Proofreading:

    Students can make use of Microsoft Word’s grammar and spell-checking functions but the use of Grammarly is not allowed as it uses AI text generation. If student’s use third-party proofreaders, these cannot make any changes that alter the assessment in anyway including correcting language or citation format errors. Third-party alterations to the assessment are a form of academic misconduct.

    Plagiarism

    Plagiarism can be defined as incorporating another person’s material from books, journals, the internet, another student’s work, or any other source into assessment material without acknowledgement. It includes:

    • Using exactly the same words (sentences, phrases or even expressions not in everyday use, invented or created by an author to explain an idea) as used originally
    • Rephrasing by making slight adjustments
    • Paraphrasing in a way which may deceive the reader as to the source.
    • Plagiarism in whatever form it takes is form of academic misconduct.

    Collusion:

    If students submit work for assessment that is falsely presented as the student’s own work but was jointly written with somebody else; this is a form of academic misconduct.

    Duplication/Self-Plagiarism:

    The inclusion in assessments of a significant amount of identical or substantially similar material to that already submitted for assessment by the student and graded for the same course or any other course or module at GBS or elsewhere is classed as self-plagiarism. It does not include a resubmission of the same piece of work allowed by the examiners in an improved or revised form for reassessment purposes. Self-plagiarism is a form of academic misconduct.

    Further clarification of the above can be found in CCCU’s Academic Misconduct documents below

     

    1.      CCCU Student Academic Misconduct Procedures can found below: Please click the link to Open.

    https://www.canterbury.ac.uk/asset-library/policy-zone/Student-Academic-Misconduct-Procedures-staff-students.pdf

     

    2.      CCCU Student Academic Integrity Policy can be found below: Please click the link to Open.

    https://www.canterbury.ac.uk/asset-library/policy-zone/Student-Academic-Integrity-Policy.pdf

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