Thesis Format

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Subject: Thesis / Capstone Research

Description: This subject describe as a support of candidature for an academic degree or professional qualification presenting the author's research and findings.

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General Objectives:

Discussion:

A thesis or dissertation[1] is a document submitted in support of candidature for an academic degree or professional qualification presenting the author's research and findings.[2] In some contexts, the word "thesis" or a cognate is used for part of a bachelor's or master's course, while "dissertation" is normally applied to a doctorate, while in others, the reverse is true.[3] Dissertations and theses may be considered as grey literature.

The term "thesis" comes from the Greek θέσις, meaning "something put forth", and refers to an intellectual proposition. "Dissertation" comes from the Latin dissertātiō, meaning "path".

A thesis (or dissertation) may be arranged as a thesis by publication or a monograph, with or without appended papers respectively. An ordinary monograph has a title page, an abstract, a table of contents, comprising the various chapters (introduction, literature review, findings, etc.), and a bibliography or (more usually) a references section. They differ in their structure in accordance with the many different areas of study (arts, humanities, social sciences, technology, sciences, etc.) and the minimal differences between them. In a thesis by publication, the chapters constitute an introductory and comprehensive gist of the appended published and unpublished article documents.

Thesis Structure:

Table of Contents

Title Page

Approval Sheet

Certificate of Approval

Acknowledgment

Chapter 1: Introduction

This introduces the research topic, the methodology, as well as its scope and significance.

I. Statement of the Problems

II. Hypothesis

III. Scope and Delimitation

IV. Significance of the Study

V. Conceptual Framework

VI....