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Effective Thesis Writing

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Title: Effective Thesis Writing


1
Effective Thesis Writing
  • Jo-Anne Andre Audrey Habke
  • University of Calgary
  • Faculty Technology Days
  • May 6, 2009

Effective Writing Program http//efwr.ucalgary.c
a
2
Overview
  • Common problems in theses
  • Getting started your writing process
  • Conceptualizing your audience
  • Structuring your thesis -- The abstract
  • The introduction
  • The literature review
  • Methods
  • Results
  • Discussion and Conclusion
  • End matter References Appendices

3
Common Problems in Theses
  • From an informal survey of U of C CPSC professors
  • Conceptualization of research into thesis
    structure
  • Conceptualization of audience
  • Structuring the thesis
  • Coherence paragraph structure
  • Development of strong arguments
  • Definitions use of specialized terminology
  • Clarity and precision in sentences grammar
  • Presenting math effectively
  • Editing - spelling, punctuation, word use,
    citations

4
Getting Started
  • Familiarize yourself with requirements
    resources
  • Effective Writing resources for grad students
    http//efwr.ucalgary.ca/gradstudents
  • Thesis template ( guidelines)
    http//www.ucalgary.ca/it/mswordthesisstylefiles/
  • Review several theses in your field
  • For U of C theses, see https//dspace.ucalgary.ca/
    handle/1880/281
  • For Canadian theses, see http//www.collectionscan
    ada.gc.ca/thesescanada/index-e.html
  • Find other theses online or in specialized
    databases. See the UofC library website.
  • Some theses may be freely available online.
    E.g, from computer science
  • Brygg Ullmer dissertation (MIT)
    http//alumni.media.mit.edu/ullmer/dissertation/
  • George Fitzmaurice dissertation (U of T)
    http//www.dgp.toronto.edu/gf/papers/PhD20-20G
    raspable20UIs/Thesis.gf.html
  • Cory Kidd thesis (MIT) http//web.media.mit.edu/
    coryk/papers/Kidd_MS_thesis.pdf

5
THE WRITING PROCESS
6
Writing Process
  • Work from an outline
  • Expect to do multiple drafts
  • Write first, edit later edit in waves(move from
    large issues to small issues)
  • Consider the layered approach to draftinga lit
    review (Thomas, 2000, p. 21)
  • 1. Focus on factual information
  • 2. Add evaluative and critical material
  • 3. Write integrative material (section
    previews, comparisons of studies, summaries)
  • Get feedback on your drafts

7
Conceptualizing Your Audience
You, your supervisor, and researchers focusing on
topics similar to yours
Specialists in your field working on other
topics
Professionals in related fields, who might
have an interest in your research. ? TARGET THIS
RING
8
Basic Structuring Strategies
Background ? Claim
  • General(link to familiar information, context)

Evidence Support e.g., data, technical
information,equations, examples, reasoning
  • Provide section overviews / previews closing
    summaries
  • Provide background for readers
  • Start paragraphs with topic sentences
  • Provide context for your work and for formulas,
    examples, etc.
  • Use visuals to show the scope of your research

