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How to Write an Abstract for Your Thesis or Dissertation
What is an Abstract?
- The abstract is an important component of your thesis. Presented at
the beginning of the thesis, it is likely the first substantive
description of your work read by an external examiner. You should view
it as an opportunity to set accurate expectations.
- The abstract is a summary of the whole thesis. It presents all the major elements of your work in a highly condensed form.
- An abstract often functions, together with the thesis title, as
a stand-alone text. Abstracts appear, absent the full text of the
thesis, in bibliographic indexes such as PsycInfo. They may also be
presented in announcements of the thesis examination. Most readers who
encounter your abstract in a bibliographic database or receive an email
announcing your research presentation will never retrieve the full text
or attend the presentation.
- An abstract is not merely an introduction in the sense of a
preface, preamble, or advance organizer that prepares the reader for the
thesis. In addition to that function, it must be capable of
substituting for the whole thesis when there is insufficient time and
space for the full text.
Size and Structure
- Currently, the maximum sizes for abstracts submitted to Canada's
National Archive are 150 words (Masters thesis) and 350 words (Doctoral
dissertation).
- To preserve visual coherence, you may wish to limit the
abstract for your doctoral dissertation to one double-spaced page, about
280 words.
- The structure of the abstract should mirror the structure of the whole thesis, and should represent all its major elements.
- For example, if your thesis has five chapters (introduction,
literature review, methodology, results, conclusion), there should be
one or more sentences assigned to summarize each chapter.
Clearly Specify Your Research Questions
- As in the thesis itself, your research questions are critical in
ensuring that the abstract is coherent and logically structured. They
form the skeleton to which other elements adhere.
- They should be presented near the beginning of the abstract.
- There is only room for one to three questions. If there are
more than three major research questions in your thesis, you should
consider restructuring them by reducing some to subsidiary status.
Don't Forget the Results
- The most common error in abstracts is failure to present results.
- The primary function of your thesis (and by extension your
abstract) is not to tell readers what you did, it is to tell them what
you discovered. Other information, such as the account of your research
methods, is needed mainly to back the claims you make about your
results.
- Approximately the last half of the abstract should be dedicated to summarizing and interpreting your results.
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1 comments:
Writing a abstract needs research and takes a lot of time, click precis article if you need to write one and you don't feel sure about something.
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