1 / 12

Research and writing thesis

Research and writing thesis. Dr. Bahawodin Baha University of Brighton, UK 7 th April 2009. Overview. Conducting research and writing a thesis require the following steps: Selecting a topic and identify your objectives Project planning Research Conducting practical work

Download Presentation

Research and writing thesis

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Research and writing thesis Dr. Bahawodin Baha University of Brighton, UK 7th April 2009

  2. Overview • Conducting research and writing a thesis require the following steps: • Selecting a topic and identify your objectives • Project planning • Research • Conducting practical work • Hardware and software design, building and testing • Report/thesis writing • Presentation

  3. Project Planning • A "Project" is a set of activities which ends with specific accomplishment and which has: • Non-routine tasks • Distinct start/finish dates • Resource constraints (time/money/people/equipment). • Use Gannt chart

  4. Year 1  Year 2  Year 3 Activities Oct. 07 Jun. 08 Jul. 08 Sep. 08 Oct. 08 Jun. 09 Jul. 09 Sep. 09 Oct. 09 Sep. 10 English Language Training Back to KPU Preparatory course Back to KPU MSc course The Original Training Plan of the KPU Lecturers at UoB English Language Training - 9 Months Return to KPU - 3 Months Prep. Course - 9 Months Return to KPU - 3 Months MSc - 12 Months

  5. Year 1 Year 2  Year 3 Activities Apr. 08 Sep. 08 Oct. 08 Jun. 09  Jul. 09  Sep. 09 Oct. 09 Sep. 10 English Language Training Preparatory courses English Language Training MSc courses The Modified Training Plan of the KPU Lecturers at UoB English Language Training - 6 Months Prep. Course - 9 Months English Language Training - 3 Months MSc -12 Months

  6. Research Methods • Carry out research to find background information about your chosen topic • Sources of information • Text books • Journals • Conference proceedings • Internet • Writing to companies • Visiting institutions

  7. Conducting practical work • Seeking solutions for the problems, identified earlier • It may be hardware, software or combination of hardware and software • Divide the task into smaller tasks • Try to find solution to every task • Test every task • Integrate all the tasks • Show flow-chart for the software that you may develop

  8. Report writing • Title page • Abstract or summary • Content • Main body of report • Introduction • Background • Main objectives • Chapters and sections • Discuss your results • Conclusions • References • Appendices

  9. References • It is important that you use full and proper referencing throughout the text. • Findings or assumptions must be referenced. • A reference is indicated in the text by a number of square brackets, eg 1. • Each new referred work is given a new number. • These references must then be listed at the end of your thesis as follows: • reference number Authors name(s), Title of paper, article, book etc, Title of Journal, Volume number of Journal, (name of editor), page numbers, year of publication.  • Example for a Journal paper • 1 F G Hammitt, ‘Damage to solids caused by cavitation’ Proc Royal Soc A260, pp 243-255, 1966.

  10. Important points to remember • People will assess your work on the basis of your written work • Check the format of thesis for TU and follow the guidelines • Try to minimize spelling and grammatical mistakes • Try to publish papers on your work

  11. Thesis • i Title page • ii Abstract • iii Contents • Introduction • Background • Design of artefact, model, test program, computer simulation etc. • Results, including calculation • Discussion of Results • Conclusions • Suggestions for Further Work • References • Appendices • Acknowledgements

  12. THE END • Thanks for your attention • B.Baha@brighton.ac.uk

More Related