MIST MSC-ME Syllabus
MIST MSC-ME Syllabus
The committee of courses for the introduction of Master Degree Program at ME Dept, MIST
published vide BUP letter no. 1001/BUP/103/MIST/KP dated 24 April 2014. The
undersigned committee has worked out and finalized the detail course outline for the Master
Degree Program including the ordinance for ME Dept, MIST on 22 May 2014.
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President : Col Md Lutfor Rahman
Head, ME Dept. MIST
Members -------------------------------------------------------------
: Prof. Dr. Md Ehsan, ME Dept., BUET
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: Prof. Dr. Mohammad Ali, ME Dept., BUET
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: Prof. Dr. Sheikh Reaz Ahmed, ME Dept., BUET
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: Lt Col Md Humayun Kabir Bhuiyan, psc, MIST
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: Wg Cdr Dr GM Jahangir Alam, psc, MIST
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CHAPTER 1
1. Introduction
In view of global necessity, it is clear that postgraduate degree in mechanical engineering will
play an important role in future demand of highly professionals in this field. The national and
international requirement of professionals of mechanical engineers is increasing day by day for
the developing and developed countries. From this perspective, it is of vital importance to offer
high quality education to the next generation of mechanical engineers.
The Master's program in mechanical engineering offers students deep knowledge and
functional skills in most fields of relevance for mechanical technology. After graduation,
students will be well prepared for future positions within the advanced professional arena, or
in a Mechanical technology research environment.
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CHAPTER 2
2.1 The courses offered by the Department for both Masters and Ph. D. Programs
are generally divided in the following divisions.
a. Division of Fluid Mechanics,
b. Division of Thermal Engineering, and
c. Division of Applied Mechanics.
2.2 The following courses are offered by the Department for both Masters and Ph.
D. Programs. Each term only some of the courses (typically 6-9) are offered from the
different divisions.
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Division of Applied Mechanics
ME 6005 Tribology 3
ME 6171 Advanced Dynamics 3
ME 6173 Mechanical Vibrations 3
ME 6175 Applied Elasticity 3
ME 6177 Theory of Plates and Shells 3
ME 6179 Elastic Stability of Structures 3
ME 6181 Experimental Stress Analysis 3
ME 6191 Engineering Acoustics and Noise Control 3
ME 6193 Variational Methods in Structural Mechanics 3
ME 6201 Mechanical Behaviour of Engineering Materials 3
ME 6203 Structure and Properties of Engineering 3
Materials
ME 6205 Theory of Plasticity 3
ME 6209 Mechanics of Composite Materials 3
ME 6211 Smart Materials 3
ME 6301 Surface Engineering 3
ME 6213 Fracture Mechanics 3
* Compulsory Course. Note: A student must pass at least two courses related to the area of
his/her research work
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ME 6401 Advanced Mechatronics (3 Credits)
Mechatronics systems overview; Sensors, transducers and actuators; System responses,
transfer functions and closed loop controllers; Signals, interfacing, data processing and
communications; Microprocessors and programmable logic controllers; Machine vision,
industrial automation and robotics; Case studies.
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3.2.3 Division of Thermal Engineering Courses
ME 6101 Classical Thermodynamics (3 credits)
Fundamentals of classical thermodynamic, first and second laws; Concept of properties.
Reversible and irreversible processes, entropy and other characteristic functions. Maxwell's
relations. Equation of state and generalized co-ordinates; Equilibrium and stability.
ME 6143 Advanced Conduction and Radiation Heat Transfer (3 credits) Steady and
unsteady state conduction, solutions by analytical, numerical and analogue methods,
Thermal radiation processes and evaluation of heat exchange by different methods.
