How to Write a Better Thesis

(Marcin) #1

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ful rather than superficial, and key arguments have been diligently explored. I try
to not be too critical of presentation (in particular because the majority of theses I
have examined are by students whose first language is not English), but I do value a
thesis where the copy-editing is careful and significant effort has gone into creation
of figures and tables that are easy to understand.


Characteristics of a Poor Thesis



  • Objectives and protocol of the study are not stated.

  • The research questions are either not significant or are self-evident (no risk of a
    successful outcome).

  • The principal purpose or argument of the thesis is difficult to discern.

  • No clear delimitations to the study.

  • Overly simplistic comments and generalizations.

  • The scope of the thesis is overly ambitious.

  • Grasp of the literature has serious limitations (the student is unaware of major
    relevant works, or uses older works that are no longer authoritative or never were
    authoritative).

  • The description of the literature is serial rather than interpretative (with scant
    critical analysis or argument emerging).

  • There is no clear connection between the focus of the study and the logic or
    foundations of the research on which it is based.

  • Theoretical perspectives or conceptual frameworks are left implicit; the rationale
    for a particular theoretical approach is missing or undeveloped.

  • Shows no awareness of the alignment or compatibilities of particular theoretical
    and methodological approaches.

  • The overview of theory is broad and lacks depth or persuasiveness (especially
    noted by a reliance on undergraduate texts without reference to primary authors).

  • The description of the sample selection strategy is inadequate (inclusion and
    exclusion criteria not stated).

  • The arguments are intrinsically weak.

  • Large slabs of (qualitative) data are used to present a point when smaller excerpts
    with richer or deeper analyses are needed.

  • No demonstrated understanding of appropriate statistical analyses and interpre-
    tation, or insufficient detail on how the data analysis was undertaken.

  • Triangulation often claimed but rarely delivered.

  • Contains sweeping, unfounded conclusions that have little or no basis in evi-
    dence.

  • Definitions of key terms are either omitted or imprecise.

  • Contains poor photos, confusing diagrams, and inadequately labelled tables.

  • Contains poor written expression that detracts from the candidate’s argument.
    Littered with spelling and typographical errors; has incorrect or inconsistent ref-
    erencing.

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