GPE Master Thesis Guide 2019
GPE Master Thesis Guide 2019
Master Thesis
Dear Student,
Now you are almost in your final period of your master study program and short before you
are starting the next step in your professional career.
With this guideline we wish to help you to understand the special regulations of the last exam
– the Master Thesis.
We tried to reword the regulations in a more “easy to understand” way and additionally
gathered all questions and put it into the Q&A section.
It is expected that you read all sections carefully to meet all thesis requirements to bring
your studies to a successful end.
Nevertheless, there remain always some very unique questions, for which we will be pleased
to answer you in a personal way.
And of course we will be grateful for any suggested improvement.
1. Introduction ........................................................................................................................ 5
1.1. Purpose ........................................................................................................................ 6
1.2. Scope ........................................................................................................................... 6
1.3. The Scientific Work Course .......................................................................................... 6
2. Preparation, Registration, processing time ........................................................................ 7
2.1. Approval ...................................................................................................................... 7
2.2. Allotted supervisor ....................................................................................................... 7
2.3. Shaping your topic ....................................................................................................... 7
2.4. Non-Disclosure Agreement .......................................................................................... 7
2.5. Registration ................................................................................................................. 8
2.6. Verification of Registration.......................................................................................... 9
2.7. Submission of Master Thesis ....................................................................................... 9
2.6.1 The printed unit ........................................................................................................................ 9
2.6.2 The digital unit .......................................................................................................................... 9
2.6.3 Acknowledgement of receipt .................................................................................................... 9
2.8. Failing due to noncompliance with formality rules ..................................................... 9
2.9. Grading of Master Thesis ............................................................................................ 9
2.10. Overview of the steps for a successful Thesis ............................................................ 10
2.11. Possible Timeline ....................................................................................................... 11
3. Composition ...................................................................................................................... 12
3.1. Content ...................................................................................................................... 12
3.2. Layout ........................................................................................................................ 13
3.3. Appropriate language and style ................................................................................ 13
4. Citation ............................................................................................................................. 14
4.1. Example: Short references ......................................................................................... 14
4.2. Footnotes ................................................................................................................... 15
4.3. References of figures and tables ............................................................................... 15
4.4. References in the list of sources ................................................................................ 16
4.4.1 Specialist publication .............................................................................................................. 16
4.4.2 Specialist journal..................................................................................................................... 16
4.4.3 Webpage ................................................................................................................................ 16
4.4.4 Norms and guidelines ............................................................................................................. 17
4.4.5 Further specifications for the list of sources ........................................................................... 17
5. Design Sample .................................................................................................................. 18
5.1. Title Sheet .................................................................................................................. 18
5.2. Affirmation in lieu of oath - mandatory .................................................................... 19
5.3. Abstract of the Thesis - mandatory ........................................................................... 20
5.4. Table of Contents and Structure ................................................................................ 21
5.5. List of Figures and List of Tables ................................................................................ 22
5.6. List of Abbreviations .................................................................................................. 22
5.7. Formulas .................................................................................................................... 22
5.8. Appendix .................................................................................................................... 23
1. Introduction
General information
Writing a master thesis is statutory according to the examination regulations of GPE. These
regulations are based on the general regulations for Master of Science examination policy
signed in Bologna from 29 European Ministries of Education to create a consistent educational
system within Europe. The agreement is defining amongst others that 1 ECTS is a workload of
30 hours. A Master Thesis is worth 18 ECTS points which is equal to 540 working hours. This is
equivalent to 45 hours a week for a thesis period of 12 weeks (3 months).
Since the start date of the Master Thesis is the registration date, a well-defined schedule should
be considered beforehand.
Duration and Extension
A possible extension of two times each for four weeks should only help students as well as
supervisors to have a backup for extraordinary delays, e.g. supervisor is on a congress, business
trip, or student has to leave the country for a job interview etc.
An extension has to be accepted from the supervisor and to be requested at the examination
board – nonetheless a granting of extension is not obligatory. An official general statement
confirming a five-month-master-thesis-period will not be issued nor stamped by the GPE
examination office.
Once the topic is officially fixed and signed by the supervising professor and yourself and
submitted to the GPE Examination office, the period of 3 months is starting.
Consequences for a company
The master thesis can also be written in collaboration with a company, however this is not a
requisite. Hereby a supervisor from university is still required independently of the company’s
supervisor.
For a company this time period means in the end, that only three months are considered as a
mandatory student period. In case of extension or prior occupation period, the company may
have to clarify the social insurance situation on their own.
Possible Support by GPE
A longer period of research-time prior to the official registration date may help to extend the
period of time staying at a company to finally get a well-done master thesis in a timely manner.
Finally, we wish to let you know that GPE endorses a longer period of time at a company
gathering more professional experience and would always help our students within our
available legal frame.
