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How to Write a Thesis

How to Write a Thesis
By Rowena Murray

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Product Description

The Ulitimate Guide to Thesis Writing

In How to Write a Thesis, you will find practical, easy-to-follow advice for mastering this challenge, from getting started to revising.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #47005 in Books
  • Published on: 2006-06-01
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 320 pages

Editorial Reviews

About the Author
Rowena Murray is a Reader in the Department of Educational and Professional Studies at the University of Strathclyde. She has developed a Thesis Writing course, runs consultancies on Writing for Publication, and has published on many aspects of academic writing. She is also the author of How to Survive your Viva (Open University Press, 2003) and Writing for Academic Journals (Open University Press, 2004).


Customer Reviews

Essential5
If you are contemplating tackling a higher level degree that involves academic writing of some sort or are entrenched in the process already, this book is an essential must for your decision-making and/or library. Murray’s book offers practical and insightful information into the process of thesis, dissertation and academic publication writing. The layout of the manuscript is also rewarding offering hints and suggestions at the important moments of the research and writing phases as well as exercises to bust moments of anxiety, fear, writer’s block and moments of discontent and apathy. I have two suggestions though: First for the publisher and printer, offer a volume that is spiral bound so it lays flat while we are immersed in our subjects. And finally, hopefully, Dr. Murray can develop a workbook that can accompany the book itself. Perhaps in journal form.

Not for the science and engineering people.1
Most universities will have two types of courses on thesis writing, one for the Humanities and one for the Sciences. This is because the structure of these PhDs is very different and a course that covers both types is not realistic. This book is for the humanities and only pays lip service to the scientific thesis.
For example it states that you may have a chapter titled Methods; in all practical PhD's you “will” have a Materials and Method section. The way this section is written is very different from the Introduction and Discussion, in that it is very stylised, concise, and may consist of page after page of recipes. Writing the Methods section in a concise and logical manor can also be a problem, again this was not discussed. Similarly, presenting only experimental data in the Results section requires a style of its own. The Results chapter is the main “make or break” section of a scientific thesis and so needs more than a passing comment. This section relies heavily on figures and tables neither of which gets covered at all in the book.
The book does not even mention the possibility that some one else publishes your work or the basic theory of your thesis is disproved during your PhD studies. I personal have seen this on numerous occasions. This does not kill the project but does require special consideration when writing the thesis. It may result in a different end point than originally intended or in extreme circumstances, two unrelated halves.
It also does not mention negative results; a thesis may contain a section on expressing a protein that you never managed to express. This should not be omitted from the final thesis, but included to demonstrate how you approached a difficult problem and attempted to solve it. It’s nice to win all the time but not very likely.
In summary this book is for the production of a discursive thesis which is based on presenting and supporting an opinion and not a scientific thesis based on explaining experimental data.

Invaluable5
I discovered this book about a year before submitting my thesis from an 8-year part-time PhD. It helped enormously in getting my ideas together and making the final product useful. This was particularly the case for me as an "external" since I'd long been away from the academic style of writing and although it's clearly got a bit of a humanities bias, this didn't really disturb me as an aerospace engineer. Anybody who is doing a research degree, BUY THIS, more importantly buy it BEFORE you start work on your thesis not towards the end. It will save you enormous amounts of aggro and is a brilliantly useful volume. This will be required reading for any PhD students that I find myself supervising in the future.