Dissertation Outline
Dissertation Outline
The prospect of writing a dissertation can initially appear a bit daunting. However,
the actual experience is rarely as frightening as it at first seems. The dissertation
provides you with the opportunity to conduct an in-depth study of a subject of
personal interest – so you might even enjoy it!
Your Supervisor
A dissertation is a piece of self-directed study, so the majority of input should come
from you as the researcher. However, your dissertation supervisor can provide
guidance, support, and direct you towards relevant materials. To get the most out of
supervisory meetings you should:
obtain guidelines about how much of your supervisor’s time you are entitled
to
arrange a series of meetings to discuss your progress with him/her
play an active part in meetings in order to get maximum benefit from them
set yourself deadlines for sending drafts to the supervisor prior to meetings.
This gives you a date to work to and will give your supervisor time to read
your work before feeding comments back during the meeting
maintain contact with the supervisor even if things aren’t going well. If there
is a problem it is better to get it sorted out sooner rather than later
The Structure of Dissertations
In the absence of any departmental guidelines, there is a standard structural form
that can be adapted to fit most dissertations. All of these sections may not be
suitable for all subject areas. Whatever the topic of research, it is important to
divide your work into a number of manageable sections.
The conventional structure for reporting research divides the material into three
parts: the preliminary part, the main text and the end matter.
Title
The title itself needs to indicate accurately the contents of the work. It also needs to
be fairly brief. A good way of combining the two is to have a two-part title. The first
part acts as the main title and gives a broad indication of the area of work. The
second part adds more detail. For example, ‘Ethnicity and Friendship: the Contrast
between Sociometric Research and Fieldwork Observation in Primary School
Classrooms’.
Abstract
The abstract is a summary of the research. It enables other people to see, at a
glance, what the dissertation is about.
List of contents
This can range from being just a list of chapter headings and their starting pages
through to being an extensive list including sub-headings of the contents within the
chapters.
Acknowledgements
Under this heading, credit can be given to those who have helped with the research.
It is usual to acknowledge the support of anyone who you feel contributed to the
dissertation - supervisor, technicians, participants, family.
List of abbreviations
If the nature of the report demands that many abbreviations are used in the text,
these should be listed, usually alphabetically, alongside the full version of what they
stand for.
Introduction
At the beginning the reader needs to be provided with information about:
A general background to the work including an overview of the main topic
and your rationale
The aims of the research
Key definitions and concepts to be used
An indication of the limitations (if any) of the study
An overview of the dissertation, briefly indicating the content of each chapter
Literature Review
This may be presented as an integral part of the ‘Introduction’ or it may appear as a
separate chapter. Check with your supervisor to see if there are specific
departmental requirements regarding this. This section demonstrates an
understanding of the topic through the work of others, providing a review of the
material that already exists on the topic in question, and highlighting strengths and
weaknesses where necessary. It should also express links between previous
research and the particular issues, problems and ideas that the current research
addresses. (See separate handout for more on literature reviews).
Findings
This is where the reader gets introduced to the data. Aspects of the findings are
singled out and described. The first step is to say, ‘This is what was found with
respect to this issue…This is what was found with respect to another issue…’
You need to describe the findings before you are in a position to move on and
consider what significance the data might have in the context of the overall aims of
the study.
Chapters
Not all dissertations follow the more scientific format outlined, although all will have
a separate Introduction and Conclusion as mentioned above. Some are based on
secondary data and will have the work of writers throughout the entire dissertation.
In this sense, the chapters are like a series of linked essays. Each chapter should:
Include both an introduction and conclusion
Focus on one main theme, or a series of inter-related ones
Use sub-headings to guide the reader
Develop points carefully, step by step, recapping when necessary
Make sense on its own while simultaneously sharing a common ‘thread’ with
other chapters
Appendices
An appendix is the place for material which is too bulky for the main body of the
text. The following are usually placed in the appendices:
extensive tables of data
questionnaires used in a survey
extracts from an interview transcript
memos or minutes of meetings
technical specifications
The above should all be presented in separate appendices and given their own
number or letter.
References
The positioning of these will vary depending on the style of referencing used by the
researcher. When the researcher uses the Harvard System of referencing, a
complete list of those works cited in the research should be included in an
alphabetical list at the end. With an Endnotes system, references are sometimes
placed after individual chapters, and you should check if this is expected with your
supervisor. The footnoting style of referencing requires the references to be
inserted at the bottom of each respective page. (See specific referencing handouts
for more information).
Develop logical links from one section to the next - A good dissertation is
one that takes the reader on a journey. Therefore the steps and direction
should be clear, and the reader should never be left in doubt about the
progression of the points being made. Links between information need to be
clear. It is a good idea to recap at certain stages of the dissertation. The logic
of the discussion should build point on point towards a final conclusion.
Use headings and sub-headings to divide the text into clear sections -
Headings and sub-headings can separate the text into blocks in a way that
makes the reader’s task of understanding the overall piece of work far easier.
They act as signposts. As with signposts, too few and the reader gets lost,
too many and the reader gets confused.
Use care with the page layout - The visual element of the presentation can
be important, and the researcher should give some consideration to things
like the page layout and the use of graphs, tables and photographs. It is
important that these are all relevant to the content.
References:
Adapted from: Denscombe, M. (1998) The good research guide. Oxford: Oxford University
Press.