1.1. Purpose
The Master Thesis is the finishing touch on the study program. This is where students
demonstrate how they can apply what they have learned. Furthermore, it enables the student
to develop deeper knowledge, understanding and capabilities in research in the field of the
student's specialization.
The Master Thesis can be industrial or academic oriented. Students have three months to
complete the scientific work on their task. Once the student has handed in the Master Thesis,
the student might have to defend or present the thesis’ result at the sponsoring institute and
the company (if applicable).
1.2. Scope
The following guideline is intended for use by GPE Students, when writing their Master Thesis.
It gives a short introduction into scientific writing and explains how to register the Master
Thesis.
Variations in respect to writing demands are possible and depending on the supervising
research assistant. The requirements of the supervising assistant are predominant in case of
discrepancy.
Please be aware: The GPE examination office is your contact as far as the official and binding
registration of your Master Thesis is concerned. Make sure you clarify everything beforehand.
The students involved in activities with companies are also advised not to accept any given
confidentiality agreement, but at least to push for a time restriction and limitation of liability.
The Faculty Council and the examination boards are of the opinion that a successful and
trustful cooperation between students and private companies is also possible without non-
disclosure agreements, for which there are numerous examples. Non-disclosure agreements
are generally prohibited in PhD dissertations, which does not prevent the collaboration with
companies. In order to handle confidential information tools have been developed. For
instance, to place sensitive information in annexes of the thesis, not to be submitted to the
examination office. It is also possible to produce two versions of a thesis, one with confidential
information, and the other “public to the university”, where for example sensitive information
shall be concealed by a non-dimensional representation.
2.5. Registration
Upon finalizing the topic, the abstract has to be signed personally by your main supervisor and
by you. The start date is the date of the receipt stamp of the GPE examination office of the
thesis topic signed by you and your supervisor.
Submission deadline of the registration sheet at the GPE exam office is two weeks after the
supervisor’s signature.
Please be aware that the digital data will be verified by plagiarism software.
2.6.1 The printed unit
Submit your thesis bound (either hard cover or soft cover with transparent front cover and
cardboard back cover). Do not bind your thesis by spiral or coil. Choose white paper. Normally
a single-page print is done. Hereby you can individually agree also on a two-page print with
your supervisor.
2.6.2 The digital unit
In addition to the printed copy a digital version of the thesis burned on a CD/DVD has to be
submitted. Choose either the format “.pdf” or “.doc(x)”.
2.6.3 Acknowledgement of receipt
Upon complete submission of your thesis, you will receive an acknowledgement of receipt by
email.
In case you are writing a thesis in cooperation with a company you may have to present your
thesis to the company’s supervisor. Nevertheless, the university main supervisor is the grading
authority – not the company.
In this case, the complete process takes 5 months (without extensions) or 7 months
(with exceptions) for finding, creating, shaping, writing and presenting your thesis.
3. Composition
3.1. Content
The following guidelines about the layout of student research papers and Master Thesis are
meant to be an aid for GPE students. They address common and recurring questions
concerning formal aspects. The guidelines about layout are suggestions not instructions.
Variations are possible after the consultation with the supervising assistant.
All together the volume should not exceed 80 – 100 pages.
The structure of a seminar paper or Master Thesis should follow the below mentioned scheme:
Front Cover Might be transparent
Title page Author’s name and title of thesis (in case of a transparent cover
sheet the sheet should be blank), Title of thesis, author’s name,
matriculation number, date, name and academic degree of
Supervisor(s)
Affirmation Declaration that you have produced the thesis on your own -
Printed and originally signed by you
Abstract Copy of the task description given in to the student office for
Master Thesis registration (Please ask the student office for your
template)
Acknowledgement (optional), e.g. words of gratitude
Table of contents Headers of chapters and subsections with page numbers
List of tables Table headers with consecutive numbering and page number
List of figures Figure headers with consecutive numbering and page number
List of abbreviations Index of used symbols and abbreviations
Introduction Introduction of problem, aims and procedure
Main part Theoretical part: process of relevant current literature
Your own part: Independent processing of the problem and drafting of solutions
Conclusion/Discussion Answers to researched questions, a critical reflection regarding
contents and methods and implications for theory and practice,
conclusion and discussion have to be clearly separated
Bibliography The procedure of listing the references should be agreed on with
the supervisor
Appendix Figures, tables, etc. that are not of central importance to the
paper but an addition
Back Cover Never transparent
3.2. Layout
While designing the outer appearance of a Master Thesis one should take into account several
factors. Special details should be agreed on with the supervising assistant.
The following
Thermal binding: hard cover, at least 120g/m², or using a transparent covering page.
Please use the service offered by various copy shops.
White paper, DIN A4, one-sided print
Use text processing tools; do not handwrite your thesis. Use a high quality printer, e.g. laser
printer or a good inkjet printer.
