Article on serverless computing

Need a 15 page APA research article on Serverless Computing. The article should strictly follow the below rules. The attached document has details on the formate

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1) A minimum of five (5) peer-reviewed journal citations is required.

2) Chapter 1 illustrates the document details of the research report [Review the Final Exam Research Report Guide (Research Report Help section)] and constitutes Background/Introduction, Problem Statement(s), Goal(s), Research Question(s), Relevance and Significance, Barriers and Issues related to topic chosen. Chapter 2 should consist of student paraphrasing the cited research material (i.e. what happened in case study x). Chapter 3 should be the reasoning for doing a basic compare/contrast or advantages/disadvantage of what was stated in Chapter 2 (do not state because the professor said so). Chapter 4 is a complete analysis, synthesis, and evaluation of what was stated in chapter 2. In effect, chapter 3 is a statement of what will be done and chapter 4 is what was done and what the findings were. Again, thus far the writing is objective and must not contain student opinion. Chapter 5 states results, conclusion, and future work recommendations. Here is where student opinion (or any researcher) can state their respective opinion as the student has now “done the work” and are justified in stating results.  Graduate student ar

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School of Business, Economic, and Technology

Campbellsville University- Louisville Center

Research Report Guide

A Guide for BA634 Students

©2017, Dr Vincent Scovetta

Campbellsville University. All rights reserved.

9/25/2019

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Table of Contents

  • The Research Report
  • ………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….. 4

  • Chapter 1- Background/
  • Introduction
  • (3 – 4 pages)

    ………………………………………………………………………………………… 4

    Introduction ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 4

  • Problem Statement and Purpose of Research
  • ……………………………………………………………………………………………….. 4

  • Relevance and Significance
  • …………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………. 4

  • Research Questions
  • …………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 5

  • Barriers and Issues
  • …………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….. 5

  • Chapter 2 – Review of the Literature (6-8 pages)
  • ……………………………………………………………………………………………. 5

  • Chapter 3 – Approach/Methodology (1 – 2 pages)
  • ………………………………………………………………………………………….. 5

  • Chapter 4: Findings, Analysis, and Summary of Results (2 – 4 pages)
  • ………………………………………………………………… 5

  • Chapter 5: Conclusions (2 – 4 pages)
  • …………………………………………………………………………………………………………….. 5

  • References
  • ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….. 6

  • Research Report Structure
  • ………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….. 6

    Front Matter …………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………. 6

    Chapter 1 through 5 (12 pages): ………………………………………………………………………………………………………………. 6

    Back Matter: ………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….. 6

  • Document Preparation – Form and Style
  • ………………………………………………………………………………………………………. 6

    References and Citations ………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 7

    Margins ………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 7

    Line Spacing…………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 7

    Paragraph Spacing………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….. 7

    Page Numbering …………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….. 7

    Type Style ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 8

    Title Page ………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………. 8

    The Abstract ………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….. 8

    Chapter Title, Heading 1, Heading 2 …………………………………………………………………………………………………………. 8

    Tables and Figures in the Text Body …………………………………………………………………………………………………………. 9

    Appendix ………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………. 9

  • Additional Resources
  • …………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………. 9

  • Sample First Page of Table of Contents
  • ………………………………………………………………………………………………………. 10

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  • Sample Reference List
  • ………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………. 11

    4

    The Research Report

    The Research Report serves as the deliverable towards partial completion of the requirement for BA634. The

    requirement of your research is expected to be built and constitutes the five-chapter model. This document is not

    intended to be a one-time or static document. The Research Report needs to be at least 14 pages and is written

    in the past and present tense, as appropriate.

    The Research Report should be a complete and concise document that establishes your credentials as a relative

    expert in the domain of your study. In all cases, a good understanding of the specific domain will be necessary

    for the successful completion of your study. It is vital that you stay current in the literature germane to the

    study you are conducting and update the chapters accordingly.

    The following is the general structure of the Research Report

    Chapter 1- Background/Introduction (3 – 4 pages)
    In this section, present enough information about the proposed work so that the reader understands the general

    context or setting. It is also helpful to include a summary of how this document is organized.

    Introduction
    This section introduces the reader to the structural content of your Research Report

    Problem Statement and Purpose of Research
    In this section, present a concise statement of a research-worthy problem to be addressed (i.e., why the work

    should be undertaken – don’t state “it was a requirement of the professor”). Follow the statement of the problem

    with a well-supported discussion of its scope and nature. The discussion of the problem should include: what the

    problem is, why it is a problem, how the problem evolved or developed, and the issues and events leading to the

    problem. Your problem statement must be clear, concise, to the point and able to be articulated in no more than

    three sentences.