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ME 6155 Heat Transfer Enhancement (3:00 Credits)
Concept of enhanced heat transfer surfaces; Its application; Performance evaluation criteria,
Extended plate and Fin surfaces; Internally finned tubes and annuli; Insert devices;
Externally finned tubes; Integral roughness; Enhancement by additives for gases and liquids;
Enhancement in magnetic and electric fields; Swirling and flow structures in enhanced
surfaces; Fouling on enhanced surfaces; Application in two-phase systems; Boiling and
condensation; Enhancement rate in laminar and turbulent flows; Enhanced heat transfer
correlations and estimation.
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ME 6173 Mechanical Vibrations (3 credits)
Single degree of freedom system; Coupled two mass systems. Energy methods. Forced
vibrations. Different types of damping. Polar plots. Vibration isolation. Effects of couple
modes. Multidegree of freedom systems. Shock loading. Normal modes of continuous
systems.
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Euler-Lagrange equations; Direct methods of variational calculus: Castigliano's theorem,
stationary total potential energy method, Least-squares method, Rayleigh-Ritz method,
Collocation method, Galerkin's method; Application of variational methods to beam
problems, torsion problems and plate problems; Application of variational methods to finite
element formulation for stress analysis of structural components.
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CHAPTER 3
1. Degrees Offered
1.3 Any other Master Degrees approved by the Academic Council may also be
offered under this ordinance.
2. Admission Requirements
2.1 For admission to the courses leading to a Masters degree (M.Sc. Engg / M. Engg),
an applicant
(a) Must have a minimum GPA of 4.0 out of 5.00 or a first division or equivalent
in any one of S. S. C and H. S. C or in equivalent examinations and must not have a
GPA less than 3.00 out of 5.00 or a second division or equivalent in any of the
aforementioned examinations.
(b) Must have at least 55% marks or a minimum GPA of 2.75 out of 4.0 or its
equivalent in B. Sc. Engg. in ME, IPE, NAME, AE (aerospace) and other related field
to Mechanical Engg.
2.2 For admission to the courses leading to the degree of M.Sc. Engg /M. Engg in any
division, an applicant must have obtained a B.Sc. Engg Degree in the relevant branch or an
equivalent degree from any recognized institution. An applicant with a B.Sc. Engg Degree in
other branches of engineering may also be eligible for admission to the courses leading to
the degree of M.Sc. /M. Engg. In such cases, the selected candidate may be required to
undertake non-credit prerequisite courses at the undergraduate and / or postgraduate level as
may be determined by the Board of Post Graduate Studies (BPGS) of concerned Engineering
Department. BPGS shall be constituted as follows:
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i. Chairman : Head of the concerned Engineering Department.
ii. Member : Instructor Class A or equivalent and above faculty of the
department.
iii. Internal Member : One Senior Instructor from other Department of MIST.
iv. Member Secretary : Course Coordinator.
3. Admission and Registration Procedures
3.1 Applications for admission to the above courses shall be invited through regular
means of advertisement and shall be received by the Admission Officer.
3.2 Before being finally selected for admission a candidate may be required to appear at
an oral and / or written test by a Selection Committee as constituted by the BPGS. He/She
will be required to take pre-requisite courses as may be prescribed by the Selection
Committee. Every selected candidate, unless he/she has already been registered, shall get
himself/herself registered with Bangladesh University of Professionals (BUP).
3.3 After admission each student shall be assigned, by the relevant BPGS, an Adviser
from among the teachers of the Department not below the rank of an Assistant
Professor/Instructor Class A. In advance of each enrolment and course registration for any
semester, the Adviser or Supervisor (as appointed by Art. 8.1 & 9.1 of this ordinance) shall
check and approve his/her student’s schedule for subjects, pre-requisites as recommended by
the Selection Committee and the total hours. The student is expected to consult his/her
Adviser/Supervisor on all academic matters but, it is the responsibility of the individual
student to see that his/her schedule conforms to the academic regulations.
3.4 Every registered student shall get himself/herself enrolled on payment of prescribed
fees and other dues as per MIST and BUP rules before the commencement of each semester.