9
Example opening overview
From Ullmer, B. A. (2002). MIT. Dissertation
2 Conceptual foundations Humans are clearly no
newcomers to interaction with the physical world,
or to the process of associating symbolic
functions and relationships with physical
artifacts. This chapter considers the broad
conceptual background underlying tangible
interfaces. The chapter begins by considering
several historical examples that have been
inspirations for this thesisthe abacus, board
games, and early token-based accounting systems.
Next, an overview will be provided for related
areas of study from the social sciences . . . .
Several per-spectives from the design community
will also be considered. The chapter then turns
to the discipline of human-computer interaction,
reviewing several principles and models that
broadly relate totangible interface design.
Finally, the chapter discusses several models
that are specific to graspable and tangible
interfaces, . . . .
10
Example paragraph structure
There are two representative ways to form a
passivation layer, namely, vacuum deposition
79 and solution deposition 10,11. To date,
vacuum deposition processes, such as atomic layer
deposition 7 and chemical vapor deposition
8,9, have been predominantly used to produce
passivation layers. However, these processes have
many drawbacks, including long processing times
and high costs. Solution-deposition processes, by
contrast, have the advantages of allowing simple
and low-cost processing in short times. Example
from Nam et al. (2009)
General point
supporting discussion
11
Structuring your Thesis Traditional
  • Front matter Title page, approval page,
    abstract, acknowledgements, table of contents,
    list of tables, list of figures, list of
    abbreviations
  • Ch. 1 Introduction
  • Ch. 2 Conceptual Foundations
  • Ch. 3 Related Research (Literature Review)
  • Ch. 3 Methods
  • Ch. 4 Results
  • Ch. 5 Discussion
  • Ch. 6 Conclusion
  • End matter References, appendices

Body chapters may vary depending on the thesis
e.g., chapters may present new work or report on
testing or case studies. In some cases, body
chapters will resemble research articles.
12
Structuring your Thesis Compilation
  • Front Matter (as with the traditional style
    theses)
  • Ch. 1 Introduction
  • Ch. 2 Study 1
  • Ch. 3 Study 2
  • Ch. 4 Study 3
  • Ch. 5 Integrated discussion
  • Ch. 6 Conclusion
  • End Matter (as with traditional style theses)

13
Structuring Sections
Table of Contents Approval Page...............
..................................................
......................... ii
Abstract..........................................
..................................................
....... iii Acknowledgements..................
..................................................
............. iv Table of Contents............
..................................................
........................v CHAPTER ONE
INTRODUCTION......................................
.......................1 1.1 Research
Objectives........................................
..............................1 1.2
Background........................................
............................................2 1.2.
1 The Oil and Gas Economy .......................
..........................2 1.2.2 Environmental
Legislation ......................................
..........3 1.2.3 Environmental Impact of Salts
.........................................4 1.2.4
Salt Remediation ................................
..............................5 1.2.5 Tile
Drainage Systems..................................
.....................7 1.2.6 Solute Transport
..................................................
.............7 CHAPTER TWO STUDY
AREA..............................................
...................9 2.1 Site
Description.......................................
.......................................9 2.2
Previous Site Investigations......................
.....................................9 2.3
Regional Setting..................................
.........................................11
2.3.1 Physiography and Climate..................
.............................11 2.3.2 Geology
..................................................
.........................13 2.3.2.1 Tectonic
Setting and Bedrock..............................1
3 2.3.2.2 Surficial Sediments and Soils
..............................15
Use informative ( grammatically parallel)
subheadings
Restrict the number of heading levelsto 3 or 4
14
FRONT MATTER
15
Writing the Abstract
  • A brief summary of your project
  • One or more paragraphs
  • Masters thesis 150 words max.
  • Doctoral dissertation 350 words max.
  • Abstract should be informative

Example showing kinds of information to include
16
Example
Global gene expression of cellsattached to a
tissue engineering scaffold Klapperich, C. M.
Bertozzi, C. in Biomaterials Nov2004, Vol. 25
Issue 25, p5631- A goal of tissue
engineering is to produce a scaffold material
that will guide cells to differentiate and
regenerate functional replacement tissue at the
site of injury. Little is known about how cells
respond on a molecular level to tissue
engineering scaffold materials. In this work we
used oligonucleotide micro-arrays to interrogate
gene expression profiles associated with
cellbiomaterial interactions. We seeded
collagenglycosa-minoglycan meshes, a widely used
tissue engineering scaffold material, with human
IMR-90 fibroblasts and compared transcript levels
with control cells grown on tissue culture
polystyrene. Genes involved in cell signaling,
extracellular matrix remodeling, inflammation,
angiogenesis and hypoxia were all activated in
cells on the collagenGAG mesh. Understanding the
impact of a scaffold on attached cells will
facilitate the design of improved tissue
engineering materials. 128 words
Context / problem
Purpose / focus of study
Method
Consider how the opening sentences help to make
the abstract clear and readable
Findings
Significance
17
THE INTRODUCTION
18
Writing the Introduction (Ch. 1)
  • Introduce the broad research area topic
  • State the research problem or question
  • Establish its significance
  • Mention existing solutions their limitations
  • Outline the proposed new solution
  • Indicate the purpose and objectives of the study
    (e.g. to identify to determine to measure
    to evaluate to develop)
  • Include hypotheses (if applicable)
  • Indicate the studys scope and limitations

