Thesis : Thesis Preparation and Knowledge
How Theses Get Written:
Some Cool Tips
Outline : Outline Part 1: Writing your thesis
(1) Context: What is a thesis (for)?
(2) How Do I Get Started?
(3) What Should My Thesis Contain?
(4) How Do I Get Finished?
(5) Summary
Part 2: The Examiner’s View
(1) “Uh oh, not another thesis to read…”
(2) “What’s this one about?”
(3) “Now there must be some corrections…”
(4) “Let’s see, what can I ask the candidate?”
What is a thesis? : What is a thesis? An argument
An exposition of an original piece of research
The product of an apprenticeship
Probably the largest (most self-indulgent) piece of
work you’ll ever do
Something that could be published:
E.g. at least one paper in a scholarly journal
but you will probably never publish the whole thesis
Examination Issues : Examination Issues Your examiners need to appreciate your research:
Choose your examiners well
Target your thesis at them
Keep abreast of their work
Talk to them regularly
Ask around about what is the norm for your university
E.g. at U of T, it is normal to interact regularly with your thesis committee
Your examiners need to be told about your research:
If it’s not in your thesis, they won’t find out about it
No matter how good your research is, you MUST write a good thesis
How do I get started? : How do I get started? Do this today: I do really mean
Decide your title Before you go to bed tonight
Write your title page Tomorrow is too late
Start a binder
(Look at some theses in your area)
Plan your argument…
You can change things later
But you can’t change it unless you have something to change!
Slide 6 : For example:
Look, I’ve just
done 1/126
of the task!
This changed
a few times…
I just copied
this format
from another
thesis
Okay, so this
wasn’t my
first choice…
Plan Your Argument : Plan Your Argument One sentence for each: Example
Introduction
(area of study)
“The success of a software development project depends on
capturing stakeholders’ needs in a specification ...
The problem
(that I tackle)
“However, specifications often reflect the analyst’s own bias,
rather than the inputs of the many different stakeholders…
What the literature says
about this problem
“Current methods described in the literature fail to address
identification and integration of multiple views.
How I tackle this problem “By treating the specification activity as a dialogue between
stakeholders, we can model each perspective separately.
How I implement my
solution
“We provide a set of tools for exploring disagreement between
perspectives, and use these tools as the basis for a computer supported
negotiation process.
The result “This approach is shown to significantly improve
Plan your arguement : Plan your arguement One sentence for each: Example
Introduction
(area of study)
“The success of a software development project depends on
capturing stakeholders’ needs in a specification ...
The problem
(that I tackle)
“However, specifications often reflect the analyst’s own bias,
rather than the inputs of the many different stakeholders…
What the literature says
about this problem
“Current methods described in the literature fail to address
identification and integration of multiple views.
How I tackle this problem “By treating the specification activity as a dialogue between
stakeholders, we can model each perspective separately.
How I implement my
solution
“We provide a set of tools for exploring disagreement between
perspectives, and use these tools as the basis for a computersupported
negotiation process.
The result “This approach is shown to significantly improve traceability and
validity of specifications and overall stakeholder satisfaction.”
Another Example : : Another Example : One sentence for each: Example
Introduction
(area of study)
“A Ph.D. is examined by submission of a thesis...
The problem
(that I tackle)
“Many students fail to complete their theses within the
regulation four years...
What the literature says about
this problem
“Empirical studies indicate that late submission is highly
correlated with delaying the start of the write-up...
How I tackle this problem “A model of PhD study that encourages an early start to
the thesis writing task is clearly desirable...
How I implement my solution
“Such a model encourages the student to plan a structure
for the thesis and collect material for each chapter
throughout their study...
The result “Application of this model dramatically improves
submission rates.”
Plan your thesis : Plan your thesis Convert this argument into a chapter outline
At least one chapter per sentence
...maybe more than one for some sentences
Start a binder with a division for each chapter
Collect material in this binder
Set out clearly what each chapter should say
Don’t be afraid to change your mind
As you write the thesis, your ideas will evolve
Don’t wait for them to stop evolving:
It’s much easier to change an outline that you’ve written down than one you
haven’t.