In an academic year there will be normally two semesters. All course registration must be
completed within two weeks from the start of a semester.
3.5 On the recommendation of the appropriate BPGS and Committee for Advanced
Studies and Research (CASR), the rules for admission into the Institute for master/post
graduate studies shall be framed from time to time by the Academic Council. CASR on its
own may, if it deems fit, recommend such rules for admission for approval of the Academic
Council.
CASR shall be constituted as follows:
i. Chairman : Commandant, MIST
ii. Member : Dean, Faculty of Technical & Engg. Studies, BUP.
iii. Member : Dean (Dir Academic), MIST
iv. Member : One Senior Instructor/Professor from all departments.
v. Member : BUET (one professor nominated by VC BUET).
vi. Member Secretary : Director, R& D, MIST.
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3.6 No late registration will be allowed after two weeks of designated dates of
registration. Late registration after this date may only be accepted for thesis/project if the
student submits a written appeal to the Dean, MIST through the concerned Head and can
document extenuating circumstances such as medical problems (physically incapacitated and
not able to be presented) from the Medical Officer (MO) of the Institute or some other
academic commitments which precluded registration prior to the last date of registration.
Students will be charged a late registration fee of Tk. 1000.00 (One thousand) only. This
extra fee will not be waived whatever be the reason for late registration.
3.7 If a student is unable to complete the final examination of a semester due to serious
illness or serious accident or official commitment he/she may apply to the Dean, MIST in a
prescribed form through Head of the degree awarding Department for total withdrawal from
the semester within a week after the end of the semester final examination. The application
must be supported by a medical certificate from the MO, CMH or relevant official
documents. The Academic Council will take the final decision about such application on the
recommendation of the relevant BPGS.
4.1 The minimum duration of the M.Sc. Engg./ M. Engg. Program shall be of three
semesters. A candidate for the Masters degree must complete all the requirements for the
degree within five academic years (Session) from the date of the first admission in the
respective program.
4.2 Academic progress shall be measured in terms of credit hours earned by a student.
One credit hour subject shall normally require 14 hours of lecture for one semester; while
one credit hour for thesis/project/ laboratory should normally require 42 hours of work for
one semester. The number of credit hours for each subject shall be as specified in the
syllabus of the respective branch of Engineering Department.
4.3 The credit hour requirement for the Masters Program shall be as follows:
4.3.1 For the degree of M.Sc. Engg, a student must earn a minimum of 36 credit hours
including a thesis for which 18 credit hours shall be assigned.
4.3.2 For the degree of M. Engg a student must earn a minimum of 36 credit hours
including a project for which 9 credit hours shall be assigned.
4.4 There shall be two categories of students, namely, full-time students and part-time
students.
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4.4.2 Full time students must register for a minimum of 12 credit hours and a maximum of
15 credit hours per semester. A full time student shall not be allowed to be in the
employment of any organization (even as a part time employee). However, they may be
employed as teaching/ research assistant at the Institute. If a full time student becomes an
employee (full time or part time) of any other organization in the middle of a semester,
he/she may, with the approval of the Head of the Department and his/her Employer, be
allowed to continue as a full time student for that semester.
4.4.3 A student may be allowed to switch from part-time to full-time or vice versa on the
recommendation of the respective BPGS before the commencement of a semester.
4.6 A student on the recommendation of the relevant BPGS and as approved by the
CASR may be allowed to transfer a maximum of 9.0 credits of the courses completed by the
student at a recognized institution provided that the courses were not taken earlier than five
calendar years from the date of his/her first enrolment in the respective program at MIST and
that the student obtained a minimum GPA of 3.0 out of 4.0 or its equivalent in such courses
and that the courses are equivalent to the approved courses of MIST.
5. Grading system
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5.2 Courses in which the student gets F grades shall not be counted towards credit hour
requirements and for the calculation of Grade Point Average (GPA).