19
Example Objectives
Peate, I. U. (2003). Phd Thesis. U of London
  • 1.4.1 Objectives of this study
  • The main focus of this study is to
    examine the volcanic stratigraphy and lateral
    distribution, eruption and emplacement
    mechanisms, and petrogenetic evolution of
    large-volume silicic eruptions associated with
    Oligocene flood volcanism in Yemen. . . . goes
    on to present the rationale for the location,
    Yemen, and approach. This study seeks to
    establish a volcanic stratigraphy, and a
    chrono-logical and geochemical database for
    Cenozoic silicic flood volcanism in Afro-Arabia.
    The results of this are used to
  • 1. Construct a regional stratigraphy of
    Yemen silicic flood volcanic products and
    examine eruption and emplacement mechanisms
    of silicic pyroclastic volcanism.
  • 2. Compare and contrast the chrono- and
    volcano-stratigraphies of Yemen and Ethiopia in
    an attempt to link the conjugate rifted margins,
    and to evaluate any spatial variation in
    timing of volcanic activity across the
    Afro-Arabian flood volcanic province.
  • 3. Evaluate the origin and evolution of
    silicic volcanism in Yemen and its genetic
    relationship to basaltic flood volcanism.
  • 4. Evaluate the impact of silicic flood
    volcanism on global climate change, specifically
    the Oi2 global cooling event, by examining the
    relationship between Indian Ocean tephras and
    Afro-Arabian silicic pyroclastic eruptions.

20
Considering the Significanceof your Thesis
Research(Friedland Folt, 2000)
Methodological/technological contributions
How others mightuse your research
Empiricalcontributions(information)
Potentialsignificance ofthe research
Consider elementsseparately
Theoreticalcontributions(understanding)
Consideranalogoussystems
Contributionsto other fields
Educational orsocietal benefits
Short- vs long-term importance
21
THE LITERATURE REVIEW (REVIEW OF RESEARCH)
22
Reviewing the Literature What
  • A literature review situates your research
    intothe larger research context by
  • Reviewing previous research
  • Synthesizing it into a summary of what is and
    isnt known
  • Relating it to your research question
  • Identifying points of controversy
  • Suggesting questions for further research
    (Taylor, 2008, p. 1)

23
Level of Detail
(Hart,1998)
24
Common Criticisms of Lit Reviews
  • The review is a chronology of work done in the
    area the writer has not organized the review
    thematically
  • The writer separates research from different
    disciplines, rather than reviewing across
    disciplines
  • Some sections sound too much like the original
    author
  • The writer accurately summarizes the research,
    but fails to take a stand on the research or come
    to conclusions about the contributions and
    limitations of the research
  • The writer fails to shape the lit review to
    demonstrate the need for his or her research

(adapted from Swales Feak, 2000, p.149)
25
Reviewing the Literature How
  • Organize your review thematically
  • look at key concepts in your research
  • use subsections with informative headings
  • group related pieces of research
  • Move from broad to highly relevant work, from
    theoretical to empirical, from known to unknown
    (Tornquist, 1986)
  • Describe highly relevant work in more detail

26
Literature Review planning
  • Try mapping your key concepts bodies of
    research
  • e.g., study on gender differences in online
    learning for students enrolled in a distance
    nursing program
  • Develop an outline
  • Write first, edit later

Define concepts
27
Literature Review notetaking
  • Use charts to help synthesize information while
    note-taking

