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How to Write a Thesis - A Personal Experience. Hugo do Nascimento * School of Information Technologies The University of Sydney hadn@it.usyd.edu.au * Supported by CAPES and UFG-Brazil. Summary. The Thesis Doing Research Preparation for Writing the Thesis The Writing Process
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How to Write a Thesis- A Personal Experience Hugo do Nascimento* School of Information Technologies The University of Sydney hadn@it.usyd.edu.au *Supported by CAPES and UFG-Brazil
Summary • The Thesis • Doing Research • Preparation for Writing the Thesis • The Writing Process • Tools and Useful Links
The Thesis User Hints for Optimization Processes Combinatorial Optimization Human-Computer Interaction Information Visualization
The Thesis User Hints for Optimization Processes
The Thesis • Contents Acknowledgement Abstract • Introduction • Background • The User Hints Framework • User Hints for Graph Clustering • User Hints for Directed Graph Drawing • A Focus and Constraint-Based Genetic Algorithm • User Hints for Map Labeling • General Remarks • Conclusion Appendix A: Optimization Table Appendix B: Included CD-ROM Approximate number of words counted by WinEdt 2 pages, 572 words 1, 292 9, 2806 34, 11481 10, 3147 16, 4699 29, 9095 55, 11214 36, 10909 20, 7307 4, 1179 9, 1483 17, 2356
The Thesis • Statistics • 9 chapters + 2 appendices + 1 ack + 1 abs • 40 subsections • 85 pictures • 21 tables • 205 references • 63099-66620 words in the printed version (not including words in pictures and tables) • 274 pages • Writing period: Feb-June
Study the bibliography Revise the proposal Write a paper, Give a talk Do more experiments yes Has it been done? no no no yes Is it feasible? yes Are the results sufficient? Do “experiments” end Doing Research(A Process) Have a proposal
Preparation for Writingthe Thesis • Organize your references • For the file name of every digital paper that you get use the title, authors’ surname, and the year of publication. • Also get the bibtex or normal reference of the paper and save it in a file. • Organize all printed papers in folders. An Empirical Study of Constraint Usage in Graphical Applications_Zanden-Venckus_1996.pdf
Preparation for Writingthe Thesis • Develop writing skills: • Read other thesis • Take courses on time management and on scientific writing (The University of Sydney runs classes on these subjects in the Education Building).
Preparation for Writingthe Thesis • Visualizethe thesis • A content page written at the beginning of the research helps to visualize the thesis. In general, the content page is based on the research methodology. • Revise the content page as the research progresses. • When you are able to visualize the whole thesis (although there may be some “gaps” to close), then you are ready to write it.
The Writing Process • Define a schedule with dates for writing every chapter of the thesis (This is important since it will push you to work continuously. It will also allow you to check whether more time is needed to complete the writing). • Create (empty) pages for every chapter, section and subsection of the thesis. • Insert the papers and slides that you wrote into the thesis. • Start by writing your most recent work.
The Writing Process • Every time that you have a good idea for a section of the thesis that you are not working on at the moment, then write something quick about it in the appropriate page. • If you are tired of writing a particular section, take a short break by writing easier and funnier sections such as the acknowledgement, the dedication page, etc. If you a really tired, then have a rest! But be sure that you write a lot every day! • Leave the conclusion, the abstract, and the appendices to the end of the writing (some people also suggest postponing the writing of the introduction; any way, you will have to revise the introduction later).
The Writing Process • Leave time for revising the thesis. Ask at least 2 people to revise it. Do your own review afterwards. • Print and bind the final version of thesis. This can take up to two days if a hardcover binding is demanded. • Take the thesis to the Faculty of Science, with a letter of your supervisor saying that you have completed everything and that the thesis is ready to be evaluated. You will have to sign some forms there. • Backup the thesis regularly!
Tools and Useful Links • Software • MiKTEX (http://www.miktex.org/) - LaTeX for Windows/DOS. • Winedt (http://www.winedt.com/) - text editor that works with MiKTEX. It needs a license. • GIMP (http://www.gimp.org/) - Image manipulator software. • Microsoft Word – used for writing some papers and for creating diagrams. • Adobe Acrobat – used for converting diagrams in Word to PDF. Adobe Acrobat requires a license. There is a educational version for students that is cheaper.
Tools and Useful Links • Documents • Oetiker, “The not so short introduction to LaTeX”, 2001. (http://people.ee.ethz.ch/~oetiker/lshort/) • Technical writing and research ethics (http://goanna.cs.rmit.edu.au/~jz/writing.html) • Advice on Research and Writing (http://www-2.cs.cmu.edu/~mleone/how-to.html) • Writing Guidelines for Engineering and Science Students (http://filebox.vt.edu/eng/mech/writing/) • Links • TOPPS BibTeX Templates (http://www.diku.dk/topps/Registration/Registration-Templates.html) • Accents in LaTeX (http://www.giss.nasa.gov/latex/ltx-401.html) • A good page about Latex (http://b2.cs.kent.edu/~rmuhamma/Systems/latex.html)
Books on How to Write a Thesis • Gordon B.Davis, Clyde A. Parker. "Writing the Doctoral Dissertation: A Systematic Approach", Barron's Educational Series, 1997. • Harry Teitelbaum. “How to Write a Thesis”, Prentice Hall & IBD, 1998. • Estelle M. Phillips, Derek S. Pugh. “How to Get a PhD: A Handbook for Students and Their Supervisors”, Open University Press, 2000. • Joe Wolfe. “How to Write a PhD Thesis”, UNSW (http://www.phys.unsw.edu.au/~jw/thesis.html)