Project - EN Template CET Dept
Project - EN Template CET Dept
Project - EN Template CET Dept
By
Student Name
Student Name
Student Name
Supervisor
Asst. Prof. Dr.
A thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of
BSc
Month 2023
Kirkuk, Iraq
Declaration
I hereby declare that this thesis entitled: “XXX“ is my own original work and hereby
certify that unless stated, all work contained within this is my own independent
research and has not been submitted for the award of any other degree at any
institution, except where due acknowledgement is made in the text.
Signature Signature
Name: Name:
Date: Date:
Signature Signature
Name: Name:
Date: Date:
ii
Dedication
Year
iii
Acknowledgements
Here you can acknowledge your supervisor, co-workers, family members, etc. for
support. Do not forget to mention all the funding agencies that have supported your
work.
iv
Abstract
This is where the body of the abstract goes. An abstract very briefly summarises the
entire thesis. Someone should be able to read the abstract and determine the thesis
main purpose, method, and outcome. Do not cite any references or place any figures
or tables in the abstract.
This document serves as a template for dissertations and thesis at the Northern
Technical University. The spacing, font, and other formatting in this thesis should be
followed. Notice that in this Word document, the Styles are already created for each
type of text. Use these styles for appropriate sections in the dissertation/thesis
prevent formatting errors. The “Table of Contents,” “List of Figures,” and “List of
Tables” are fields that can be automatically updated to match the document.
Therefore, they are not entered manually but inserted using the List of Figures and
Tables command in Word.
v
Table of Contents
Declaration
Supervisor’s Certificate
Dedication
Acknowledgements
Abstract
Table of Contents
CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION
vi
4.1 New Heading
References
Appendix 1
Appendix 2
vii
List of Tables (if there are any)
viii
List of Figures (if there are any)
ix
List of Abbreviations (if there are any)
Abc ………………………………………………………….
Ab Cd …………………………………………………...……..
x
List of Symbols (if there are any)
Abc ………………………………………………………….
Ab Cd …………………………………………………...……..
xi
CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION
This section introduces the topic. It presents the background to the problem area
to provide readers a familiarity with the topic so they can understand your
proposal. A strong background and support of the problem is very important as it
gives significance to your work. Describe the problem or questions your work will
address and briefly address the overall solution you propose. You will go into the
problem and solution in more detail later, so do not be long and drawn out in the
introduction. This ensures readers are very clear on the importance, background,
objective, and scope of your proposed work.
1
CHAPTER 2 LITERATURE REVIEW
The literature review should provide a story made of the resources you used in
your thesis. Research works presented in the literature review should be related to
your work and linked together appropriately. For each paper/research
work/resource you used you have to give a short summary of the work then
provide your opinion on how it is related to your work, this should include any
critic you have or ideas that you adopted in your work. The IEEE style is used for
referencing resources.
2
CHAPTER 3 THEORETICAL APPROACH OR DIFFERENT
TITLE
Content……………………….
Content……………………….
Content……………………….
Content…………………
Content…………………
Content…………………
Content…………………
3
Table 1.The table caption
Heading Titles
Title1
Title2
Title3
Content…………………
Content…………………
Content…………………
Content…………………
Content…………………
Equation=x 2 ( y 1 + z ) √x
xyz
…………………………………………………………….3.1
[( A+ B ) C ]
4
CHAPTER 4 EXPERIMENTAL WORK OR DIFFERENT TITLE
5
CHAPTER 5 RESULTS AND DISCUSSION OR DIFFERENT
TITLE
6
CHAPTER 6 CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS OR
DIFFERENT TITLE
7
References (IEEE format)
[2]. K. E. Elliott and C.M. Greene, "A local adaptive protocol," Argonne National Laboratory,
Argonne, France, Tech. Rep. 916-1010-BB, 1997.
[4]. T. J. van Weert and R. K. Munro, Eds., Informatics and the Digital Society: Social, ethical and
cognitive issues: IFIP TC3/WG3.1&3.2 Open Conf.e on Social, Ethical and Cognitive Issues of
Informatics and ICT, July 22-26, 2002, Dortmund, Germany. Boston: Kluwer Academic, 2003.
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Appendices (if there are any)
Appendices, labelled Appendix 1, Appendix 2, etc., should be treated as additional
chapters and should normally follow the main text. Appendices may consist of
supporting material of considerable length or of lists, documents, commentaries,
tables or other evidence that if included in the main text, would interrupt its flow.
The style of appendices must be consistent with the style of the main text. Long
appendices may be divided into sections, labelled as Appendix 1.1 etc., with
corresponding subsection numbering, which must be entered in the table of
contents.
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Appendix 1
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Appendix 2
And so on…
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Notes:
Minimum pages (45)
Maximum pages (75)
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