28
Use Appropriate Tenses
  • Researcher actions - past tense
  • Smith (2003) studied Pell (2004) found
  • Research in general present perfect
  • Research has shownhas been studied
  • Conclusions drawn - present tense
  • Response time depends on(Pell, 2004)

29
Using Sources Effectively
  • Dont paraphrase by using the original sentence
    structure and changing words here and there
    that is plagiarism even if you cite the source
  • Use quotation marks around wording taken from a
    source
  • Quote only when the original wordingnot just
    the idea is important
  • Use sources to support your pointsnot to make
    them
  • Whether you paraphrase or quote, always cite
    the source

30
Paraphrasing too Closely (Example from Zobel,
2004, p. 217-218)
  • Original (Barlman Trey, 2001) The impact of
    viruses has become a major issue in many large
    organizations, but most still rely on individual
    users maintaining virus definitions, with no
    internal firewalls to protect one user from
    another.
  • Unacceptable paraphraseViruses have become a
    major issue in many large organizations, but most
    organizations still rely on users maintaining
    virus definitions on their individual computers,
    with no internal firewalls to protect one
    computer from another (Barlman Trey, 2001).

31
METHODS(EXPERIMENTAL)
  • A methodology is not just a list of research
    tasks but an argument as to why these tasks add
    up to the best attack on the problem
    (Przeworski Salomon, 2004, p. 1)

32
Writing the Methods Section
  • Overall purpose to argue that your chosen
    methodology was the best approach to your
    particular research question.

The methodology section serves to convince the
examiner that you really knew what you were doing
and that you knew how to do it properly (Parsons
Knight, 2005, p.128).
33
Describing Methods What
  • Summarize the research design
  • Approach, research questions hypotheses
  • Link to background, review of literature
  • Explain philosophical basis for your approach
  • Describe the research setting sample
  • Population, sampling method, sample size, ethics
    considerations
  • Explain ( justify) the intervention, procedures
    and tools for data collection and analysis
  • Address variables, measurement, sources of bias,
    etc.
  • Establish scope and limitations

34
Describing Methods How
  • Use headings to organize information
  • Be as specific as possible provide enough detail
    to allow replication
  • For novel approaches, justify methods in detail
  • Include references

35
Language and Presentation
  • Verbs
  • Use past tense for research actions (occasionally
    shifting to present tense for other purposes)
  • Use active when possible, switching to passive
    voice to downplay researcher role as required
  • Aim for precision
  • Visual design
  • Use informative headings
  • Include useful visuals (e.g., photos or
    illustrations of samples, equipment and
    procedures)

36
Example (modified from Belcher, 2005, p.94)
5.1 Multi-Method Charcoal Analysis In order to
maximise the amount of information gained from
the charcoal record, three separate methods of
preparation have been used 1) polished blocks
were collected, 2) demineralised sediment samples
were captured, and 3) these sediment samples were
sieved into two separate fraction sizes,
macroscopic and microscopic. Studying charcoal in
polished blocks is essential in order to
establish the exact stratigraphic location of any
charcoal. They will, however, only represent a
"snapshot" of the sections charcoal content.
Residues from demineralised sediment have a lower
spatial resolution but will reveal the sizes and
shapes of particles and the overall charcoal
content of each horizon (e.g. particles of
charcoal per gram of sediment).
generalto specificdescription
Justification of method
37
Example (Hunton Rose, 2005)
Participants completed a 30-minute driving
course, where they drove around a simulated city.
The course was designed at a 90 degree of
difficulty in order to assure that the driving
task was physically and cognitively demanding.
The degree of difficulty of the selected driving
course was determined by the simulator software
based on various programmed factors, such as the
amount of congestion, movement of surrounding
vehicles, number of obstacles, behaviour of
pedestrians, and complexity of intersections. To
determine driving performance, we measured the
number of incidents (e.g., speeding, running a
stop sign, failing to yield, and following too
close) and number of crashes (i.e., circumstances
where the car hits a person, object, or
automobile).
Link methods to research purpose
38
RESULTS
39
Presenting the Results
  • Separate results from methods and discussion
  • Summarize the research, reminding readers of key
    aspects describe the sample
  • Present the results first and analyze them later
    in the chapter (or section)
  • Provide detailed data in labelled tables /
    figures use appendices if necessary for raw data
    or detailed results
  • Refer to visuals and appendices explicitly (e.g.,
    Figure 2 Appendix A) where appropriate in the
    discussion.
  • Provide conceptual links between results and the
    research design connect findings to your
    research question, objectives, hypotheses, and
    methods

