Planning & Writing A Thesis Protocol. Thesis [Part-1] Dissertation Proposal
Writing a dissertation or thesis is not a simple task. It takes time, energy, and a lot of dedication to get you across the finish line. It’s not easy - but it doesn’t necessarily need to be a painful process. If you understand the big-picture process of how to plan and write a dissertation or thesis, your research journey will be a lot smoother.
A research proposal is born with the intent to convince others that your project is worthy and you are able to manage it with a complete and specific work plan. With a strong idea in mind, it is time to write a document where all the aspects of the future research project must be explained in a precise, understandable manner.
The first drafting of the protocol for a new research project should start from a solid idea with one or more of these goals
1. Overcoming the limits of the current knowledge in a determinate field with the aim of bridging a “knowledge gap”
2. Bringing something new in a scarcely explored field
3. Validating or nullifying previous results obtained in limited records by studies on a wider population.
Here are the points you should include in the proposal:
Dissertation title
Objectives - Aim for up to three objectives. If you're too extensive at this point, it will seem like your plan doesn't have a focus, so you'll need to narrow it down.
Literature - Ask your mentor if you're expected to list some specific references in this section. If that's not the case, you'll at least need to mention the areas of study, schools of thought, and other sources of information you're going to use during the research stage.
Research - This is the main section, where you'll elaborate the ideas of your research question. You will clearly outline the area of research.
Methodology - The dissertation project can be non-empirical (if the resources come from previously published projects) or empirical (if you collect data through questionnaires or other methods). In this section, you need to explain the methods of collecting data.
Potential outcomes - Where do you think you'll end up after all the research and analysis? Explain the outcome you expect to come down to.
Timeframe - Create a schedule that explains how you will manage all stages of dissertation writing within a specific timeframe.
List of references - Ask your mentor if you're supposed to include this part, and he'll provide you with the instructions.
4 авг 2024