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VU
Lesson
43
THESIS
WRITING AND PRESENTATION
Follow
these guidelines
while searching for a
subject topic
·
Understand
the distinction between the
subject and a topic that can
help you to plan
your
research
paper effectively.
·
Within
a broader research subject
decide about the topic that is more
focused and worth an
investigation.
·
Consider
your subject or topic and answer the
questions who, what, when,
where, why, and
how.
·
Draw
a short and possible list of topics and
settle for the one
that interests you and is
worth
investigating.
·
Explore
your own understanding of the topic, as
there's always a temptation to select
a
topic
before a thorough ground work,
resist the
temptation.
·
Be
sure that the topic meets
the requirements of your research
assignment, audience's
needs,
and expectations
A
topic should be should be
Single
-don't
try too much
Significant
-is
your topic important to you
and your reader?
Specific
-limit
your topic to narrow,
specific points higher
failure...
Supportive
-is
there enough evidence to support, defend
yout topic?
·
Avoid
dead end topics those
unsuitable for your interest
or resources.
·
Avoid
scattered, superficial research
topics.
·
Avoid
topics that are too
beaten and narrow and
has nothing new to
offer.
·
Pick
a topic that shows your
individuality,
ability
and interests.
·
Continue
refining and narrowing it to
make it significantly specific
·
ensure
that there: are sufficient
resources available on your
selected topic because
without a
worthwhile
literature
·
REVIEW
THE THESIS WILL BE
WORTHLESS.
Sections
of a Thesis (Format)
The
following are sections that
most theses should contain
Introduction
An
introduction to the topic
and
the subject.
Describes
the
background
to the
research, particularly the major
ideas (or
theoretical
perspective)
from
which the research
is derived.
Explains
the reasons for doing the
research,
Indicates
why the
research is important
valuable or
significant.
Outlines
the
contribution
that
the research
will make to
knowledge.
Also
outlines
the aims of the research by
presenting research questions or
hypotheses.
Be
sure to include in it a clear statement
of your hypothesis How you
are going to address it
Use
citations from the research literature to
support your study.
Citations
should include but not be limited to
research presented in the
Literature
Review
following are suggested
topics that are usually
covered in the introduction.
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First
grab the attention and
interest of your readers;
Secondly introduce
the problem to be studied.
All
assertions
of feet must be documented. Be
careful of any generalizations
that
you make. A social
science
research
paper is not an
editorial
Statement
of the Problem.
Clearly
state the problem that
your thesis is going to
address.
Present
relevant information
about why this is an important
problem.
Describe
what precisely you intend
to show/argue
and why (i.e., address the
ever-lurking "So What?"
question).
Is
your research problem
addressing a significant social problem, or is it
testing some theoretical
hypothesis,
The
issues
raised ideally are timely,
relevant to the problems or
trends of the present time,
and have
broad
applicability.
Good
questions
are those allowing theories
to be tested or, as
when two theories make
opposing
predictions,
be compared.
Background
and Need. You
should present relevant literature that
supports the need for your
project.
Research
articles, books, educational and
government statistics are
just a
few sources that should
be
used
here.
This
section can include
brief overviews of articles
covered in the literature
review that support
the
need
for your project.
Rationale:
The
rationale should define the larger problem being
investigated, summarize what is
known
about
the problem, define the gap(s) in the
knowledge, and state what needs to be
done to address the
gap(s).
Purpose
of the Project: Based
on the above background information,
explain the purpose of the study.
Explain
what you hope the study
will accomplish and why you
chose to do this particular study.
This
should be supported with citations and
specific information related to the
study,
Research
Questions/Hypotheses. Given
the background above, you carefully state
the hypothesis (ses)
that
will be tested in your
thesis.
The
hypothesis
is the central question
being researched. It should be
expressed in straight-forward
terms.
A good hypothesis is comparative,
measurable, and falsifiable.
Hypotheses
are usually defined in
"cause
-effect" relationships. Any corollary
hypotheses or secondary
research
questions should
also be stated. Any
supplemental definitions or discussion
necessary to explain
the
hypothesis should be offered.
The
thesis statement is usually
considered the most important
sentence and the main point
of your essay/
report
or research paper because it
out lines the central
purpose of your
essay.
A
thesis, statement is one of the
greatest unifying aspects of a paper. It
should act as mortar,
holding
together
the various bricks of a paper,
summarizing the main point of the
paper "in a nutshell" and
heralds
the
development of the paper.
