This page outlines the stages of an honours thesis and provides links to other pages that will give you more information and some examples from past theses.
| Abstract | Write this last. It is an overview of your whole thesis, and is between 200-300 words. For more information on what to include in your abstract, see Writing Abstracts for Honours Theses. To see some examples, visit the Sample abstracts page. |
| Introduction | Usually longer than an abstract, and provides the following:
For more information, go to Thesis introductions exercise |
| Literature Review | Often part of the Introduction, but can be a separate section. It is an evaluation of previous research on your topic, where you show that there is a gap in the knowledge that your research will attempt to fill. The key word here is evaluation. For more information about literature reviews including examples |
| Methods | Often the easiest part of the thesis to write. Outlines which method you chose and why (your methodology); what, when, where, how and why you did what you did to get your results. |
| Results | Outlines what you found out in relation to your research questions or hypotheses, presented in figures and in written text. Results contain the facts of your research. Often you will include a brief comment on the significance of key results, with the expectation that more generalised comments about results will be made in the Discussion section. Sometimes Results and Discussion are combined: check with your supervisor and with highly rated past theses in your School. |
| Discussion | The Discussion section:
The Discussion should also relate your specific results to previous research or theory. You should point out what the limitations were of your study, and note any questions that remain unanswered. The Discussion CAN also include Conclusions/Future Research. Check with your supervisor. |
| Conclusions | Very important! This is where you emphasise that your research aims/objectives have been achieved. You also emphasise the most significant results, note the limitations and make suggestions for further research. Conclusions CAN include Future Directions. Check with your supervisor. For more information on what to include in your conclusion, see Conclusions in honours theses To view some examples, visit the Sample conclusions page. |