From Edutechwiki - Reading time: 9 minThis is part of the methodology tutorial.
In other words: The organization of the written theses has nothing to do with the organization of the research plan or its little section on planning. In particular:
The structure of your thesis if defined by two main elements:
A reader must understand your objectives, the theorectical background, the questions, how you did it and your answers (results).
Let's first a look at some superficial presentation issues.
Start by admitting that you don't know how to use a word processor. Don't feel ashamed. Most people don't. E.g. I had to write a wiki entry about Microsoft Word before writing a larger text. I usually use FrameMaker which is very different because it was designed for people that write real text and I had to make a real effort to adapt to MS Word. - Daniel K. Schneider
Here is a list of "must know" things:
Don't loose days with repetitive re-fomatting.
You need at least the following elements:
Tip: Read Microsoft Word for some advice.
Here is some advice about titles and sections
The table of contents not only is a navigation tool but it indirectly defines your argumentation flow. This is why wording of titles and structure is important.
Do not use too many section levels (like 12.3.4.1.a). Your thesis is not a military or administrative operations manual, but a flow of connected ideas.
You have to find a compromise between:
There exist several schools of thought. Make sure to consult official guidelines too !
Either just number from 0 to n or use the more sophisticate following scheme:
Notice: In MS Word 2003 adding chapter headings is painstaking labour since you have to do this for each section, so you may skip this. But any real word processor can do this really easily.
Here are the most important parts of an academic piece:
| Elements | Importance | Main functions |
|---|---|---|
| Foreword | * | Personal Context |
| Table of contents | ** | Navigation |
| Abstract | * | Main objective, result and scope |
| Introduction | *** | Objectives, global approach |
| Principal part | ** | (depends on your research type) |
| Conclusion | *** | Summary of results, further work and scope |
| List of sources | * | Data anchoring |
| Indexes | * | Navigation |
| Bibliography | ** | Theoretical anchoring |
| Annexes | * | Presentation of detailed data, materials, etc. |
The foreword is not part of your thesis.
You may use it to:
Things that relate to your work belong to the introduction
Tip: Give some thanks to your advisor. He/she probably deserves it and even if he/she doesn't, it's good policy.
Do not forget that you don't just write a thesis for a jury. Other people may read it and they want to do this fast and maybe just find some bit of information as quickly as possible.
The introduction (as well as the conclusion) is the most
important chapter of your thesis. Some people will decide to read or not to read your thesis after looking at the first page.
| Elements | Details |
|---|---|
| The big question | .... summarizes your subject, i.e. what you wanted to find out. |
| .... implicitly or explicitly defines a scope | |
| The "language" | .... which major concepts you use, word definitions you use, etc. |
| The general approach | .... research type, global approach, principal methods used |
| .... the structure of your thesis |
In general, the introduction includes:
A description of your research subject (including the big question).
A short discussion of the interest of your work and its scope (including what you will not do).
A synthetic list of research questions and/or working hypothesis (if your research is rather theory-finding). Alternatively, they may appear after the literature review part.
A list of some important definitions, e.g. an explanation of the words you use in the title of thesis or the big question. You also can do this in the literature review.
A presentation/discussion of the global approach, unless you dedicate a special section to this. In the latter case you should just briefly describe the approach in a single short paragraph.
A short guide for the reader. It will help the reader finding things and also show that you can provide a rationale for the adopted structure.
An introduction of the object(s) you study. E.g. if you do some policy implementation research, you may present the context and the legal basis.
Notice: A working hypothesis is not a scientific hypothesis that can be tested. It's just a more aggressively formulated general research question. "Real" hypothesis exist in theory-testing approaches. They are grounded in theory and can be properly tested with data. Such hypothesis are always presented after the theory part and then even further operationalized after or in the methods chapter.
It is difficult to give some useful advice about the principal chapters, since there exists a large variety.
Certain research types / approaches have strong guidelines for content structuring. However, we can try to formulate some general principles.
In all empirical studies, you should:
However, the order is not necessarily the same for a given research type...
Avoid including lots of statistical indices in your sentences, rather use tables for this (except in experimental psychology, where text is supposed to be unreadable)
Usually, the review is done in chapter two. However, there may exist exceptions (e.g. in history)
But in any case this chapter should be used. Research questions are presented in detail after the review and they must be grounded in the literature review. Research results have to be confronted to the theory later on (e.g. after or during presentation and discussion of the results). This is an often observed problem in master thesis. This principle also works the other way round. If you don't use theory, do not present it.
Recall the principal results of your research
Discuss the scope of your results and provide an outlook
If necessary, this chapter will include a list of all your primary sources, e.g.
You also may include these in the bibliography.
You may (but usually must not) produce an index of concepts and authors. It will help the quick reader to find interesting "spots" and also provide an idea about the way you tackled your research.
Most word processors can do this fairly easily (even Word)
Annexes are important and include everything that is not strictly necessary for the presentation and the discussion of empirical results.
Typically, the annex(es) may include:
Bascially, the annex allows a critical reader to figure out if you did it right. It also will help other persons to replicate some or your empirical research, e.g. apply your questionnaire to a different population.
It must include each and every reference you directly or indirectly used.
You do not need to include any other references, i.e. texts you didn't use.
You must respect a certain standard (and be coherent)
Tip: Start doing the bibliography right from the start.
You will have to respect a given norm. In some institutions you can choose, in others you will have to comply. See the citation article for some links that might help you.
Do not forget to prepare your presentation. A good presentation can make a little difference. Often the jury is divided and has to decide between a somewhat lower and a somewhat higher grade.
Time is usually very limited, so stick to the essential !
Ask them to tell you what wasn't clear
Once you feel that the contents are ok, you will have to deliver in time and with a minimum of style. The only way to get this right is to repeat the presentation using your voice at least 3 times (looking at the slides and mumbling will not do).
Here is a typical "talk menu". It's in french since French food has a good reputation (I am not going to comment about typical French talk delivery quality here ...).
Suggest to your advisor to present your work as a conference paper with him as second co-author. This is fairly standard procedure in the US but not necessarily in other countries. Both will profit if he/she does his/her share ...