    Relevance and Significance
    This section provides the necessary support for both the problem statement of your study. Consider the following

    questions and support your discussion by citing the research literature:

     Why is there a problem? What groups or individuals are affected?

     How far-ranging is the problem and how great is its impact? What’s the benefit of solving the problem?

     What has been tried without success to correct the situation? Why weren’t those attempts successful?

     What are the consequences of not solving the problem?

     How does the goal of your study address the research problem and how will your proposed study offer
    promise as a resolution to the problem?

     How will your research add to the knowledge base?

     What is the potential for generalization of your results?

     What is the potential for original work?

    5

    Research Questions
    In this section you will define the research questions you expect to answer in your finding / results / conclusion

    sections. The research question(s) must be directly related to the problem statement and introduce the reader to

    their respective relationships. The answers to the research question(s) need to be either qualitative or

    quantitative.

    Barriers and Issues
    In this section, identify how the problem is inherently difficult to solve. You should also show how the solution

    you propose are difficult to obtain (unlike a book report). You should show the study you propose is of adequate

    difficulty to warrant a successful grade assignment.

    Chapter 2 – Review of the Literature (6-8 pages)
    In this section, it is important to clearly identify the major areas on which you will need to focus your research in

    order to build a solid foundation for your study in the existing body of knowledge. The literature review is the

    presentation of quality literature in a particular field that serves as the foundation and justification for the research

    problem, research questions or hypothesis, and methodology. You will develop a more comprehensive review of

    the literature as part of your report.

    Chapter 3 – Approach/Methodology (1 – 2 pages)
    Describe how you plan to address your research problem and accomplish your stated goal. List the major steps

    that must be taken to accomplish the goal and include a preliminary discussion of the methodology and specific

    research methods you plan to implement. Although specific details are not required at this point, you must provide

    adequate discussion of the general process you will follow to implement your research methodology.

    Chapter 4: Findings, Analysis, and Summary of Results (2 – 4 pages)
    Chapter 4 includes an objective description and analysis of the findings, results or outcomes of the research. Limit

    the use of charts, tables, figures to those that are needed to support the narrative. Most of these illustrations can

    be included as part of the Appendixes.

    The following topics are intended to serve as a guide:

     Data analysis

     Findings & discussion

     Analysis

     Summary of results & discussion

    Chapter 5: Conclusions (2 – 4 pages)
     Conclusions – Clearly state the conclusions of the study based on the analysis performed and results achieved.

    Indicate by the evidence or logical development the extent to which the specified objectives have been

    accomplished. If the research has been guided by hypotheses, make a statement as to whether the data

    supported or rejected these hypotheses. Discuss alternative explanations for the findings, if appropriate.

    Delineate strengths, weaknesses, and limitations of the study.

     Implications – Discuss the impact of the work on the field of study and its contributions to knowledge and

    6

    professional practice. Discuss implications for future research.

     Recommendations – Present recommendations for future research or for changes in research methods or
    theoretical concepts. As appropriate, present recommendations for changes in academic practice, professional

    practice, or organizational procedures, practices, and behavior.

    References
    Follow the most current version of APA to format your references. However, each reference should be single-

    spaced with a double space between each cited entry. Make sure that every citation is referenced and every

    reference is cited.

    Research Report Structure
    Notes:

     White space added to the report will negatively affect the final grade of your report. Do not add extra space

    to your document in an effort to extend the page count.

    Front Matter
     The front matter includes the following:

    o Title Page
    o Abstract
    o Table of Contents
    o List of Tables
    o List of Figures

    Chapter 1 through 5 (12 pages):

    Back Matter:
     The back matter includes the following:

    o Appendixes
    o References

    Document Preparation – Form and Style

    Form and style guidelines for a Research Report serve a number of purposes: to ease adaptation of the document

    for publication in whole or part, to ensure a level of professional appearance, and ease the burden on the readers

    of the document by presenting material in a logical, consistent fashion. Nevertheless, form and style guidelines

    should not be burdensome for Peer Reviewer or Professor. The bulk of the effort in developing and mentoring a

    Research Report should certainly be directed toward the quality of the thoughts being presented, not the

    appearance of that presentation.

