Griffin Research Consultancy – Helping PhDs and Masters’ Students

Need help with your PhD? We provide doctoral support before, during and after the doctoral process.

How do we provide doctoral support?

  • We assist with the initial creation of a doctoral proposal.
  • We help focus the research and assist in the formulation of research questions.
  • We advise on research methodology – whether to take a qualitative or a quantitative approach, or indeed, a mixed methods approach.
  • We assist with the data analysis process, to arrive at findings, conclusions and further recommendations.
During the doctoral process, we assist with time management issues, and help the student take a structured approach to achieve their goals. This assistance is given to the student at every step of the doctoral process. Once the doctoral thesis is finally submitted, we assist prepare the candidate for the ‘viva voce’ in order to maximise the candidate’s chances of a successful outcome.
The process begins with a free consultation. This helps to set up a roadmap of doctoral benchmarks, mapping the start and finish of the doctoral process. GRC can assist candidates at any stage during the doctoral process.
Sometimes, candidates get in touch because they cannot see light at the end of the tunnel and feel stuck and frustrated. Maybe their supervisor is unavailable or not supportive. Maybe they are overwhelmed with the demands of their course, their job and family. We help students see light at the end of the tunnel. We help our students move towards that light, and indeed, get beyond it. In short, we can assist any person at any stage during their doctoral process. Please contact us if you feel you need support.

Griffin Research Consultancy (GRC)

Academic Writing at Third Level

Welcome all to GRC. What I am going to tell you here today is relevant to whatever subject or discipline you are taking, be it Business, Medicine, Law, Arts, Engineers, Science or social science. It doesn’t matter what areas you are studying, the key core elements of succeeding at third level are the same. So listen carefully to what I am about to say:

In fact, what I’m going to tell you today is something I wished somebody had told me at the beginning of my course at third level. I entered third level as an Undergraduate Arts student studying English, Philosophy, History and Psychology. I also took French up until the deadline when we had to finalise our subject choices. (Do watch out for the final deadline for changing course or subject options, as if you miss it and want to change, it will be very difficult, if not impossible, after the deadline.) So, think carefully, especially those in Arts, about your subject choices. You must be happy with your choice of study if you are to pursue it until the end.

As you know, in third level, you have to do a lot of independent study, reading and researching. Nobody is going to tell you how to do it, you have to figure a lot out for yourself… What follows are some helpful tips to get you started on the right foot.

 

How to write an academic essay:

Writing an academic essay is not like you are writing a secondary school essay in English. I know this because I was a secondary school English teacher. It is quite different, and this is how it is different. It is a critical essay. Now what does that mean, a critical essay? It means that you have to use argumentation backed by research to support anything you say. What do I mean by this?

Essays at third level are not essays in the sense we understand them at secondary school, rather they should now be seen as ‘research assignments’. So, anytime, you see the word ‘essay’, you will need to substantiate it with the words ‘research assignment’. Essays are no longer about your opinion per se, rather they must now be about your informed opinions, informed by your own reading and research. In other words, you have to validate your claims.

So, for instance, if you were asked to write an essay (or ‘research assignment’) on the nutritional properties of butter, you can’t just start writing, ‘I think butter is good for you because it has been around for centuries and has proven nutritional value’. You can no longer make this statement without substantiating it without research. In other words, you might say instead, Griffin’s study of 2009 proves definitively that butter has essential fatty acids not easily found in other foodstuffs, and this makes butter an essential part of a healthy balanced diet’. Or you might want to say, ‘O’Connor’s study of 2001, proved definitively that those who eat excessive amounts of butter were more likely to suffer from cardiac arrest ten years earlier than those who ate moderate or little amounts of butter’. Whatever way you argue, or you may still wish to argue that natural butter is a good nutritional source when taken in moderation. It doesn’t really matter what you say, the main point is, you have to prove your claims, and back them up by evidenced based research.

Read on, to find out how this is achieved.

– assistance with academic writing and research skills
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Griffin Research Consultancy

Griffin Research Consultancy (GRC) is set up to assist professionals or students intending to undertake research in an independent at a third level institution. The Consultancy’s main purpose is to assist aspiring professionals and students to undertake research in an organised, professional and integrated way. This includes giving clients guidance and support with their dissertation or thesis, be it a project for a degree programme, a Master’s Degree or Doctorate. GRC Consultancy will assist students by acting as a shadow supervisor, assisting, advising and guiding students every step of the way. This includes the following steps: from the thesis proposal stage, through to the proposed research design (Qualitative and Quantitative Research Methods); research ethics, data analysis and finally, the presentation of findings, results, conclusions and recommendations. GRC  advises on the general steps involved in undertaking research, in the formatting and presentation of a thesis, in research referencing, bibliography design and appendices. GRC also provides a service for those undertaking a doctorate, in students’ preparation for their all important ‘Vive Voca’ examination. GRC is designed to assist students’ every step of the way. Disclaimer: GRC will at no point do the work for the student, or act in a way that is unethical or take responsibility for a students’  work. All work is the students’ own work and responsibility. GRC provides research guidance, support and advice only and therefore cannot be liable or responsible for a students’ own work.