5.2.1 The C grades, up to a maximum of two courses, may be ignored for calculation of
GPA at the written request of the student to the Head of the Department on the
recommendation of the supervisor / Advisor, provided that the student has fulfilled the total
course credit hour requirement in the remaining subjects with a minimum GPA of 2.20.
5.2.2 When a course is repeated for improvement, better grade shall be counted for
calculation of GPA.
5.2.3 Performance in all the subjects including all the F grades shall be reflected in the
transcript.
5.3 Grade I is given only when a student is unable to sit for the examination of a course
at the end of the semester because of circumstances beyond his/her control. He/She must
apply to the Head of the Department within one week after the examination to get an I grade
in that course. It must be completed within the next two semesters provided the same course
is offered. He/She may, however, be allowed to register without further payment of tuition
fees for that course. If that course is not offered within next two semesters, then he/she will
be allowed to register another course of his/her choice.
5.4 Satisfactory or Unsatisfactory- used only as final grades for thesis/project and non-
credit courses. Grade for thesis/ project “In Progress” shall be so recorded. If, however,
thesis / project is discontinued an ‘I’ grade shall be recorded.
5.5 Students may enroll for non-credit course(s) termed as audit course(s) on
recommendation of his/her thesis / project Supervisor and Head of the Department.
5.6 A student shall withdraw officially from a course within four working weeks of the
commencement of the semester or else his grade in that course shall be recorded as F unless
he/she is eligible to get a grade of I. A student may be permitted to withdraw and change
his/her course within the specified period with the approval of his/her Adviser, Head of the
Department and the respective teacher(s) concerned. (In that case his / her grade in the
courses registered shall be recorded as ‘W’ in his Academic Record but shall not be reflected
in the transcript.)
5.7 Numerical markings may be made in answer scripts, tests etc., but all final grading to
be reported to the Controller of Examinations (BUP) shall be in the letter grade system as
detailed below:
80% and above : A (Plus)
75% to below 80% : A
70% to below 75% : A- (Minus)
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65% to below 70% : B+ (Plus)
60% to below 65% : B
55% to below 60% : B- (Minus)
50% to below 55% : C+ (Plus)
45% to below 50% : C
40% to below 45% : D
Below 40% : F
6. Conduct of Examination
6.1 In addition to tests, assignments and/ or examinations during the semester as may be
given by the teacher(s) concerned, there shall be a written examination and / or other tests
for each of the subjects offered in a semester at the end of that semester, the dates of which
shall be announced by the Exam Section, MIST as advised by Dean in coordination with
BUP at least two weeks before the commencement of the examination. The final grade in a
subject shall be based on the performance in all tests, assignments and / or examinations.
6.2 The Exam Section and BUP shall keep up to-date record of all the grades obtained by
a student in individual Academic Record Card. Grades shall be announced by the Controller
of Examinations at the end of each semester. In addition, each student is entitled to one
official transcript of the University record at the completion of his academic program from
the office of the Controller of Examinations on production of statement of clearance from all
departments’ offices.
6.3 The BPGS of the department shall recommend the names of the paper setters and
examiners for the semester examinations at least two weeks before the date of
commencement of the examination to the Commandant MIST/VC BUP for approval.
7. Qualifying Requirements
7.1 The qualifying requirement for graduation is that a student must earn a minimum
grade point of 2.65 based on the weighted average in his course work.
7.1.1 Two courses may be repeated for improvement with the prior approval of the Head
of the Department on the recommendation of the Supervisor / Advisor. Such approval shall
be reported to the BPGS.
7.1.2 A student obtaining F grade in a course may be allowed to repeat the course with the
prior approval of Head of the Department on the recommendation of the Supervisor /
Advisor. Such approval shall be reported to the BPGS.
7.2 A student shall not be allowed to continue the program if he/she obtains a total of
three or more F grades in one or more than one subjects taken together, during the course of
his / her studies.
