Washington State University How to Write a Thesis Joan Wu Washington State University
Similar personal experiences Presentation by Thoughts Based Upon Similar personal experiences Presentation by - R. Hotchkiss, formerly CEE, WSU - M. Flury, CSS, WSU
Thesis Goal Acquire Contribute to - knowledge - research experiences - technical, communication skills Contribute to - knowledge base
Thesis Final Product Publications
Publication Refereed journal articles Archived
What is not a Publication? Book chapter Conference paper Project report Non-archived article
Why a Publication? If it is not published, the work has not been done! Peer review (for quality) Effective communication
Literature Review Know what has been done Know current state-of-the science Know what currently is being done Know what to be done
Literature Review Avalanche technique Current Contents Database search Recent review articles
Literature Review Be rigorous! Be persistent!
Reading a Paper Read title carefully Read abstract Read objectives Look at figures Look at tables Read summary/conclusions
Experimental Section Keep good notes Write-up as much as possible right away
Paper Format Abstract Introduction Materials and Methods Results Discussion Conclusions Acknowledgment References Appendices
Abstract Write it last! Keep it short (1 or 2 paragraphs) Most important No references No equations/figures/tables No codes
Introduction Relevance of work Literature review Objectives Organization/structure of paper
Materials and Methods Be accurate and in adequate detail Work should be reproducible No more rationale and discussions
Results Wording, tabular, graphic, codes Report under categories/sub-headings Results-discussion relation
Figures/Tables One per page Should be stand-alone - Headings need to be explanatory - Clear labels High-quality graphics Pencil in figure number and prepare a figures list
Figures/Tables Warning: - Takes a long, long time … - Careful design
Discussion Be objective, concise, and clear Do not over interpret your data Do not expect perfect, complete knowledge
Conclusions It is more than a summary Results and discussion based Certainty Synthesis Relevance Recommendations No “new” statements No figures/tables/codes
Acknowledgment Funding source(s) Data source(s) Professional help Avoid inadequate generosity
References Be accurate Use appropriate references Use standard format and be consistent
Appendix Unless required or Necessary and allowed
Scientific No’s Never quote a paper you have not seen—no cross-referencing Never copy sentence from a paper word by word—you need to rephrase
Software Word-processing Scientific plotting Scientific drawings Spreadsheet Statistics Programming
Research vs Course Work Good balance of time Serving each other If you aim to learn, the good grades will come automatically
Practice, Practice, Practice Write a lot Read a lot Laboratory reports Conference papers Journal articles
What You Need Time schedule Discipline Motivation Dedication Exercise Fun
We Work as a Group Consult with colleagues Use resources Help each other Collaborate
At the End Be better than your advisor!