- Apply center justification
- Font: Times New Roman 12 point or Arial 11 point
- Line pitch: 1.5 spacing
- Margins: top/bottom: 25mm, left 35 mm, right 25 mm
Even design of the intervals in the text, particularly with bullet points
The first level of classification sections 1,2,3 etc. must begin on a new page
Headings must be formatted uniformly and have to stand out from the surrounding text
Paragraphs in the text must followed by a blank line for emphasis
Avoid coloring the text. A colorful design of the thesis will not have any influence on its
quality.
Foreign words have different types of spelling which are all correct, e.g. color vs. colour. One
way of spelling has to be chosen and be kept throughout the text. Decide beforehand whether
British or American English is to be used.
Scientific papers contribute to further academic discussion and the candidate should therefore
not express his subjective opinion. Therefore, the personal I-form has to be considered
inappropriate. Those passages, under the condition that intellectual property of others has
been correctly identified, which represent more than common knowledge, demonstrate the
author's proprietary achievement. Those passages should not just reproduce facts that are
already known. One's own achievement can be shown through a restructuring in a new,
different, debatable manner and by addressing omitted or ignored aspects. The author's
creative proprietary achievement and his critical reflections are evident to the examiners, even
without expressive notice on his personal opinion.
4. Citation
Several methods of citation are accepted. The most important rule concerning this issue is
consistency, which means one form of citations should be used throughout the document. It is
an important part of the research process because:
it allows others to identify and locate the materials used in your work. Many readers rely
on quotations and footnotes to identify other relevant literature on a topic.
it demonstrates the depth of your research showing that you have read and engaged the
relevant literature on your topic. This indicates that you have an informed understanding
of your subject and enhances the credibility of your findings.
it allows you to give proper credit for the ideas of others and avoid plagiarism.
Plagiarism refers to the process of copying the work of others and submitting it as one's
own. Plagiarism is a violation and is one of the most serious offenses in the academic world.
Every thought or idea that is adopted from someone else has to be quoted. The used sources
have to be given in an unambiguous way and to be strictly verifiable. If you do not follow a
stringent way of quoting, you will fail the master thesis!
It is recommended to use one of the commonly used styles like CIRP style (see:
http://www.elsevier.com/journals/procedia-cirp/2212-8271/guide-for-authors#20021) of
referencing. Nevertheless, your supervisor may advise you, which style is most appropriate
and should be used.
Once you decided on one style it has to be used for the entire thesis. To avoid
misunderstandings, the supervisor should be asked to provide further information about the
accepted standard within the institute. Examples are given afterwards.
If it is a book, monography, etc. the page number has to be referenced as well (with “p. xx):
Example: [Mül-08, p. 20]
Short references are to be inserted right behind the relevant text passage:
Example: “[…] womit der direkte Zusammenhand hergestellt wurde“ [Mus-10, S.3]. Des
Weiteren [...]
Identical short references to different sources can be differentiated by using small letters:
Example: [Sch-08a], [Sch-08b], [Sch-08c] …
4.2. Footnotes
Footnotes should not be used for citation. As described it the last point, short references are to
be used in the text to mark citations.
Especially tables and diagrams are created individually. In this case the reference should look
as follows:
Example: Name of item [Own design]
If a figure is designed after an example from an existing source, the reference should look as
follows:
Example: Name of item [Own design based on Reu-08, S.213]
Example:
Fahrenwaldt, H.; Schuler, V.: Praxiswissen Schweißtechnik. Werkstoffe, Prozesse, Fertigung.
[Fah-11]
4th Issue. Wiesbaden: Vieweg+Teubner, 2011.
Example:
Brecher, C.; Haber, D.: Thermisch bedingte Verlagerungen von Werkzeugmaschinen. In: ZWF
[Bre-13] – Zeitschrift für wirtschaftlichen Fabrikbetrieb, 07-08/2013, Seite 483-486. München: Carl
Hanser, 2013.
4.4.3 Webpage
Webpage – Text
Webpages have to be referenced according to the following example:
Example:
Kroh, R.: Mensch und Roboter kommen sich näher. Maschinenmarkt – das
Industrieportal, 2013.
[Kro-13] URL:
http://www.maschinenmarkt.vogel.de/themenkanaele/automatisierung/robotik/articl
Webpage - Images
Only if the URL is relevant (mostly the case with images):
Example:
Technische Universität Berlin (Hrsg.): Campus Charlottenburg. Technische Universität Berlin
Service, 2012.
[Tec-13] URL: http://www.pressestelle.tu-
berlin.de/fileadmin/a70100710/Dokumentationen/Imagematerial/TU-
Logos/TU_Logo_kurz_RGB_rot.png, letzter Zugriff am: 05.11.2013.
