Thesis Proposal Format
Thesis Proposal Format
Thesis Proposal Format
TITLE PAGE
TABLE OF CONTENTS
DEFINITION OF TERMS
THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK
CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK
RESEARCH METHODOLOGY
Research Design
Research Respondents/Participants (or Source of Data)
Research Environment
Research Instrument(s)
Data-Gathering Procedure
Statistical Treatment of Data
REFERENCES
APPENDICES
[Sample Title Page]
A Thesis Proposal
Presented to
The Faculty of the Graduate School
Negros Oriental State University
Dumaguete City
In Partial Fulfillment of
The Requirements for the Degree
MASTER OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
By
Your Name
Date
THE TITLE
The title page (Annex A) is the first page of the thesis or dissertation. Although
not numbered, it should be counted as page “i”. The guideline for its preparation is
originally included in the GS Memo dated 04 March 2003. Below are important points to
consider for a title page.
2. The title should be written in capital letters and in inverted pyramid form. Its
first line should come two (2) inches from the tope edge of the paper.
4. The third part is the information about the degree for which the
thesis/dissertation is presented in partial fulfillment of the requirements. This
should be placed midway between presentation statement and the name of the
thesis/dissertation writer.
5. The last part contains the name of the writer (in capital letters) and the month
and year in which degree is to be conferred.
INTRODUCTION
There should be an introductory statement which reflects the main problem of the
study.
Sub-problems should be stated in such a way that it is not answerable by either
yes, no, when and where.
Sub-problems should include all the variables reflected in the
theoretical/conceptual framework.
Sub-problems should be arranged in logical order and extensive in coverage and
must be mutually exclusive in its dimensions.
If the research is quantitative, avoid the “how” question.
Statement of Assumptions
Optional
On the basis of the researcher’s own intuition, experience and observations,
propositions that are not yet scientifically proven maybe stated. This will serve as
a premise to the solution of the problem envisioned in his study.
Optional
Based on the specific problems, the null hypotheses that require statistical testing
should be stated.
This section explains the nature, coverage, and time frame of the study.
It presents in brief the subjects, area of investigation, the place, the time period or
school year covered.
It discusses the variables included in the study and the exclusion for other
variables, which are expected to be included.
It indicates the extent of capability of results arising from the sampling
population.
DEFINITION OF TERMS
The terms which connote different meanings from the conceptual or dictionary
definitions should be operationally defined to facilitate the full understanding of
the text by the readers.
The terms to be operationally defined are those used throughout the study and
may be a word or a phrase, usually taken from the title, the statement of the
problem or hypothesis.
The terms should be arranged in alphabetical order and the definitions should be
stated in complete sentences.
Presents and discusses the theory, principle or law where the research problem
under study evolves.
CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK
RELATED LITERATURE
It should be synthesized such that evidence from all studies reviewed would get
an overall understanding of the state of knowledge in the problem area.
Related Studies
There should be justification of the present study and its bearing on and
relatedness to the reviewed literature and studies.
A summary of the reviewed related studies in matrix form should be provided and
placed in the appendix.
RESEARCH METHODOLOGY
Research Design
The introductory paragraph should specify and justify the research method used.
A flow chart may be presented to show the research process.
Research Respondents/Participants
This reveals who are the subjects or respondents of the study, their nature, work,
profiles and other circumstances.
It specifies the sampling technique used and how the sample size is determined.
Research Environment
Instruments
This explains the specific type of research instrument used such as questionnaire,
checklist, questionnaire-checklists, structured- interview, teacher-made test,
standardized instrument which are adopted or borrowed with permission from the
author or from other sources.
The parts of the instruments should be explained and what bits of information are
derived.
The establishment of validity and reliability should be explained and only experts
should be chosen to validate such instrument.
Specific and appropriate statistical test used should be given and the computed
values derived. Interpretation should be included in the discussions.
Data-Gathering Procedure
This describes the details on how the researcher will go about the manner in
proceeding the research, the persons to be contacted, get approvals, and who/what
will be utilized in gathering of data.
This explains the statistical tools (formulas should be placed in the appendix) used
in the treatment of data. If the research instrument includes options that are
scaled, explain how each scale is given the weight, its interval and class limits.
STYLE AND OTHER IMPORTANT SPECIFICATIONS
Style, in the words of Lord Chesterfield, is the “dress of thoughts.” For this
reason, thesis/dissertation writers are advised to abide by the following specifications:
1. Paragraph
2. Paper Size
3. Margins
4. Font
Use only Courier New or Times New Roman size 12 throughout the
manuscript. Size 10 may be used for footnotes or legends.
5. Page Numbers
Except for the title page and the beginning of each chapter, all pages
should be numbered four spaces from the top and at the right margin.
Use Arabic numerals except for the preliminary parts of the manuscript
like the abstract and the table of contents, where lowercase roman
numbers should be used.
Although no page number will appear, the title page should be the first
page (i) of the manuscript.
6. Text Headings
Tertiary heading – Underline the heading and run it into the text, e.g.,
Only tables and charts used in the discussion should be included in the
text, and should be numbered using Arabic numerals.
Table numbers and captions shall be in accordance with the APA Manual,
7th Edition.
Reference tables and charts should be placed in the appendix.
8. Numerals
Write out single digit numbers, except in a series where they appear with
some numbers 10 or higher.
9. Abbreviations
10. Measurements
11. Quotations
Quotations not over five lines in length should be run into the text and
enclosed in double quotation marks (use single quotation mark for
quotation within a quotation).