Slide 11 : Of course,
your plan will
evolve as you
proceed with
the research
…and you may
find that exactly six
chapters doesn’t
quite work for you…
Here’s one of
my attempts…
Don’t omit any of these: : Don’t omit any of these: Title (and title page) - conveys a message
Abstract - for the librarian
Contents Listing - shows the right things are there
Acknowledgements - get your supervisor on your side!
Introduction - says “I am going to look at the following things”.
Review of Previous Work - show you know the subject
Philosophy of Approach - show you can pick out important ideas succinctly
Plan of Attack - show you approached the problem in a systematic way
Description of the work - details, so that others can follow what you did
Critical analysis of the results - show you know its limitations
Future Work - show you know what’s missing
Conclusions - repetition of the intro, but with reference to the detail.
References - Cover the field; examiners will look for the key references
Appendices - Nitty Gritty details that would clutter your eloquent description
Say everything thrice : Say everything thrice In the thesis as a whole:
a. What the thesis will say ( Introduction) b. Details of the work(Body) c. What the thesis said(Conclusion)
Within each chapter / section
a. What this section says(Signposting) b. The details(Body)
c. What this section said(Summary)
Within each paragraph…
Each paragraph describes a single idea
The first sentence introduces the idea (linking it with the previous one)
The last sentence concludes the idea (linking it with the next one)
But it’s not repetition, it’s linking and rationale.
If you do it right, the reader won’t notice any repetition
Bibliography : Bibliography Keep a database of complete references
Use a consistent citation style
Use a tool
Bibtex, Refer, Endnote, ProCite, or whatever.
New tools: Mendeley, Zotero, CiteULike,…
Attention to detail is important
Get the spellings right
Keep complete references
page numbers, volume numbers, editors names, locations and dates for conference
proceedings, etc.
Find out what the local rules are for citation style
If there are no local rules, use [Author, Year] format
This improves readability by saving the reader flicking to the back
Assume the reader is familiar with the main references
But that doesn’t mean you should skip them
How do I get finished? Answer: by not getting stuck. : How do I get finished? Answer: by not getting stuck. You’ve written most of it ...
... but for the bits you’re avoiding ...
... you keep rewriting other bits ...
... doing more reading ...
... tinkering with the layout ...
... seeking cute quotations ...
Q: Why are you stuck?
A: Because you’ve set yourself too hard a task.
Don’t be afraid to change your plan if it proves too hard.
Be savage in cutting irrelevant bits.
Learn how to notice symptoms of “being stuck”, and ask for help… Stop
Reviewing : Reviewing Get other people to read your drafts
Peers will give friendly comments (and may have the most time!)
Supervisor will steer you
Other academics will spot things your supervisor has missed.
Above all:
…get the bugs out before the examiners see it.
Summary : Summary Start writing today (never tomorrow)
Make up a title page for inspiration
Write down your argument succinctly
Turn the argument into a chapter plan
Maintain a binder of stuff to put into these chapters
Don’t be afraid to change the plan
The Examiner’s View : The Examiner’s View Uh oh, not another thesis to read...
Your examiners are busy people
Examining theses is a chore, but:
“It might help me keep up to date with an area of research”
“It might inspire me”
“I might learn something”
“I might gain a new colleague”
Note: the reading will be done in trains, planes, and
departmental meetings!
Examiner’s first question : Examiner’s first question What’s this one about?
Examiners have little time available, so they want to extract the most juice in
the shortest time:
Typical scanning order of a new thesis:
Abstract bibliography conclusions contents listing
What’s it about? Does it cite the right things? What was achieved? Are all the pieces there?
Has it been published already? do I believe it? Is the argument clear?
This may be enough to decide whether it’s worth a PhD.
Then:
1) What questions now spring to mind?
2) ...read through...
3) Were the questions answered?
Good luck with your papers ! : Good luck with your papers ! Goodbye
Designed and written by : Malissa Hope Collins