اسلام علیکم 

زموږ ډیر هیوادوال نن ورځ د بهرینو سر چینو څخه د تحصیلي برسونو د تر لاسه کولو چانسونه تر لاسه کوي، خو ډیری ېې بیا د خپلو لوړو زده کړو د پرمخ بیلو لپاره کوم پروپوزل او یا څړنیز-پلان نشي برابرولای.

دلته مو ستاسو لپاره په دغه برخه کې ډیرې ګټورې نکتې او بشپړ لارښود پر لیکه کړیدی، چې کولای شئ همدلته یې ولولئ، یا هم خپل کمپوټر ته ښکته کړئ.

که غواړئ، دغه لارښود ښکته کړئ، دلته کلیک کړئ.

 

How to write a thesis proposal

 

 

 

I. Framework

 

II. Structure of a thesis proposal

 

III. Order in which to write the proposal

 

IV. Tips

 

V. Resources

 

 

 

I. Framework

Senior research projects in Structural Engineering have the following elements in common:

A Structural Engineering issue is identified.

Other people's work on the topic is collected and evaluated.

Data necessary to solving the problem are either collected by the student, or obtained independently.

Data are analyzed using techniques appropriate to the data set.

Results of the analysis are reported and are interpreted in light of the initial Structural Engineering issue.

The final outcome of this process is a senior thesis that you will complete in the spring semester.  The goal of the fall semester is that you identify a research topic, find a research mentor, formulate a hypothesis, understand the background of your project, develop or adapt appropriate methods, and summarize the state of your project as a thesis proposal. The goal is to progress as far as possible with the elements listed above during the fall semester. The more you can accomplish during the fall, the further you can drive the project in the end, and the more relaxed the spring semester is going to be for you.

The purpose of writing a thesis proposal is to demonstrate that the thesis topic addresses a significant Structural Engineering problem; an organized plan is in place for collecting or obtaining data to help solve the problem; methods of data analysis have been identified and are appropriate to the data set.

  1. Any future career in Engineering, whether it be in industry or academia will require these skills in some form.

We are well aware that the best laid out research plans may go wrong, and that the best completed theses sometimes bear only little resemblance to the thesis planned during the proposal. Therefore, when evaluating a thesis proposal, we are not trying to assure ourselves that you have clearly described a sure-fire research project with 0% risk of failure. (If there was no risk of failure, it wouldn't be research.)

 

Instead, what we're interested in seeing is if you have a clear handle on the process and structure of research as it's practiced by our discipline. If you can present a clear and reasonable thesis idea, if you can clearly relate it to other relevant literature, if you can justify its significance, if you can describe a method for investigating it, and if you can decompose it into a sequence of steps that lead toward a reasonable conclusion, then the thesis proposal is a success regardless of whether you modify or even scrap the actual idea down the line and start off in a different direction. What a successful thesis proposal demonstrates is that, regardless of the eventual idea you pursue, you know the steps involved in turning it into a thesis.

 

 

II. Structure of a thesis proposal

Your thesis proposal should have the following elements in this order.

Title page

Abstract

Table of contents

Introduction

Thesis statement*

Approach/methods

Preliminary results and discussion

Work plan including time table

Implications of research

List of references

The structure is very similar to that of a thesis or a scientific paper. You will be able to use a large fraction of the material of the thesis proposal in your final senior thesis. Of course, the state of the individual projects at the end of the fall will vary, and therefore also the format of the elements discussed below.

*      Thesis statements are not titles.

  • Title: My First Smoking Experience
  • Thesis: Although all my friends thought cigarettes were stylish, I discovered that smoking is actually a disgusting habit with many health risks.
  • Title: Finding a Solution to Campus Parking Problems
  • Thesis: To solve the lack of parking space at Sierra College, administrators should use lottery funds to build parking lots.

 

 

 

Title page

Contains short, descriptive title of the proposed thesis project  (should be fairly self-explanatory)

And author, institution, department, resreach mentor, mentor's institution, and date of delivery

Abstract

The abstract is a brief summary of your thesis proposal

Its length should not exceed ~200 words (Variable)

Present a brief introduction to the issue

Make the key statement of your thesis

Give a summary of how you want to address the issue

Include a possible implication of your work, if successfully completed


 

Table of contents

List all headings and subheadings with page numbers

Indent subheadings

Introduction

This section sets the context for your proposed project and must capture the reader's interest.