40
Example
4.2.2 Major Element Geochemistry 4.2.2.1
Classification Three tuffs were sampled from the
area and analysed for their geochemistry. Based
on their silica contents (62.54-74.39 wt SiO2)
they are evolved andesites to rhyolites and have
lower K2O contents (0.9-1.73 wt) than similarly
evolved Cenozoic igneous rocks from elsewhere in
Sabah (Fig. 4.3). 4.2.2.2 Major Elements The
major element concentrations of the samples from
Sandakan are listed in Table 4.1, and plotted on
Fig. 4.4 where they are compared with those from
SE Sabah (Tawau I and Tawau II). As only 3
samples were analysed, the data are insufficient
to interpret clear correlations in some of the
Harker plots e.g. Al2O3 (13-15.9 wt) and Fe2O3
(3.9-7.2 wt). Some major elements show no
correlation with increasing SiO2 content e.g.
TiO2 (0.403-0.721wt ), MgO (0.71-2.65), Na2O
(1.8-4.7 wt) and MnO (0.155-0.2.73 wt). A
positive trend exists for K2O (0.9-1.73 wt) with
negative trends for P2O5 (0.097-0.291 wt ) and
CaO (0.92-6.3 wt ) versus silica. Compared with
the Tawau I samples with similar SiO2 contents,
the Sandakan rocks have lower Al2O3, MgO and K2O
and higher TiO2, Fe2O3, Na2O, CaO, MnO and P2O5.
The three samples have high LOI from 7.41-9.32
wt. (Chiang, 2002, p.205)
Link to research design
41
DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSION
42
Discussing Results Inductive Logic
  • Developing a new claim (Evidence? Claim)
  • Presenting contested claims
  • Justifying decisions discussing weaknesses

Evidence building toward your claim
Claim
43
Example (Romer, 2005, p107)
It is a common belief that in general women are
more polite than men and that female language
contains more hedges than male language (see for
instance Holmes, 1995). For the present
analysis, this would mean that the percentages of
hedged negative evaluative statements should be
significantly higher in Book Review in
Linguistics Corpus (BRILC) female than in BRILC
male. However, if we determine the shares of
hedging in the subcorpora of BRILC, we do not
find any significant differences between the
numbers of hedge negative adjective
combinations in reviews written by women and men,
but almost equal percentages. In BRILC female,
hedging devices (like rather, somewhat, it seems,
I think) were found in 83 out of 150 examined
concordance lines (53.3). With 53.7 (79 out of
147 instances), the relative number of hedged
critical state-ments in texts written by male
reviewers is only slightly lower.Thus,
concerning the shares of hedging of all analysed
adjectives as a group, no significant
gender-related differences were found.
44
Discussing Results Concluding
  • Summarize major findings
  • Connect findings to your research questions,
    objectives, and hypotheses
  • Highlight the meaning of the findings andrelate
    the findings to the literature
  • Do they support previous research or theory?
  • Discuss limitations of the research
  • Discuss contributions to knowledge in your field,
    applications to theory development, and
    implications for practice
  • Indicate directions for future research

45
END MATTER
46
References Citation Resources
  • UofC Effective Writing Program writing
    resourceshttp//efwr.ucalgary.ca/citationstyles
  • Resources for
  • APA
  • Chicago
  • CSE
  • Harvard
  • IEEE
  • MLA
  • Vancouver

