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#formattingtips
study-for-hogwarts 2 years
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Since I just finished my bachelor thesis and have all this -for now- unnecessary knowledge swirling around in my head, I let it out here, in case anyone can find it useful.
I present: the biggest (formating & general) rules in thesis writing (as proposed by my German professor):
1. Per page: at least 2 maximum 4 paragraphs. Professors don't like to have one huge block of text for more than half a page. They will be less likely to want to read your paper.
2. Figures and Images: put them in the text where they are spoken about, don't just refer to them being in the appendix. It disrupts the reading flow and no professor likes to shuffle back and forth in a paper multiple times. Also, images and figures should be centralised on a page, seem coherent with each other in their entirety (especially if you created them yourself, use one colour and design pallette if possible) and be named correctly. Additionally, ich you use more than 3 or 4 images/figures, have a table of tables/figures in the front of your paper after table of contents.
3. Use figures and Images - be visual, make your thesis as easy as possible to understand. No one likes to read something and have his brain in knots the whole time.
4. Use times new Roman (or Arial) in size 12, 1.5
5. Recap: If your paper is really long, we're talking about 45 pages plus and you are talking about something from chapter 2 in chapter 7, briefly (!) recap it for ease of understanding and to reinforce your red string (roter Faden).
6. Subtitles: rather have too many than too few subtitles, they make it easier to navigate the paper and help you keep track of the smaller sections (they can also help in the writing process as too not lose focus of what you are doing).
7. Limitations and future research: at the end of your paper, after the discussion and before the conclusion, you have to name limitations. If you think you had none, look again. NO paper, none at all has no limitations. If you can think only of a few, you can also add them in one or two sentences to the conclusion, but it's better to have a separate part. For theses or papers in general, common limitations are time constraint, limited access to data, limited know-how, etc. After limitations, you can have another small chapter called "future research", here you can put all the ideas that you had during writing, which are in relation to your main topics. Maybe you would have liked to research more into a specific area, or you were missing key information somewhere. In future research you can put all the ideas you would like to see researched in the future.
8. Page numbers: i hope you were clever and formatted your document with page numbers, titles and subtitles before even starting to write (if you weren't, like me), it's not horrible, but it can be slightly annoying. Don't try to do it by yourself if your not sure. Just don't. You will probably get frustrated and your stress levels will rise even more. Just Google "how to multiple kinds of page numbers Microsoft word" and follow the instructions exactly. This saves you time and nerves. Usually in theses, you use Greek page numbers (I,II,III,IV,V,VI,...) For table of contents until the introduction, and then continue with them as soon as your bibliography starts. For the part in between (introduction until conclusion) you use Roman (?) numbers (1,2,3,...).
9. Titles: if you use 1. 1.2 1.2.1 etc., make sure that it is necessary to use things like 4.5.5.1.1. A rule of thumb is, if you can't say 2 (i.e. 4.5.5.1.1 but not 4.5.5.1.2) than you don't need to say 4.5.5.1.1 at all but put that part unter 4.5.5.1. Of course, this rule does not work all the time, but I like to check the necessity of my structure in this way.
10. Plan more days: When you are nearly done with your writing process, many of us estimate 1 day for formatting and 1 for proof reading. This is, was and never will be enough. Especially not if you are a perfectionist. Plan at least 1 week for formatting and proofreading. Honestly I would recommend 10 days. Because after writing a huge paper like this you are bound to be exhausted and will crash some days. Also, it is good to take 1-2 days of distance from your work to have a fresh point of view. If I would write a bachelor thesis again, I honestly would calculate 2 weeks for formatting and proofreading. If you have to "fix" your sources, definitely take 10 days. You will take 2 days for sources, if you have to find additional ones, or check them.
11. Last but not least: if possible, register your bachelor thesis (i.e. in Germany that is the point when you officially start your writing period (usually around 9-12 weeks) as late as possible. Do as much research, etc. before this time starts. I won't say write at least half of your thesis before you start this period and have all your questionnaires/interviews/or whatever research type you use ready to go. I won't say that, but well... Just, 9 weeks is nothing. Honestly, think about the 2 weeks towards proofreading, sources and formatting (+trying to get calm after being stressed continuously for 7 weeks (I was)). Just, if you think now is the time to register, wait another two weeks.
That's all for now, I know I will use this again for my master thesis, so I will leave this here for now. I hope it helps some of you too.馃
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bykimber 1 year
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How to Format a Manuscript for Submission
As a copyeditor, here鈥檚 everything I wish my authors knew before submitting their manuscripts to a publishing house.
I work as both a professional and freelance copyeditor. That means, a lot of manuscripts come past my desk and when they do, the format of the manuscript is always different.
As a writer myself, I like to choose my own fonts and formatting style, but when you鈥檙e about to submit a finished manuscript to a publishing house, it鈥檚 important to get the formatting right.
Every publishing house has its own style guide that dictates how manuscripts should be formatted. This prepares the manuscript to eventually be formatted and designed by designers for publishing.
Before submitting a manuscript try to ask for a copy or a link to the publisher鈥檚 style guide so you can format your manuscript according to their standards.
Otherwise, you can follow the basic manuscript formatting rules I鈥檓 about to provide in today鈥檚 article!
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youronlinepublicist 2 years
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Tips on How to format books | Formatting a Book? | Making Books better
Formatting a book is an crucial task of giving your book a desired finish. Here are a few tips that may help you format your overall book better.
Read More: https://youronlinepublicist.com/formatting-a-book/
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youronlinepublicist 2 years
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youronlinepublicist 2 years
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Tips on How to format books | Formatting a Book? | Making Books better
Formatting a book is an crucial task of giving your book a desired finish. Here are a few tips that may help you format your overall book better.
Read More: https://youronlinepublicist.com/formatting-a-book/
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youronlinepublicist 2 years
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youronlinepublicist 2 years
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Formatting a Book? | Tips on How to format books | Making Books better
Thinking about formatting a book? If Yes it means you鈥檝e written, edited, and proofread your book, and you want to format it to look the way you want it to.
Read More: https://youronlinepublicist.com/formatting-a-book/
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youronlinepublicist 2 years
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youronlinepublicist 3 years
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Formatting a Book? | Tips on How to format books | Making Books better
Thinking about formatting a book? If Yes it means you鈥檝e written, edited, and proofread your book, and you want to format it to look the way you want it to.
Read More : https://youronlinepublicist.com/formatting-a-book/
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youronlinepublicist 3 years
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