A
thesis statement is what you'll
PROVE, it is the ARGUMENT. If is the
SCOPE, it is the MAIN IDEA
and
the PURPOSE of your paper
and that you intend to
develop, prove, defend or explore with
evidence
and
therefore has an argumentative or
informational edge and must
not state the obvious.
A
thesis statement is a sentence
that clearly and concisely
indicates the
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Subject
of your paper, the main
points you will discuss,
and the order in which you
will discuss them.
·
Hypothesis
is a guide
or a sign post to the
researcher that keeps one on
the track.
·
The
researcher tests the initial
presupposition or hypothesis as works
along.
·
Hypothesis
is formulated in such a way
that it enables the researcher to
test it.
·
Hypothesis
depicts and describes the method
that follows during the
study.
·
Hypothesis
is; a kind of hunch that the
researcher has about the
topic.
·
Hypothesis
establishes the precise focus of the
research study.
·
Hypothesis
helps decide the aims and
objectives of the study.
·
Hypothesis
is of speculative nature, an imaginative preconception
of"what might be
true".
·
Hypothesis
is a welt established research question
that can be in form of a
descriptive statement or
a
question.
A
thesis statement establishes
the writer's point of
view, set
the, stage or mood of the
paper and
prepare,
the readers what to expect.
A
thesis statement is important
for the writer, because it
gives
the structure to the paper
and .is
equally
important
for the readers, because it
guides them as what to expect.
It
is precise. It is not something
that one has trouble
understanding and should be specific enough to
give
your
reader a clear sense of what
your entire essay is going to
discuss.
It
should
not be too general or so specific,
that it fails to represent any
strong position
Often,
the thesis is stated clearly
in one or two sentences at the
end of, the essay's
introduction. There
are
exceptions to almost every rule of
writing, including this one.
Ideally, the position
of the thesis
statement
needs to be at the end of
the introductory paragraph
so that readers know the
topic of the
papers.
Underlying
every theory is the issue of
causality. What exactly does
it mean to say that poverty
"causes"
crime,
that cultural materialism "causes" moral
decay, or that religiosity "causes*1
one's euthanasia
attitudes?
Just
because two events historically
occur simultaneously does
not necessarily mean that
one is influencing
the
other.
A
thesis statement must
emphasize Intention. So use a
clause that will put
your answer into the future,
such
as:
I will... I hope to ... I plan to .... I intend to ...
prove that, refute that... argue
that... show that...
establish
that.... Demonstrate.
A
good writer can assert the
main ideas in a short
Revise
your thesis statement as
your develop your
paper
Few
writers finish writing about the exact
topic they begin with
It
is ok to start with a vague or
tentative thesis statement in
your first draft.
Remember
the less complicated and
verbose you are in writing
your statement the more
readers will follow
you.
Examples
of General to Specific Thesis
Statements:
Notice
the transition...from General to
Specific
Men
and women are
different.
Men
and women communicate
differently.
Men
and women communicate
differently. Men tend to focus on the
literal aspect of what is being said in
a
conversation,
women often "read between the lines*
and focus more on intonation
and body language.
Men
and women communicate
differently. Whereas men
tend to focus on the literal
aspect of what is being
said
in a conversation, women often "read
between the lines" and focus
more on intonation and
body
language;
this phenomenon may significantly contribute to the
high divorce rate among many
couples.
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Hawthorn
discusses evilness in Young
Goodman Brown.
In
Young Goodman Brown,
Hawthorn discusses evilness
through symbols.
In
Young Goodman Brown,
Hawthorn uses light and
darkness to emphasize good
and evil in the world
Limitations,
Provide a background
for any limitations to this study. Be
very specific for
example
the
population to which your
findings will be
limited.
Literature
Review
The
literature review should discuss all of the
research that has been done
on the subject, since the
purpose
of the literature review is to concisely demonstrate
your level of understanding of the
research
related
to your project. You should not
discuss all of the literature in-depth.
Rather you should group
your
literature
according to some general
topics and only discuss
specific studies if they are
"landmark" studies
for
your area of research (there
should be 6-10 of these). How
you group the discussion
will depend on
your
project but be sure to come
up with a logical organization before you begin
writing. How many
studies
should
be included will depend on the topic,
but a general baseline in 75 to
100 references (although
many
topics
will appropriately have many
more than this). The
literature review should end with a
discussion of
how
the literature relates to your study.