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7.3 If the cumulative GPA falls below 2.5 for a full time student at the end of the second
or any subsequent semester or for a part time student at the end of third or subsequent
semester, he/she shall not be allowed to continue in the program.
7.4 In addition to successful completion of course works every student shall submit a
thesis on his research work or a report on his/her project work, fulfilling the requirements as
detailed in the following sections.
8. Thesis
8.1. Research work for a thesis shall be carried out under the supervision of a full-time
member of the staff belonging to the relevant department of MIST/BUET/any other
university recognized by UGC. However, in special cases, a full-time member of the staff
belonging to a department outside the student’s relevant department of the Institute may be
appointed as Supervisor, if the research content of the thesis is within the field of
specialization of the member of the staff. A Co-supervisor from within or outside the
department may be appointed, if necessary. The thesis proposal of a student shall be
submitted for approval to the CASR on the recommendation of the BPGS after completion
of at least 12 credit hours of course work.
8.2 If any change is necessary of the approved thesis (title, content, cost, Supervisor, Co-
supervisor etc.) it shall be approved by the CASR on recommendation of the relevant BPGS.
8.3 The research work must be carried out in this Institute or at a place(s) recommended
by the BPGS. The work schedule and financial involvement should be mentioned in the
research proposal for carrying out research work outside the institute.
8.4 Every student shall submit to the Head of the Department, through his/her
Supervisor, required number of type written copies of his/her thesis in the approved format
(as given in Appendix-A) on or before a date to be fixed by the Supervisor concerned in
consultation with the Head of the Department.
8.5 The student shall certify (as given in Appendix-B) that the research work was done
by him/her and that this work has not been submitted elsewhere for the award of any other
diploma or degree.
8.6 The thesis should demonstrate an evidence of satisfactory knowledge in the field of
research undertaken by the student.
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Supervisor concerned in consultation with the Head of the Department and must satisfy the
examiners that he/she is capable of intelligently applying the results of this research to the
solution of problems, of undertaking independent work, and also afford evidence of
satisfactory knowledge related to the theory and technique used in his/her research work
8.8.1 An Examination Board for every student for thesis and oral examination shall be
approved by the CASR on recommendation of the thesis Supervisor in consultation with the
Head of the Department and to be forwarded to BUP for final approval. The Supervisor shall
act as the Chairman and the Head of the Department will be an ex-officio member of the
Examination Board. The Board shall consist of at least four members including the Head of
the Department and the Supervisor. The Examination Board shall be constituted as follows:
(i) Supervisor Chairman
(ii) Co-supervisor (if any) Member
(iii) Head of the Department Member (ex-officio)
(iv) One or two members from within the Dept/Institute Member
(v) One external member from outside the student’s Member
relevant Department/Institute External)
8.8.2 If any examiner is unable to accept the appointment or has to relinquish his/her
appointment before the examination, Commandant, MIST shall appoint another examiner in
his/her place, on suggestion from the Supervisor in consultation with the Head of the
department. This appointment will be reported to the CASR.
8.8.3 In case a student fails to satisfy the Examination Board in thesis and /or oral
examination, the student shall be given one more chance to resubmit the thesis and/or appear
in oral examination as recommended by the Board.
9. Project
9.1 Project work shall be carried out under the supervision of a full-time member of the
staff belonging to the relevant department of MIST/BUET/any other university recognized
by UGC. However, in special cases, a full- time member of the staff belonging to a
department outside the student’s relevant Department may be appointed as Supervisor, if the
research content of the project work is within the field of specialization of the member of the
staff. The title of the project, cost and the Supervisor shall be recommended by the BPGS for
approval of the Commandant. This approval will be reported to the CASR.
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9.2 If any change is necessary of the approved project (title, content, cost, Supervisor
etc.) it shall be approved by the Commandant on the recommendation of the relevant BPGS.
This approval will be reported to the CASR.