[Norm-xx] Name of the Norm. Issue: Norm title. Norm subtitle. Place of issue: Publisher, Month. Year.
Example:
[VDI-4499] VDI 4499. Blatt 2: Digitale Fabrik. Digitaler Fabrikbetrieb. Berlin: Beuth, 05.2011.
In some cases, the publisher has to be referenced instead of the author. Therefore, the
publisher is referenced as the “author” of the source with “(Publ.)”
Example (of an internet source):
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (Publ.): DFG gründet „Deutsches Komitee für
Nachhaltigkeitsforschung in Future Earth”. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, 2013.
[Deu-13]
URL: http://www.dfg.de/foerderung/info_wissenschaft/allgemeine_informationen/info_wis
Order
All sources have to be alphabetically listed according to their short references.
5. Design Sample
5.1. Title Sheet
Master Thesis
TITLE
submitted by
NAME of Student
Matriculation Number:
A thesis submitted
in partial fulfillment of the requirement for
the Degree of Master of Science
in Global Production Engineering
at the Technische Universität Berlin
Place, date
I hereby declare in lieu of an oath that I have produced the aforementioned thesis
independently and without using any other than the aids listed. Any thoughts directly or
indirectly taken from somebody else’s sources are made discernible as such.
To date, the thesis has not been submitted to any other board of examiners in the same or a
similar format and has not been published yet.
Place, Date
Signature
List of Tables:
Tab. 1: Charge analysis the SAP-Data in LoC and bearing Didactic
(Mustermann 1999 S. 30) ............................................................................................... 4
Tab. 2: Abstract over means of transportation ....................................................................... 15
Tab. 3: Case oriented cost distribution (in Ahnl. an Pfohl 1977 S. 152) .................................. 14
Tab. 4: Charge wises in inland (after a rising account of the business) ................................... 32
Tab. 5: Conclusion charge analysis…………………………………………………... ................................... 54
5.7. Formulas
Important formulas belong into a separate line and should be segregated from the text
through double-spacing. If the formula will be referred to later in the text it has to be
numbered. The formula and important abbreviations should be explained next to the formula.
5.8. Appendix
The appendix is the place for texts, illustrations and tables, which do not originate from the
author himself, e.g. forms, extracts from catalogues or codes, calculations and formal
derivations. Parts of the treatise, which could disturb the flow of argumentation, should be
placed in here, too. Under no circumstances should the appendix be used to circumvent the
page limit.
Q: Do I have to keep the status as a student while I am writing the Master Thesis?
A: As soon as you have registered the last examination (mostly the Master Thesis) you can fill
in the form and ex-matriculate yourself from being a Student at TU Berlin. We recommend
doing it personally and bringing the application with its enclosures to the Campus Center.
! Nevertheless, you have to be aware with this action you are changing your legal status
for your stay in Germany. Prior to take any actions, we recommend informing yourself at
the foreigner’s registration office.
Q: Do I have to re-register for the next semester when I will finish my Master Thesis?
A: If the Master Thesis is your last examination which you have to pass, you are not required
to re-register for the next semester. Although you do not have to be re-registered when
you finish the thesis, you must be re-register when you register the master thesis.
This signed appeal you have to hand in to the GPE office at least 10 days before deadline.
The extension time is 1 month – which is possible twice at the maximum.
Q: What shall I do if I cannot submit the thesis during the GPE office opening hours?
A: You may use the postbox outside of the GPE student office or you may ask the person at
the PTZ reception desk to accept the thesis submission and ask him/her to confirm its
receipt. In both cases make sure you have the envelope addressed to the GPE student office.
Q: If I cannot hand in personally my master thesis, to which address should I ship it?
A: TU Berlin, IWF
Global Production Engineering
PTZ 2 – GPE Prüfungsamt
Pascalstr. 8-9
10587 Berlin
GERMANY
Q: Is the shipping/stamp date of the postal service accepted as the submission date?
A: No – the date of arrival at the GPE office is the submission date.
However, for overseas shipments the shipment date can be accepted, provided that it is
not older than 2 days before the deadline.
Example: “My deadline is January 29. In order to be accepted by the GPE Examination
Office, I cannot ship my thesis later than January 27”.
To confirm this shipment, the shipping receipt has to be scanned and sent to the GPE
examination office! The examination office will not consider the shipping details on the
package slip, since this is often not readable.
Q: May I receive my GPE master degree certificate at the GPE Farewell Party?
A: As the preparation of the final certificates take months, we advise the students who wish
to receive it at the GPE Farewell Party, to hand it in no later than 31 st March.
7. Appendix
o Printed?
o Included?
Submit at the
GPE examination office
2 hardcopies and
1 softcopy (CD)
We hope this guide will prove to be a useful tool during this last phase of your studies before
very soon becoming a Master of Science.