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The Art and Craft of Case Writing, Second Edition
Authored by: William Naumes; Margaret J. Naumes
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Comment(s): It's simply the best available guide to the art and craft of case writing, by two acknowledged masters of the genre. -- Anne T. Lawrence, San Jose State University
The Art and Craft of Case Writing, Second Edition, is the persuasive, informative guide to effective case writing and teaching for novices and experienced writers of all disciplines. -- Hans E. Klein, President,
WACRAŽ, The World Association for Case Method Research and Application
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Paper ISBN: 0-7656-1682-3
USD: $34.95
WACRA member price: $29.95 |
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Available to all countries
Information: 296pp. Exhibits, appendices, references, recommended readings, author index, subject index.
Publication Date: March 2006
Description: Anyone conducting case research in business or the social sciences--whether experienced or novice-- should get the new edition of The Art and Craft of Case Writing. It is a practical, comprehensive, and multidisciplinary guide that blends an informal, workshop style with solid theory and practice. The authors are veteran case writers and have conducted numerous case-writing workshops with leading organizations. They take readers through the entire case-writing process, including the development of objectives, data collection, drafting the case, testing and revising, and the development of polished teaching notes. Skills for writing both teaching cases and research cases are included, and the book also features many helpful checklists, charts, and suggestions for further reading. Specific changes for the Second Edition include: --a broadened emphasis on the social sciences; --theoretical basis expanded to include not only Bloom's Cognitive Taxonomy but also Fink's Taxonomy of Significant Learning; --expanded coverage of action research; --a new discussion of Institutional Review Boards in the data chapter, research chapter, and elsewhere; --a completely updated multimedia-internet chapter.
Selected Contents: List of Exhibits Preface Prologue: The Power of Storytelling Message Details Style Cases 1. What Is a Case and Why Write One? Definition of a Case How Students Learn Case Types A Real Situation Facts, Not Opinion Research as Anthropology Reasons for Writing a Case Gap Analysis Serendipity Writing to Learn Summary and Conclusions 2. Objectives—Key to the Case What Skills/Theories Do You Want to Develop? Marzano—The Thinking Process Bloom's Taxonomies Fink's Taxonomy of Significant Learning Case Characteristics and Educational Objectives Educational Objective Data Dimensions, Analytical Methods, and Value Dimensions Types of Cases Descriptive Cases and Other Story Problems Evaluative Cases Decision-Focus Cases Research Cases A Practice Session Summary and Conclusions 3. Finding a Case Site and Gathering Data Identifying Potential Case Sites Students as Resources Family and Friends as Resources Alumni as Resources Consortia and Research Groups Published Sources Consulting Contacts The Field Research Process Making Contact Gaining Access Releases and Promises Case Disguises Gathering Data Preliminary Preparation The Interviewing Process Triangulating Authorization for Release Library Cases In Conclusion 4. Research Cases Background Advantages and Disadvantages of Case Research Methodology Institutional Review Boards Uses Hypothesis Development Hypothesis Testing Preparation Presentation Style A Research Case Example Case Research to Case Teaching: The Unbroken Circle Summary and Conclusions 5. The Instructor's Manual, Part 1 The Importance of an Instructor's Manual Who Should Write the Case Note? A Quick Outline of a Typical Instructor's Manual Objectives of the Case Case Summary Basic Pedagogy Key Issues of the Case—Student Take-Aways Theoretical Links Questions for Student Preparation and Discussion Methodology The Practice Session Summary and Conclusions 6. Organizing the Case Length and Straightforwardness Selection of Facts Appropriate Length Red Herrings and Extra Information Missing Information Students as Case Writers The Hook To Direct the Student or Not? Alternative Beginnings Case Organization Appropriate Style Point of View Ending the Case Tone and Tense Objectivity Inserting References Past Tense The Practice Session Summary and Conclusions 7. Testing and Refining the Teaching Case Releases Developing a Preliminary Teaching Plan Testing Your Case in Class What to Tell the Class The Mechanics of Class Testing What You Learned from Class Testing Evaluating the Educational Objectives Double-Check for Data Getting a Second Opinion (and a Third . . .) Other Readers, Other Case Writers Other Teachers Workshops and Other Collaborative Formats Revising and Updating Cases The Practice Session Summary and Conclusions 8. The Instructor's Manual, Part 2 Refining the Discussion Questions Answers: Sample or Suggested Responses Refining the Teaching Objectives and Key Issues What You've Learned from Class Testing The A Student/C Student Split Timing Board Layout Other Techniques Double Checks for the Case's Completeness The Role of Opinion Exhibits for Instructors' Use Master Copies Data Workouts Bibliography, Recommended Readings, Other Resources The Epilogue The Practice Session Summary and Conclusions 9. Notes, Case Series, and Other Supplements When a Case Note Makes Sense Technical and Other Notes Cultural and National Notes Sources of Information for Notes When It Makes Sense to Divide a Case (Create a Series) Time Series Cases Multiple Approach Case Series The Practice Session Summary and Conclusions 10. Video and Multimedia Case Studies Video Supplements Video Cases Benefits of Video Cases Problems of Video Cases Multimedia Cases Benefits of Multimedia Cases Problems of Multimedia Cases Development of Internet Cases Case Documents Internet Access Summary and Conclusions Appendix I. Case Example—First Draft Appendix II. Instructor's Manual—First Draft Appendix III. Case Example—Published Version Appendix IV. Instructor's Manual—Final Version References For Further Reading About the Authors Index
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