9.3 The project work must be carried out in this Institute or at a place approved by the
Commandant on recommendation of the Supervisor in consultation with the Head of the
Department. The work schedule and financial involvement should be mentioned in the
project proposal for carrying out project work outside the institute.
9.4 Every student shall submit to the Head of the Department, through his/her
Supervisor, required number of type written copies of his/her project report in the approved
format (As given in Appendix- A) on or before a date to be fixed by the Supervisor
concerned in consultation with the Head of the Department.
9.5 The student shall certify (as given in Appendix-B) that the research work was done
by him/her and that this work has not been submitted elsewhere for the award of any other
diploma or degree.
9.6 Every student submitting a project report in partial fulfillment of the requirement of a
degree shall be required to appear at an oral examination, on a date or dates fixed by the
Supervisor concerned in consultation with the Head of the Department and must satisfy the
examiners that he/she has gained satisfactory knowledge related to the project work.
9.7.1 An Examination Board for every student for the project and oral examination shall
consist of at least three members including the Supervisor. The Supervisor shall act as the
Chairman. The BPGS shall recommend the names of the examiners for approval of the BUP.
This approval will be reported to the CASR. The Examination Board shall be constituted as
follows:
(i) Supervisor :Chairman
(ii) One member from within the Dept/Institute :Member
(iii) Head of the department :Member (ex-offico)
(iv) One member from outside the Dept/Institute :Member (External)
9.7.2 If any examiner is unable to accept the appointment or has to relinquish his/her
appointment before the examination, the Commandant shall appoint another examiner in
his/her place on the recommendation of the relevant BPGS. This appointment will be
reported to the CASR.
9.7.3 In case a student fails to satisfy the Examination Board in project report and /or oral
examination, the student shall be given one more chance to resubmit the project report
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and/or appear in oral examination as recommended by the Board.
10.1 The name of the student shall be struck off and / or removed from the rolls of the
Institute on the following grounds:
(ii) Failing to proceed with the program by the exercise of the Art. 4.1, 7.2 or 7.3 of
this Ordinance.
A student withdrawing officially from all courses and / or thesis/project as per Art. 10(v) is
entitled to get a refund of 50% of the course registration fees provided he / she withdraws in
writing through the respective Head of the Department before the expiry of four working
weeks from the commencement of the classes. Thesis / project registration fees in any case
are not refundable.
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APPENDIX-A
FORMAT FOR THESIS OF MASTERS AND PROJECT REPORT OF M.Sc./M.
ENGG
PART A
Formal Requirements
This following set of instructions may be followed as standard format for the thesis / project
report.
1. General requirements
The Department normally requires that a thesis should be submitted for examination in
written format, with supporting materials, artefacts or products as appropriate to the research
program on or before prescribe date.
The thesis shall be in English unless otherwise specified.
1.2. Length of theses
Department does not prescribe the length of a thesis, except to require that no thesis be
longer than 50,000 words. Theses must provide sufficient content material to demonstrate
that students have fulfilled the criteria of the project.
1. Size and Thickness of Paper:
Thesis/project is to be printed on A4 size quality offset paper and minimum weight of paper
should be 80 gm.
2. Typing or Print:
The typeface should be consistent and the copy must be clean for both text and illustration.
Dot matrix printers should not be used unless giving near letter quality. The general text of
the thesis/project report should be spaced at one and a half with single spacing for footnotes
or lengthy quotations. Triple or larger spacing may be used where necessary to set off
headings, subheadings or illustrations. The thesis/project report must be in “letter quality”
print and laser printing is recommended. Any standard type (font) may be used but it must be
consistent throughout. The print size should be at least 10 points (or equivalent) not
exceeding 12 points.
3. Margins and Layout of Text:
There must be a margin of 4 cm to allow for binding on the left hand side of the paper.
Minimum margins of 3 cm are required at the top and the bottom. A 2.5 cm margin is
required at the right hand side. This also applies to tables and figures.