    The current edition of the Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association serves as the primary

    guide for format and style. Since that manual focuses primarily on publication in journals, some exceptions are

    necessary for a Research Report. The Research Report guidelines are amplified with examples of:

    • Title Page (Appendix A)

    7

    • Table of Contents (Appendix E)
    • List of Tables (Appendix F)
    • List of Figures (Appendix G)
    • First Page of a Chapter (Appendix H)
    • Appendix Pages (Appendix I)
    • Reference List (Appendix J)

    References and Citations
    One of the most important tasks in writing a Research Report is to reference other works and sources in the text

    body. You must provide a formal reference citation for each idea or statement taken from the work of an

    individual or organization. Failure to provide a reference citation, when one is appropriate, is plagiarism, which

    is a violation of the university’s Code of Student Conduct and Academic Responsibility. An act of plagiarism

    will subject the student to disciplinary action including suspension or expulsion from the university. Always err

    on the side of caution when writing any formal paper. As you conduct your work, keep accurate records that

    indicate which portions of your Research Report are not your own words and ideas. If you attempt to do this as

    an afterthought, you run the risk of losing the source of the information and committing plagiarism. Reference

    citations in the text should use the author-date citation system specified in the current edition of the Publication

    Manual of the American Psychological Association. All reference citations must be listed alphabetically in the

    References section at the end of the document, again following the format specified in the current edition of the

    Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association. However, each reference should be single-

    spaced with a double space in between each entry. Make sure that every citation is referenced and every

    reference is cited.

    Margins
    The left-hand margin must be 1.5 inches (4 cm.). Margins at the right, top, and bottom of the page should be 1.0

    inch. (See exception for chapter title pages below.) The Research Report text must be left-aligned (leaving a

    ragged right edge).

    Line Spacing
    Double-spacing is required for most of the text in documents submitted during the Research Report process.

    Pages for the abstract, acknowledgments, and parts of the table of contents, however, must be single-spaced in

    the Research Report. Single-spacing also can be used for table titles and headings, figure captions, references in

    a reference list (but double-spacing is required between references in the list), footnotes, and long quotations.

    Long quotations may be indented five spaces. Judicial triple can improve appearance and readability and is

    appropriate after chapter titles, before major subheadings, before footnotes, and before and after tables in the

    text; however, avoid open white spaces.

    Paragraph Spacing
    The text of the document is double-spaced. There should be no extra spaces between paragraphs in sections;

    however, indent the first line of paragraphs five spaces (1/2 inch). Chapters must begin on new pages.

    Page Numbering
    Page numbers for the front matter, starting with the Table of Contents, should be lowercase roman numerals,

    centered at the bottom of the page. All pages following the front matter should have page numbers in Arabic

    8

    numerals in the upper right-hand corner. The page order and numbering for the front matter is:

    1. Title page is page i, but the page number is not printed.
    2. Approval Signature page is page ii, but the page number is not printed.
    3. Abstract is page iii but the page number is not printed.
    4. Acknowledgements is page iv and not to exceed one page. The page number is not printed.
    5. Table of Contents is page v and the page number is printed, bottom center.
    6. List of Tables (only present if the document contains tables) is given the next page number in

    sequence, printed bottom center.

    7. List of Figures (only present if the document contains figures) is given the next page number in
    sequence, printed bottom center.

    Type Style

    For body text, you should use 12-point Times New Roman. Text for the cover page may be larger but should

    not exceed 14-point size. Text for the chapter title text should be 14-point size. Be consistent in your use of

    typefaces throughout the document. Do not use a compressed typeface or any settings on your word processor

    that would decrease the spacing between letters or words. Sans serif typefaces such as Helvetica or Arial may

    be used for relatively short blocks of text such as chapter headings and captions but should be avoided in long

    passages of text as they impede readability.

    Title Page
    Every document that is submitted, from the Research Report, must have a title page. The title page includes the

    exact title of the Master’s Thesis, date of submission, your name, and name of the department which the report

    is submitted. Use the format of the Sample Research Report Title Page provided in Appendix A.

    The Abstract
    The abstract (see Appendix es C) is single spaced. An abstract is a stand-alone document and therefore, should

    not include citations because it would then need references. Note that the abstract must be fewer than 200

    words.

    Chapter Title, Heading 1, Heading 2
    It is preferred that Research Report contain no more than three levels of headings in the body text. All headings

    should have only the first letter of each word capitalized except that non-major words shorter than four letters

    have no capital letters. See Appendix H for a sample page for a first page of a chapter.

    Instructions for heading levels follow:

    Level 1: Chapter Title

    This heading starts two inches from the top of the page, is centered on the page, and is set in 14point type.

    The first line contains the chapter number (e.g., Chapter 4). The second line is blank. The third line

    displays the chapter title, is centered on the page, and is set in 14-point type.

    Level 2: Heading 1

    Start heading 1 at the left margin of the page, four spaces (i.e., two returns when your document is set for

    9

    double-spacing) down from the title, set in bold 12-point type. Double-space (one return) to the

    subheading body text. Indent the first line of the body text five spaces.

