The following page was adopted from a page that Tim Brecht from the University
of Waterloo put together.
A Simple Approach
to Thesis Writing
(Adapted from "The Guaranteed Mackworth
Thesis Formula", by Alan Mackworth)
Abstract (<= 1
page)
- one page stating what the thesis is about
- highlight the contributions of the thesis
Chapter
1: Introduction (~5-10 pages)
- Thesis Statement (one or two sentences)
- What is your
hypothesis?
- How will you test
(prove/disprove) your hypothesis?
- Motivation
- Goals / Objectives
- **** Contributions *****
- What have you
contributed to the field of research?
- Why is the world a
better place because of what you've done?
- What is now
known/possible/better because of your thesis?
- Outline of the thesis (optional)
Chapter
2: Background / Related Work (~8-20 pages)
- More than a literature review
- Organize related work - impose structure
- Critique the existing work - Where is it strong where
is it weak? What are the unreasonable/undesirable assumptions?
- Identify opportunities for more research (i.e. your
thesis) Are there unaddressed, or more important related topics?
- After reading this chapter, one should understand the
motivation for and importance of your thesis
Chapter 3: Theory
/ Solution / Program / Problem (~15-30 pages)
- continuing from Chapter 2 explain the issues
- outline your solution / extension / refutation
Chapter
4: Implementation / Formalism (~15-30 pages)
- not every thesis has or needs an implementation
Chapter
5: Results and Evaluation (~15-30 pages)
- adequacy, efficiency, productiveness, effectiveness
(choose your criteria, state them clearly and justify them)
- be careful that you are using a fair measure, and that
you are actually measuring what you claim to be measuring
- if comparing with previous techniques those techniques
must be described in Chapter 2
- be honest in evaluation
- admit weaknesses
Chapter
6: Conclusions and Future Work (~5-10 pages)
- State what you've done and what you've found
- Summarize contributions (achievements and impact)
- Outline open issues/directions for future work
Bibliography /
References
- Include references to:
- credit others for their
work
- help to distinguish
your work from others
- provide pointers to
further detailed readings
- support your claims (if
evidence can be found in others work)
- Ensure that ALL bibliographic entries are complete
including: authors, title, journal or conference, volume and number of
journals, date of publication and page numbers. Be careful to at least be
consistent in punctuation.
- Learn how to use a good typesetting program that can
track and format bibliographic references (e.g., groff,
latex, frame).
- Within the text of the thesis, a reference with a
number of people can be referred to as Lastname
et al. (where et al appears in italics and the al is followed by a
period).
- My personal view is that URL's are not valid
bibliographic references. They and their contents change and they often
contain material that has not been refereed.
Appendix
- Include technical material that would disrupt the flow
of the thesis.
- Included for curious or disbelieving readers
Writing Hints
- Before handing in a copy
of what you've written you should proof read it and make corrections
yourself. Be critical of your own work when you do this. You should think
not only about syntax and grammar but about the structure of the document
and whether or not your are making good arguments and whether or not someone
else will be able to follow and believe what you are saying. You should
repeat this process a large number of times before you hand in a copy. Far
too many people type something in, print it out and hand it in. If this is
the case you as a student are not doing your job. It is not your
supervisor's job to write your thesis.
- Try to aim for around 100 pages or less.
- Including a glossary or list of acronyms may be
helpful.
- Start thinking about what your contributions are early
on.
- How is what you are
doing interesting and important?
- How will it make the
world a better place?
- What are you doing or
discovering that hasn't already been done or isn't already known?
- For many people it is best to start by writing the
"guts" of the thesis, Chapters 3, 4 and 5. In some cases the
results and conclusions may not be known (or may change) while doing these
chapters.
- Chapters 3,4 and 5 can take on
different forms depending on the thesis and approaches being used.
- Sometimes design, implementation and performance are
subsections within chapters and the chapters are broken down by other
criteria.
- Remember (especially those doing experiments) that you
must include enough detail in your thesis so that someone else could read
your thesis and reproduce your results - without ever talking to you.
- The word performance is by itself quite meaningless.
Stating that you've improved performance significantly does not tell the
reader anything. There are problems with the word performance and the word
improved. Remember that there are often a number of different performance
metrics that can be applied to a system. Instead of using the word
performance state precisely what performance metric is improved.
Also improved may also be potentially ambiguous. State precisely what you
mean. For example: The mean response time has been decreased by 20%. Peak
bandwidth has been increased by 40%.
- Try to get an outline and style guidelines from someone
else for the system you use for formatting your thesis.
- All figures included should add to the work. As such,
there should be text included that refers to the figures (preferably
before the figure is encountered). The text should explain what the reader
should get from the figure - what are they supposed to notice and what is
the figure explaining. Often people just include a figure with no
reference to the figure and no explanation of what the figure is for - if
the figure was not included no one would notice (this is not a good
approach).
- Using and misusing abbreviations.
- The word
"it's" is an abbreviation of "it is" it is NOT a
possessive form of "it".
- The abbreviation of the
phrase "for example" is written "e.g.".
It contains a period after the "e" and one after the
"g". A comma is also usually required with its use. This is an sentence that uses "for example" (e.g.,
this is how to use for example). Quite often it is enclosed in
parentheses and you should avoid using it too often.
- The abbreviation of the
phrase "that is" is written "i.e.".
It contains a period after the "i"
and one after the "e". A comma is also usually required with is
use. This is a sentence containing an example of how to use "that
is" (i.e., this sentence is the example). Quite often it is enclosed
in parentheses and you should avoid using it too often.
- Don't use the
abbreviation "etc.". The use of etc.
is usually an admission of ignorance. It is like admitting that the list
you've given is not complete but you don't know what is missing. If you
did know what was missing the list would be complete".
- You should purchase and use a book like "The
Elements of Style" by Strunk and White.
Plagiarism
- You must not make minor modifications to someone else's
work and include it in your own work.
- If you want to explain someone else's work the best
approach is to read it over, put it aside, and then write in your own
words what that work is about (do this without referring to the original
source).