4. Pagination:
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The text is to be numbered consecutively in the bottom middle of the page. The number does
not appear on the first page of the text although is understood to be a numeral ‘1’. All
figures, tables, appendices and similar materials are numbered as pages of the text through to
the end of the thesis/project report. Material preceding the first page of the text is to be
numbered in small roman numerals centered at the bottom of each page. The title page is
considered to be a page but is not so indicated.
5. Word Spacing and Division:
Text should be set to ensure an even spacing between words for any particular line. Word
division at the ends of lines (hyphenation) should be avoided if possible.
6. Illustrations:
Tables, figures, photographs, and other illustrations must always be referred to in the text.
They should be arranged neatly and effectively. They should be in black ink, or be high
quality photocopies, photo-offset, or photographs. They should be presented on paper of
similar weight to that used in the thesis/project report. Oversize maps, charts or diagrams
must be folded so that they can be bound with the pages or inserted in a pocket. Original
photographs or photo-offset must be provided in all required copies of the thesis/project
report. They should be properly pasted on paper with permanent non-wrinkle glue.
Photographs printed on 21.5 cm x 28 cm (8 ½ in x 11 in) photographic paper or photo-
offsets are preferred rather than being pasted on. High quality computer graphics (black and
white or colour) and high-quality colour photocopies are acceptable. All required copies
must be identical. The title of a table must be above the table and the title on the figure,
below the figure. The student should consult with the thesis/project supervisor if any
difficulty arises in the placing of illustrations.
7. Computer Disks:
If a student has to include computer disks as a part of his data, he must submit a disk for
each required copy of this thesis. These must be submitted loosely. It is not necessary to
submit them at the time he schedules his defence. In this case, there should be a pocket in the
thesis/project report on the inside back cover. He should also indicate the presence of
CD/DVD in his Table of Contents.
8. Binding and Colour:
Sewn and bound in strong, waterproof cloth. Not more than 3.5 cm thick. Black colour for
M. Sc Engg; Maroon for M. Engg.
9. Lettering:
In golden on spine only.
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Top : Degree
Middle : Name of author (initials and surname)
Foot : Year of presentation
Cover Page : Centre Justified. Title, Name, Dept., Passing Month Year
Spine : At the bottom and across: the word “MIST”.
90 mm from the bottom and across: the degree and year of project approval,
for example:
MSc
2015
90 mm from the top and across: the initials and surname of the author.
Evenly spaced along the spine, from top to bottom: the title of the thesis. In
cases where the thesis title will not fit along the spine, an abbreviated title
should be provided.
No other lettering or decoration shall appear on the spine.
10. Order of Items:
10.1. Title Page
The student should follow the following instruction for title page:
10.1.1. The title of the thesis should appear in 12 point boldface capital each word.
10.1.2. The word ‘by’ should be in lower case letters.
10.1.3. The name of the author should be in upper and lower case letters, and should
be identical to the one in the copyright page. The name used must be the
student’s legal name as it appears on the MIST records.
10.1.4. Write out the full name of the degree in uppercase letters for which the work
is presented, e.g. MASTER OF SCIENCE IN MECHANICAL
ENGINEERING.
10.1.5. Under major subject, write out your department / Institute or school’s name in
full e.g. Mechanical Engineering.
10.1.6. Type MILITARY INSTITUTE OF SCIENCE AND TECHNICAL (MIST) in
uppercase letters.
10.1.7. The date of the title page should indicate only the year of the defence.
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10.3. Declaration Page:
The Declaration page should be as per the format of Appendix-A.
10.4. Dedication (optional):
10.5 Table of Contents:
The decimal system is advised for mentioning the headings and subheadings of the chapter.
Each heading and subheading appearing in the Table of Contents must appear in the text of
the thesis / project report.