Explain the background of your study starting from a broad picture narrowing in on your research question.

Review what is known about your research topic as far as it is relevant to your thesis.

Cite relevant references.

The introduction should be at a level that makes it easy to understand for readers with a general science background, for example your classmates


 

Thesis statement

In a couple of sentences, state your thesis

This statement can take the form of a hypothesis, research question, project statement, or goal statement.

The thesis statement should capture the essence of your intended project and also help to put boundaries around it.

Approach/methods

This section contains an overall description of your approach, materials, and procedures.

What methods will be used?

How will data be collected and analyzed?

What materials will be used?

.Include calculations, technique, procedure, equipment, and calibration graphs

Detail limitations, assumptions, and range of validity.

Citations should be limited to data sources and more complete descriptions of procedures.

Do not include results and discussion of results here.


 

Preliminary results and discussion

Present any results you already have obtained.

Discuss how they fit in the framework of your thesis.

Work plan including time table

Describe in detail what you plan to do until completion of your senior thesis project.

List the stages of your project in a table format.

Indicate deadlines you have set for completing each stage of the project, including any work you have already completed.

Discuss any particular challenges that need to be overcome.

Implications of Research

What new knowledge will the proposed project produce that we do not already know?

Why is it worth knowing, what are the major implications?

List of references

Cite all ideas, concepts, text, data that are not your own.

If you make a statement, back it up with your own data or a reference.

All references cited in the text must be listed.

Cite single-author references by the surname of the author (followed by date of the publication in parenthesis)

e.g. ... according to Hewad (1994)

...considering shear wall in seismic active region is very important (Hays, 1994).

There are several different formats, you can use.

 

 

III. Order in which to write the proposal

Proceed in the following order:

Make an outline of your thesis proposal before you start writing

Prepare figures and tables

Figure captions

Methods

Discussion of your data

Inferences from your data

Introduction

Abstract

Bibliography

This order may seem backwards. However, it is difficult to write an abstract until you know your most important results.  Sometimes, it is possible to write the introduction first.  Most often the introduction should be written next to last.


 

IV. Tips

About Figures

"Pictures say more than a thousand words!" Figures serve to illustrate important aspects of the background material, sample data, and analysis techniques.

A well-chosen and well labeled figure can reduce text length, and improve proposal clarity.  Proposals often contain figures from other articles.  These can be appropriate, but you should consider modifying them if the modifications will improve your point.

The whole process of making a drawing is important for two reasons.  First, it clarifies your thinking.  If you don’t understand the process, you can’t draw it. Second, good drawings are very valuable.  Other scientists will understand your paper better if you can make a drawing of your ideas.  A co-author of mine has advised me: make figures that other people will want to steal.  They will cite your paper because they want to use your figure in their paper.

Make cartoons using a scientific drawing program.  Depending upon the subject of your paper, a cartoon might incorporate the following:

- A picture of the scientific equipment that you are using and an explanation of how it works;

- A drawing of a cycle showing steps, feedback loops, and bifurcations: this can include chemical or mathematical equations;

A flow-chart showing the steps in a process and the possible causes and on sequences.

Incorporate graphs in the text or on separated sheets inserted in the thesis proposal.

Modern computer technology such as scanners and drafting programs are available to help you create or modify pictures.


 

About Grammar/spelling

Poor grammar and spelling distract from the content of the proposal.  The reader focuses on the grammar and spelling problems and misses keys points made in the text.  Modern word processing programs have grammar and spell checkers.  Use them.

Read your proposal aloud - then have a friend read it aloud. If your sentences seem too long, make two or three sentences instead of one.  Try to write the same way that you speak when you are explaining a concept. Most people speak more clearly than they write.

You should have read your proposal over at least 5 times before handing it in.

Simple wording is generally better.

If you get comments from others that seem completely irrelevant to you, your paper is not written clearly enough never use a complex word if a simpler word will do.


 

V. Resources/Acknowledgements

The senior seminar website has a very detailed document on "How to write a thesis" which you might want to look at. Most of the tips given there are relevant for your thesis proposal as well.

Recommended books on scientific writing

Some of the material on this document was adapted from:

http://www.geo.utep.edu/Grad_Info/prop_guide.html

http://www.hartwick.edu/anthropology/proposal.htm

http://csdl.ics.hawaii.edu/FAQ/FAQ/thesis-proposal.html

http://www.butler.edu/honors/PropsTheses.html