Thesis CSThesisGuide (Source)
Thesis CSThesisGuide (Source)
Thesis CSThesisGuide (Source)
There are seven essential elements to any thesis document: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Thesis Statement Contributions Introduction Literature Survey Methodology and Implementation Evaluation Conclusions, Summary and Future Work
Extremely detailed instructions for the physical production of a thesis document can be found at: http://www.ryerson.ca/graduate/policies/documents/SGS_Thesis_Regulations_000.pdf
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Thesis statement
The word thesis roughly translates from the Greek word for position. The thesis statement is a refined and succinct set of arguments that define what you will demonstrate or prove in the thesisit is your position. It is the point of your work. The statement can be very short or many pages in length. If an oral defense were a battle, this is the ground you fight to hold.
Contributions
This is a list of things that you did that you believe expand the bounds of what Computer Science is in the context of your thesis statement. If one thinks of the massed knowledge accumulated over decades as bricks being used to build a tower that reaches ever higher. Your contributions, once examined, are the bricks that help build that tower. Contributions are always made in relationship to both the discipline of Computer Science and the thesis statement you have made. For example, writing a piece of software would not normally be considered a contribution. However, defining a methodology or algorithm that supports your thesis statement may.
Introduction
This is where you lead the reader into the core of your thesis. It is where you frame what you will present in future chapters. It explains the context in which your work has taken place. This might make reference to a particular field or perhaps a problem that your work addresses. The introduction contains your thesis statement and your contributions. It also describes how the rest of your thesis will be organized. It normally, is not very long, should be compelling and typically forms chapter one of your thesis.
Literature Survey
This section is a review of all relevant research that impinges on your thesis. It is the work done by others that relates to what you hope to demonstrate with your work. This is also where the literature related to methods that you used in your work should be introduced. Essentially, this part of your thesis document will form the bulk of your citations. The literature survey should reference only publicly available material. The purpose of this section is to illuminate the area of research not to reference magic documents that are impossible to find. Essentially, the literature survey forms chapter two although some of the literature survey may begin in the introduction to your thesis to help prime the reader. This section also helps guide the reader through the rest of your thesis in the sense that it provides direction as to what bodies of knowledge you used in support of your thesis statement. It is good practice to cite seminal and significant works directly, rather than cite work that relies on the work of others. These are considered primary sources. It is also good -2-
Graduate Programs in Computer Science practice and extremely prudent to cite ones own peer-reviewed works that adds to your position.
Evaluation
In this section you will report the results of your work with reference to the methodology you discussed in the previous section. It is very important that you report the results of your evaluation in relation to your thesis statement. This will bolster your arguments concerning the validity of your statement and will make it more difficult to attack. In many cases the claims you made in the first section of your thesis can now be substantiated as well. Generally speaking, it is a good idea to break this part of your thesis into section that addresses a single claim at a time by applying your methodology, reporting a result and discussing the result in the context of your thesis statement. This section will normally form chapter four and is essentially the meat of your document and may take more than one chapter to present.
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Flexibility
The goal of a thesis is to present a clearly defined thesis statement with the arguments that support it. As such, there is a great deal of flexibility that is permissible in the actual production of the thesis document. If you feel that the material being presented requires an alternative form than the one this document has discussed, it is always your option to pursue it. Having said this, no matter what the format of your thesis, the seven components presented in this document must still form the basis of your work and it is up to you to make it clear to the reader that you have provided them.
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