| Premium Thesis Writing |
SPONSORED CONTENT |
 |
Thesis Writing Help
Get well-researched, A Grade Thesis in APA, MLA & other formats. 100% PhD Writers. Unbelievable discount offers. Guaranteed Teacher Approval. Free Research & Bibliography. Free Unlimited Revisions. Pay in Installments. 100% Money-Back Guarantee. 24/7 Customer Support.
|
|
|
More
Reading: Drafting
the Thesis | Giving Details
| Styling & Presentation
Master Thesis
Writing a master thesis seems a difficult task. Fortunately,
it will seem less daunting once you have a couple of chapters
done. You will even find yourself enjoying it --- an enjoyment
based on satisfaction in the achievement, pleasure in the
improvement in your scientific writing, and of course the
approaching end. Like many tasks, master thesis writing usually
seems worse before you begin, so let us look at how you should
make a start.
PLANNING THE MASTER THESIS
First make up a master thesis outline: several
pages containing chapter headings, sub-headings, some figure
titles (to indicate which results go where) and perhaps some
other notes and comments.
Once you have a list of chapters and, under each chapter heading,
a reasonably complete list of things to be reported or explained,
you have struck a great blow against writer's block. When
you sit down to type, your aim is no longer a master thesis
--- a daunting goal --- but something simpler. Your new aim
is just to write a paragraph or section about one of your
subheadings. It helps to start with an easy one: this gets
you into the habit of writing and gives you self-confidence.
Often the Materials and Methods chapter is the easiest to
write --- just write down what you did; carefully, formally
and in a logical order.
How do you make an outline of a chapter? For most of them,
you might try the method that I use for writing papers, and
which I learned from my master thesis adviser: assemble all
the figures that you will use in it and put them in the order
that you would use if you were going to explain to someone
what they all meant. Once you have the most logical order,
the key words of your hypothetical 'explanation' provide a
skeleton for much of your chapter outline.
Once you have an outline, discuss it with your adviser. This
step is important: s/he will have useful suggestions, but
it also serves notice that s/he can expect a steady flow of
chapter drafts that will make high priority demands on his/her
time. Once you and your adviser have agreed on a logical structure,
s/he will need a copy of this outline for reference when reading
the chapters which you will probably present out of order.
If you have a co-adviser, discuss the outline with him/her
as well, and present all chapters to both advisers for comments.
Make a back up of these files and do so every day at least
(depending on the reliability of your computer and the age
of your disc drive). Never keep the back-up disc close to
the computer in case the hypothetical thief who fancies your
computer is smart enough to think s/he could use some discs
as well. If you want to be really careful, you could transfer
your back-ups to a machine at some geographically remote location
(using FTP), without of course telling the system administrator
that I suggested this. (For Macintosh files use Binhex to
convert the files to ASCII form and FTP in ASCII mode. For
Dos/Windows files, transfer using binary mode).
You should also have a physical filing system: a collection
of folders with chapter numbers on them. This will make you
feel good about getting started and also help clean up your
desk. Your files will contain not just the plots of results
and pages of calculations, but all sorts of old notes, references,
calibration curves, suppliers' addresses, specifications,
speculations, letters from colleagues etc., which will suddenly
strike you as relevant to one chapter or other. Stick them
in that folder. Then put all the folders in a box or a filing
cabinet. As you write bits and pieces of text, stick the hard
copy, the figures etc in these folders as well. Touch them
and feel their thickness from time to time --- ah, the master
thesis is taking shape.
|