What have others found
regarding your research
question? From
their
findings, coupled with your
theory,
develop a logical argument that leads to
the statement of your
hypothesis
(this is your theoretical hypothesis
expressed
in terms of concepts). Your
hypothesis/hypotheses should be
the
conclusion
of this "Review"
section.
What
have others found regarding
your research question? From
their findings, coupled with
your
theory,
develop
a logical argument that leads to the
statement of your hypothesis (this is
your theoretical hypothesis
expressed
in terms of concepts). Your
hypothesis/hypotheses should be the conclusion of this
"Review"
section.(methodology)
Methodology
Methods
which will be used
Describe
data collection procedure to be
used whether they be experiment, survey,
questionnaires,
observations,
participatory methods, case
studies document collection or other
method.
The
method must reliable that
can be repeated same time
and internally and externally
valid Describe the
sample
employed and the variable used to
test your hypothesis. One should give
just enough information
here
so that
Methodology
External
validity means that the
results are general sable to
a wide range of situations. It if often
necessary
to
present evidence in this section
that they study is actually
achievable. This section or a separate
section
should
also describe the data
analysis methods to be used. As
with the data collection
methods, the analysis
methods
should be justified by reference to the relevant
literature. A methodology section can
contain a
flow
chart which summarises the
way in which the various
processes involved in the project
fit together.
Describe
the sample employed and the variable
used to test your
hypothesis. One should give just
enough
information here so
that
others
can replicate your
procedures (and hopefully
come up with the same
findings and conclusion as
you
did).
A
general guideline is that you should
discuss your methods in
sufficient detail that another
researcher
could take your data and
duplicate your results. One of the
expectations of performing
original
research
is that someone in the future
will do further research on this
topic. Such a researcher should
be
able
to use your methodology
without having to consult any other
source. If you are using
statistical
analyses,
explain the statistical methods. What do
they mean? How are they
used? Why are they
more
applicable
here than other similar
methods?
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Data
collection and Analysis
Plan
It
is not uncommon for novice researchers to
collect a considerable amount of data and
then
realize
that they don't know what to do
with it. Design the data
collection process to make it
easy to collect,
code,
manage, and analyze.
Describe what the physical procedures
will be for managing this
data. Will you
use
tables, spreadsheets or data
bases to aggregate and
analyze the data? Will
computers be used to
store,
manipulate
or evaluate it? How will
this to done? Who will do
it? How long will it
take? Will it require
special
hardware, software, budge
accounts, or personnel (such as
technical assistant)? What kinds
of
analysis
will be done? How will it be
accomplished? How will the
findings be presented for
interpretation?
Discussion
This
chapter should begin with a concise
restatement of your study's
purpose along with
any
needed
background information. You should
restate each of your
hypotheses. Now that you
have presented
the
results in the previous section, discuss
them in this section. What, specifically,
do the results mean?
How
can
they be interpreted? Can they be interpreted in
multiple ways? What do the
findings tell you about
your
hypothesis?
Do not claim more for
your results than the data
really shows. Avoid
speculation.
Conclusions
This
should summarize your results
and discussion. You should include a
list of the most
important
findings
of your study in descending
order of important. You should
also provide a statement about
the
possibility
of future study. What needs to be done
and what does this study contribute?
Since this is too
often
the only part of a paper
that some individuals read
it is important to reiterate what you
intended to
discover
and what, in fact, you
fond.
Bibliography
All
pieces of literature referred to should be listed at the
end of the proposal using the
referencing
style
appropriate to the department. Before you begin
compiling this section, find
out what style you
are
expected
to use. Carefully adhere to it or you
will raise the ire of your
committee. It is important to
ensure
that
all the key journals and books in the
field have been referred to in the
proposal. This demonstrates
that
the
proposal has been developed from a
thorough understanding of the important theoretical
perspectives
and
research findings in the
literature.
Appendices
If
you have material that is
too long to include in a table
(raw data, field notes,
etc.) or not
appropriate
to a particular section it should be included as an
appendix.
Tables
and Figures
Tables
and figures should appear in the
text after they are first mentioned.
Appending them at the
end
of the thesis is a very awkward
arrangement and makes the
thesis difficult to read. Materials
presented
in
tables and figures should
not be duplicated in the text.
Raw
Data
Your
raw data should always
appear as part of the thesis. This should
appear as an appendix at the
end
of your thesis. Another
research should be able to duplicate your
work with no other documents
at
their
disposal.
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