Thesis Proposal Formatting PDF

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FORMATTING YOUR THESIS PROPOSAL

Thesis proposals are typically 5 pages long and are double-spaced in a 12-point font. Please paginate your proposal and be sure to attach the required Thesis Proposal Form to the front of your proposal. The guidelines below indicate the sections required. I. Introduction/Literature Review Your introduction or literature review provides specific background information or the "body of knowledge" relevant to your Honors thesis. The literature you cite should draw on both earlier and current scholarly work. For proposals in the arts and humanities, include several journal sources and academic book(s). For proposals in the social sciences and sciences, include primary sources, review articles, and academic book(s). This section should be written such that your research question or hypothesis or creative activity flows logically from it. II. Proposed Activity Depending upon your academic discipline, you may present your proposed activity as a research question, hypothesis(es), or creative activity with a stated goal or outcome(s). The proposed activity that forms the basis of your Honors thesis must be tied to an existing body of knowledge. This section of your thesis proposal should be clear and concise - e.g., two sentences in length. III. Methodology All disciplines lend themselves to research and creativity; all work is conducted using some methodology. Your methodology determines the rigor and validity of your work. This section of your thesis proposal should present all the methods (i.e., scholarly approaches) you will use in your thesis. Your advisor will be well-versed in methodologies. Your methodology may depend on your field. For example If you plan to create original artistic work or other creative work, provide a scholarly "lens" through which an audience may perceive it (e.g., analyze the work of artists who influenced your own work and how your work differs from/is similar to theirs). Discuss any challenges to be overcome and give a timeline you will follow to complete your project. Be specific about what you plan to create. Articulate your creative goals. If you plan to conduct literature research (whether in the liberal arts and humanities, sciences, social sciences, business, or communications), indicate how you will select and examine your sources (e.g., date range of journals to be

searched, data base(s) to utilize), what guidelines you will use to interpret them, and how you plan to analyze and synthesize your findings. If you plan to perform scientific research in a lab or the field, provide information on materials and methods including controls, replicates, and statistical analyses. If you plan to conduct a meta-analysis in the social sciences, indicate the criteria to be used to select the publications for your analysis as well as the statistics you will apply. If your research involves the use of humans, including surveys and/or questionnaires, you must obtain Institutional Review Board (IRB) approval through the Office of Research Assurances (www.irb.wsu.edu). This approval is absolutely necessary before you interview one person or send out a single survey to be completed. If you are doing a survey or interviews, include the full survey instrument and/or the complete interview questions to the Appendix section. Further, if data collection is involved, describe how the data will be collected and analyzed and what materials will be used.

IV. Expected Results and/or Potential Conclusions In no more than one or two paragraphs, describe the results you expect from your thesis and what those results will mean in the greater context of knowledge in the field. If you complete a creative project, discuss the implications of your project in terms of a larger context of your discipline. V. Annotated Bibliography This is a preliminary list of the "body of knowledge" that was cited in your Introduction/Literature Review (above). Your annotated bibliography section will begin on a new sheet of paper and contain at least five annotated sources. Select recent journal articles, review articles, and scholarly books that address your topic. After each source, write an annotation, i.e. a 3- to 4-sentence statement explaining what information is included in the source. (See example below.) Include specific facts rather than vague generalizations (e.g., instead of saying, This journal article talks about Beethovens 9th symphony, say This journal article analyzes the form, instrumentation, and re-orchestration by Mahler of Beethovens 9th symphony). If it is not obvious, explain how the source will be useful to the development of your thesis. For the citation, follow the approved style for your field (i.e. APA, MLA, Chicago Style Manual, etc.). Single-space each citation and its corresponding annotation and leave a blank line between entries:
Portes A. 1998. Social capital: its origins and applications in modern sociology. Annu. Rev. Sociol. 24:124. This review article discusses the origins and definitions of social capital in the writings of several scholars in the field. The author identifies four sources of social capital and examines their

dynamics. He also gives examples of both positive functions and negative consequences of social capital. It is fundamental for my thesis hypothesis. Powell W.W. and Snellman K. 2004. The knowledge economy. Annu. Rev. Sociol. 30:199-220. This review article uses evidence from patent data and discusses the debate on whether technological advances have generated more or less worker autonomy. It is useful for my research because it defines the knowledge economy and provides both sides of the debate.

VI. Appendix This optional section will contain your complete survey instruments and full range of interview questions, or any other information you and your advisor deem essential for readers and reviewers.

THESIS PROPOSAL REVIEW PROCESS


If your thesis proposal is electronically submitted by the fifth day of a month, you will receive approvalor a request for revisionby the last working day of that month. A faculty committee will evaluate your thesis proposal All notifications to you and your advisor will be made using WSUs email system.

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