Title: Briefing on Information and Requirements for Dissertations
1Briefing on Information and Requirements for
Dissertations
- Department of English Language
- and Literature
Dr. Szerencsi Katalin Dr. Granville Pillar
6 September 2005
2Topics for Discussion
- General Information
- Roles and Obligations of the Student
- Roles and Obligations of the Supervisor
- Dissertation Format and Regulations
- The Components of a Dissertation
- Research Methodology
- Dissertation Disciplines
- Assessment Criteria
- Grading
- Question Time
3General Information
- The submission of a dissertation is a requirement
for every final-year student. - Students should have finalised their dissertation
topics with their supervisors after having
successfully completed half of their studies. - Faculty information on dissertations is now
available on the college web site. The current
departmental guidelines can be obtained from the
home page of the English Department.
4General Information
- Previously written dissertations are available
for viewing in the English Departments library.
5Roles and Obligations of the Student
- Each student is entitled to 6-8 hours supervision
spread throughout the dissertation writing
process. - Failure to attend a consultation without
explanation will result in loss of that hour. - Students are required to come with written work
or prepared questions - mere presence at the
consultation is not sufficient.
6Roles and Obligations of the Student
- Each student should,
- produce basic ideas
- write a detailed study plan and follow it
- make changes as are necessary
- access materials for the research
- accept constructive criticism from the
supervisor - hand in the dissertation on time.
7Deadline for the Submission of Dissertations
Dissertations received after this date will not
be accepted, and will thus result in failure of
the dissertation.
8Roles and Obligations of the Supervisor
- The supervisor,
- helps students to clarify a chosen topic
- shares his or her knowledge on the topic
- advises students on the choice of research
instruments - agrees on deadlines at the stages of the writing
process - reads the students drafts and suggests any
changes
9Roles and Obligations of the Supervisor
- The supervisor,
- provides the evaluation of the dissertation
- compiles the necessary information for the
defence of the dissertation - is present at the defence.
10Dissertation Format and Regulations
- Length
- Type A dissertations approx. 30 pages
- Type AC dissertations approx. 30 pages
- double spaced, A4, Times New Roman (12)
- Margins
- left - 3 cms
- right - 3 cms
- bottom - 2 cms
- top - 2 cms
11Dissertation Format and Regulations
- The 30-page limit does not include
- title page
- abstract
- table of contents
- references or bibliography
- appendices
- diagrams, graphs, illustrations
- statistical tables
12Dissertation Format and Regulations
- Page Numbering
- consecutively in Arabic numerals
- e.g. 1, 2, 3, not i, ii, iii,
- Chapters
- new page for every new chapter
- chapter heading is to be in distinctive typeface
separated from main text - the first line of new paragraphs should be
indented 5 spaces. - no indentation after main titles or subtitles
13Dissertation Format and Regulations
- Binding
- one copy to be submitted to the English
Department - one copy for the student to keep
- dissertation must be bound in accordance with the
faculty requirements - spiral binding or plastic sleeve covers are not
acceptable.
14Dissertation Format and Regulations
- Plagiarism
- is the deliberate copying of the work of another
author, word for word, without due
acknowledgement - is the borrowing of ideas and arguments of
another author without due acknowledgement, even
if the wording differs from the original source - copying the work of a fellow student or from
someone who is unknown to you.
15Dissertation Format and Regulations
- Culpable Plagiarism
- is stealing and is cheating
- in any part or of any length, will result in
automatic failure of the dissertation. - Suspected Plagiarism
- prior to the final submission of the
dissertation, this will be indicated to the
student who will be invited to re-submit his or
her dissertation with revised referencing and
acknowledgements.
16Dissertation Format and Regulations
- Avoid Plagiarism by
- noting bibliographical details (title, author,
year of publication, publisher etc.) and page
number of the text. - enclosing direct quotations taken from a source
with quotation marks (i.e. ..) and noting page
number. - noting bibliographical details after a
paraphrased or summarised text taken from an
original source.
17Dissertation Format and Regulations
- Avoid Plagiarism by
- reading faculty handbooks (available from the
faculty library) which include instructions for
correct quotation citation and referencing. - If Culpable and/or Suspected Plagiarism is
identified prior to the submission deadline and
in unbound form, the supervisior will advise the
student to amend the dissertation in accordance
with the regulations. No such amendment is
possible after the dissertation has been
submitted in bound form.
18Dissertation Format and Regulations
- We as a department would rather receive
original work from students which contains some
language errors, than perfect work which is not
their own, but simply copied from secondary
sources. A plagiarised dissertation tells us
nothing about a students knowledge or
intellectual competence. As such, it is not
assessable.
19The Components of a Dissertation
- Title Page
- Abstract (Summary or Synopsis)
- Acknowledgements
- Table of Contents
- Introduction
- Literature Review (Survey)
- Chapters Containing Body of Research
- Conclusion
- References/Bibliography
- Appendices
20The Components of a Dissertation
- Title Page
- Gives title, author, college and year of
submission. - Title should summarise the main idea of the
dissertation, and be no more that 20 words. - Abstract
- Gives a summary of the dissertation and should be
between 100-150 words.