    Level 3: Heading 2

    Start the heading 2 at the left margin of the page, double-spaced (i.e., one return when your document is

    set up for double-spacing) from the subheading, set in 12-point italics. Double-space (one return) to the

    sub-subheading body text. Indent the first line of the body text five spaces.

    Tables and Figures in the Text Body
    Charts, graphs, diagrams, figures, and summary tables that significantly enhance reading of the Research Report

    should be placed in the text body. Only include material in the text body that is needed by the reader to understand

    the point(s) you are trying to make. Other material should be placed in Appendixes. Tables that summarize large

    amounts of data are best placed at the end of the Master’s Thesis. If you have included data in your text related

    to some point, then the full table containing such data belongs in an Appendix. When using tables and figures in

    the body of the paper, remember that the horizontal center of the body is not at the center of the paper. It is 0.25”

    to the right of center due to the 1.5” left binding margin. All tables and figures that are less than body width must

    be centered properly. Samples of a table and figure appear in Appendixes L and M.

    Appendix
    Place in appropriate appendices all analytical tables, evaluation instruments, and other material important in the

    determination, evaluation, analysis, and description of your research that is not contained in the text body (see

    section above). Use an Appendix to present material that supplements the text or may be of interest to readers

    but is too detailed or distracting for inclusion in the main body of the text. Surveys, evaluation instruments,

    original data, complicated mathematical tables, new computer programs, computer printouts, and data collection

    forms are examples of materials that are most appropriately appended. Do not exclude material that would be

    necessary for another researcher to replicate your work and that is not available elsewhere. Include copies of IRB

    permission from the sponsoring organization and from the study site. Present copies of all letters and e-mails that

    allow you to use and modify materials belonging to others. If appropriate, you may use a titled cover sheet for an

    Appendix.

    Additional Resources

    American Psychological Association (2010). Publication manual of the American Psychological Association. (6
    th

    ed.). Washington, D.C.: Author.

    Bolker, J. (1998). Writing your Research Reportin fifteen minutes a day: A guide to starting, revising, and

    finishing your doctoral thesis. New York, NY: Henry Holt Publishing.

    Kiernan, V (2005). Writing Your Dissertation with Microsoft Word. MattilyPublishing, Alexandria, Virginia

    10

    Sample First Page of Table of Contents
    Table of Contents

    Abstract iii

    List of Tables (if necessary) viii (your actual page number may be different)

    List of Figures (if necessary) ix (your actual page number may be different)

    Chapters

    1. Introduction

     Statement of the Problem to Be Investigated 1

     Goal to Be Achieved 2

     Relevance and Significance 4

     Barriers and Issues 7

     etc.

    2. Review of the Literature

     The theory and research literature specific to the topic 17

     etc.

    3 . Methodology

     Research Methods Employed 35

     etc.

    4. Findings, Analysys, Results,

     Findings 78

     Analysis 91

     Results

    5. Conclusions, Implications, and Recommendations

     Results 102

     Conclusions 108

     Implications 123

     etc.

    Appendices

    A. xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx 140

    B. xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx 148

    C. xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx 155 etc.

    Reference List 198

    Note: Count and print the number of this page centered here in lowercase Roman.

    11

    Sample Reference List

    American Psychological Association (2010). Publication manual of the American Psychological Association. (6
    th

    ed.). Washington, D.C.: Author.
    Bolker, J. (1998). Writing your Research Reportin fifteen minutes a day: A guide to starting, revising, and
    finishing your doctoral thesis. New York, NY: Henry Holt Publishing.

    Kiernan, V (2005). Writing Your Dissertation with Microsoft Word. MattilyPublishing, Alexandria, Virginia

      The Research Report
      Chapter 1- Background/Introduction (3 – 4 pages)
      Introduction
      Problem Statement and Purpose of Research
      Relevance and Significance
      Research Questions
      Barriers and Issues
      Chapter 2 – Review of the Literature (6-8 pages)
      Chapter 3 – Approach/Methodology (1 – 2 pages)
      Chapter 4: Findings, Analysis, and Summary of Results (2 – 4 pages)
      Chapter 5: Conclusions (2 – 4 pages)
      References
      Research Report Structure
      Front Matter
      Chapter 1 through 5 (12 pages):
      Back Matter:
      Document Preparation – Form and Style
      References and Citations
      Margins
      Line Spacing
      Paragraph Spacing
      Page Numbering
      Type Style
      Title Page
      The Abstract
      Chapter Title, Heading 1, Heading 2
      Tables and Figures in the Text Body
      Appendix
      Additional Resources
      Sample First Page of Table of Contents
      Sample Reference List

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