47
Appendices
  • Use appendices for detailed information related
    to research methods or results
  • Label as Appendix A, B, C, title each
  • List by name in your Table of Contents

48
References Resources
  • Friedland, A. J., Folt, C. L. (2000). Writing
    successful science proposals. New Haven CT Yale
    UP.
  • Hart, C. (1998.) Doing a literature review.
    Thousand Oaks CA Sage.
  • Matthews, J. R., Bowen, J. M., Matthews, R. W.
    (2000). Successful scientific writing. Cambridge
    Cambridge UP.
  • North Dakota State University. (n.d.) Guidelines
    for M.S. Thesis/PhD Research Proposal. Retrieved
    May 3, 2005, from http//www.ndsu.nodak.edu/HNES/G
    raduate20Stuff/ms.thesis.guid
  • Parsons A.J., Knight, P.G. (2005). How to do
    your dissertation in geography and related
    disciplines (2nd ed.). London Routledge.  
  • Przeworski, A., Salomon F. (2004). The art of
    writing proposals Some candid suggestions for
    applicants to Social Science Research Council
    competitions. Retrieved April 10, 2004, from
    http//www.ssrc.org/ publications/for-fellows/art_
    of_writing_proposals.page.
  • Swales, J.M. Feak, C.B. (2007). Academic
    writing for graduate students Essential tasks
    and skills. Second edition. Ann ArborU of
    Michigan P.
  • Taylor, D., Proctor M. (2008). The literature
    review. Retrieved May 01, 2009 from
    http//www.utoronto.ca/writing/litrev.html
  • Thomas, S. A. (2000). How to write health
    sciences papers, dissertations and theses.
    Edinburgh Churchill Livingstone.
  • Tornquist, E. M. (1986). From proposal to
    publication An informal guide to writing about
    nursing research. Menlo Park CA Addison-Wesley.
  • Verhoef, M.J., Hilsden, R.J. (2004). Writing an
    effective research proposal. Retrieved March 10,
    2009, from http//www.clinicaltrials.ualberta.ca/d
    ownloads/protocol_writing_handout_2004.pdf
  • Zobel, J. (2004). Writing for computer science.
    London Springer.

49
References (Samples)
  • Belcher, C. (2005). Assessing the evidence for
    extensive wildfires at the Cretaceous-Tertiary
    boundary. PhD dissertation Department of
    Geology, Royal Holloway University of London.
  • Chiang, K.K., (2002). Geochemistry of the
    Cenozoic igneous rocks of Borneo and tectonic
    implications. PhD dissertation Department of
    Geology, Royal Holloway University of London.
  • Hunton, J. , Rose, J. (2005) Cellular telephones
    and driving performance The effects of
    attentional demands on motor vehicle crash risk.
    Risk Analysis, 25, No. 4, 855-866.
  • Klapperich, C. M. Bertozzi. (2004) Global gene
    expression of cells attached to a tissue
    engineering scaffold, C. Biomaterials, 25, No.
    25, p5631.
  • Nam, S. et al. (2009). An inkjet-printed
    passivization layer based on a photocrosslinkable
    polymer for long-term stable pentacene
    field-effect transistors. Organic Chemistry. 10,
    6772.
  • Peat, I. U. (2003). Volcanostratigraphy,
    geochronology and geochemistry of silicic
    volcanism in the Afro-Arabian flood volcanic
    province (Yemen and Ethiopia). PhD Thesis.
    University of London.
  • Romer, U. (2005). This seems somewhat
    counterintuitive, though... Negative evaluation
    in book reviews by male and female authors. In
    Tognini-Bonelli, E. Camiciotti, G. (eds.)
    Strategies in academic discourse. Amsterdam
    John Benjamins Publishing.
  • Ullmer, B. A. (2002). Tangible interfaces for
    manipulating aggregates of digital information.
    Retrieved September 14, 2007, from
    http//alumni.media.mit.edu/ullmer/dissertation/
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