21The Components of a Dissertation
- Abstract may include
- background
- aim of the research
- methods used
- main findings
- recommendations
- conclusion
22The Components of a Dissertation
- Acknowledgements
- reference to anyone who has given substantial
assistance with the research - your supervisor
- someone who has given comments
- person who typed it
- anyone who has given you personal support
23The Components of a Dissertation
- Table of Contents
- should correspond to your list of chapter
headings and subheadings - system of numbering should not go beyond two
subdivisions. - i.e. 1.2.6 or 3.4.4., not 1.2.6.1 or 3.4.4.1
24The Components of a Dissertation
- Introduction
- establishes the topic of the research
- establishes the research question
- establishes the rationale - summarises previous
research on the topic - establishes the significance and indicates what
is missing in previous research - establishes the aim of the research
25The Components of a Dissertation
- Literature Review
- in an empirical study it is always between the
Introduction and Methodology chapters - in a non-empirical study it is normally
incorporated into the body of the dissertation.
26The Components of a Dissertation
- Literature Review - Citation Conventions
- Harvard System (in-text or author/date)
- Note System (either footnotes or endnotes)
- Full bibliographical details are given in
alphabetical order in the References/Bibliography
at the end of the dissertation.
27The Components of a Dissertation
- Literature Review - Citation Conventions
- Direct quotations shorter than 30 words should be
enclosed with quotation marks, followed by the
number of citation (in superscript) if using the
note citation system, or by the authors
name/authors names, date of source and page
number (in parenthesis, i.e. round brackets), if
using the in-text system.
28The Components of a Dissertation
- Literature Review - Citation Conventions
- Direct quotations longer than 30 words should be
single-spaced, indented 5 spaces and in a font
one size smaller than the body text. Quotation
marks are not needed and the source should be
given at the end of the quotation in parenthesis.
29The Components of a Dissertation
- Literature Review - Citation Conventions
- Direct quotations placed within quotation marks
must be the exact words found in the source. The
spelling, punctuation verb tense, verb-subject
agreement etc, must not be altered to suit your
text. Rather, your text should be changed to
conform to the quotation.
30The Components of a Dissertation
- Literature Review - Citation Conventions
- Paraphrases or ideas gleaned from a source should
also be acknowledged, but it is not necessary to
enclose them in quotation marks or give the page
number. - Citations of paraphrases should include the
authors name/authors names and date of
publication directly after the paraphrase.
31The Components of a Dissertation
- Literature Review - Citation Conventions
- Author is mentioned in the body of the text.
Example - Cognition is defined by Jacobs and Schuman
(199224) as the perception of a stimulus,
attention to that stimulus, the movement of that
stimulus into memory, and finally, the expression
or the use of that information.
32The Components of a Dissertation
- Literature Review - Citation Conventions
- Author is not mentioned in the body of the text.
Example - Cognition is defined as the perception of a
stimulus, attention to that stimulus, the
movement of that stimulus into memory, and
finally, the expression or the use of that
information (Jacobs and Schuman, 199224)
33The Components of a Dissertation
- Literature Review - Citation Conventions
- Quoting from a source taken from the internet,
cited in the text - If authors name and date are available
- e.g. (Smith, 2003) then quote full citation
details in References/Bibliography - If authors name or date is not available, the
minimum information should include the date
retrieved and the full web page reference. - e.g. (retrieved August 19, 2005 from the World
Wide Web ww.englishclub.net/teachers/workshop/vid
eo.htm)
34The Components of a Dissertation
- Literature Review - Citation Conventions
- Quoting from a source taken from the internet
cited in References/Bibliography - Details of text, including name of
author/authors, date of publication (if
available), title of article, place published and
publisher (if applicable) full web page reference
(i.e. http//www .and the date on which you
downloaded it from the internet (e.g. Smith, K.
(2003), Metaphysical Poetry. Retrieved August 19,
2005 from the World Wide Web www.englishclub.net/
teachers/workshop/video.htm)
35The Components of a Dissertation
- Chapters Containing Body of the Research
- Empirical Research (i.e.gathering of data
quantitative or qualitative based on experiment
and/or observation) - a presentation of the research method
- a presentation of the findings
- a discussion of the findings
36The Components of a Dissertation
- Chapters Containing Body of the Research
- Non-Empirical or Analytical Research (i.e.where
throughout the study there is a line of argument
usually based on research questions you have
developed about concepts or theories in your
discipline area) - structure and content are much less predictable
37The Components of a Dissertation
- Conclusion
- Reports the procedure and aims.
- Reports findings and claims based on the
findings. - Supports how other research supports present
findings (or vice versa). - Suggests limitations of procedure or findings.
- Proposes implications of the findings or claims
based on findings. - Makes recommendations.
38Dissertation Disciplines
- British and American Studies
- Literary Topics
- Stylistics
- Literary Theory
- Translation
- Cultural Studies
39Dissertation Disciplines
- Language and Linguistics
- Practical, Descriptive and Contrastive Grammar
- Applied Linguistics
- Language Testing
- Discourse Analysis
- Translation
40Dissertation Disciplines
- Methodology
- Comparative Studies on Teaching Approaches
- Language in the Classroom
- Error Analysis
- Classroom Management
- Course Book Evaluation
- Skills Teaching
- Teacher Training
41Dissertation Topics
- Methodology
- Content
- The dissertation must be classroom related and
contain evidence of empirical, original research
conducted through a number of different methods
e.g. questionnaires, case studies, interviews,
observation instruments and/or textual analysis.
42Assessment Criteria
- Theoretical integrity and practical applicability
0-10 - Relevance of and critical approach to the topic
0-5 - Structure and balance 0-10
- Expression of personal opinion 0-10
- Language, style and accuracy 0-15
43Grading
- 46-50 5
- 39-45 4
- 32-38 3
- 25-31 2
- 0-24 1