10.6 List of Tables and Figures :
A list of Tables and Figures should follow the Table of Contents. Each should appear on
separate page with the appropriate page numbers. However, if the lists are very short they
may be combined on one page under the title “List of Tables and Figures”. It is advised that
the decimal system (e.g. figure 3.2 is the second figure in chapter 3) be used for figures if
this system is followed for headings.
10.7 List of Abbreviations of Technical Symbols and Terms :
Page of the list of abbreviations of Technical Symbols and Terms should be incorporated
following the page of list of Tables and Figures. In this respect the student is advised to
consult information sources available in the Central Library. These abbreviations are also
frequently found listed at the back of standard texts on technical writing.
10.8. Acknowledgments:
These should be given on a page following the List of Abbreviations of Technical Symbols
and Terms. The student should acknowledge advice, service encouragement, library and
information service support and source of financial support.
10.9. Abstract :
The student is required to incorporate an abstract following the page of acknowledgment.
The abstract must be no longer than can be accommodated in single space type on one side
page only.
10.10. Main Body of Text :
10.10.1 Headings and Sub-headings:
Headings and subheadings of the text must be consistent and correspond to the headings
given in the Table of Contents. Each major chapter should begin on a new page.
10.11. References:
The department does not prescribe the form of referencing to be used, but it is essential that
students be absolutely consistent in their use of a single method throughout the thesis. The
23
style used should accord with norms for the discipline and should be agreed in consultation
with supervisors.
Methods of referencing a wide variety of source materials and information on bibliographies
are given in the End Chapters. This volume also contains valuable information on writing
conventions and copy preparation, and all candidates are strongly advised to consult it.
Part B also offers some suggestions.
10.12 Appendices:
Appendices should contain supplementary material that the author considers necessary to the
interpretation of the text itself. Long tables, essential raw data, detailed reports or computer
are generally more appropriately included in an appendix. Appendices should not be longer
that the body of the thesis and normally would be considerably shorter. If there is more than
one appendix, the appendices should be numbered in sequence using Arabic numerals.
Appendices should be numbered as A-1, A-2, … B-1, B-2… etc. for respective appendix.
PART B
STRUCTURE OF A THESIS
24
An Overall Framework for Theses
Thesis Item Purpose
Abstract A 200-250 word general description of the thesis, and main subjects
covered therein. This is used by libraries for cataloguing purposes.
The abstract is the first page seen by a reader after the title page.
Abstract pages are normally not numbered.
Acknowledgments An optional section which acknowledges the contributions of other
researchers or organisations which have made facilities available to
the researcher. No page numbering is ascribed to the
Acknowledgments section
Table of Contents A listing of all chapters, sections and subsections, followed by a
listing of all line-art drawings (referred to as "figures"),
photographs/grey-scale images (referred to as "plates") and tables.
Page numbering for this section of the thesis normally consists of
lower-case Roman Numerals in brackets - for example (i), (ii), etc.
Chapter 1 - This is the most crucial chapter in the thesis and the one which
Introduction requires the most careful consideration. The reader must be
(Thesis Body) introduced, in a step by step fashion, to the purpose of the project,
concepts and ideas related to the project and the structure of the
following sections of the thesis. This section should endeavour to
treat technical issues in a qualitative manner so that the reader can
clearly understand the task at hand, without reference to other texts or
periodicals. Formal page numbering for the body of the thesis begins
in this section. Pages should preferably be numbered in a simple
sequential order and should be chapter independent (ie: page numbers
such as 1.2, 2.7 are not appropriate).
Chapters 2..N This is the portion of the thesis in which literature surveys are
(Thesis Body) discussed, research and development techniques are explained,
theories, models and systems formulated and results evaluated. In
general, the body of the thesis should be free from long, complex
calculations, routine mathematical proofs, program code or large
volumes of raw data. Page numbering continues on from the
introductory chapter.
Chapter N+1 This should draw together the main findings of the research program,
Conclusions and together with findings of literature surveys carried out at the beginning
Recommendations and the end of the research program. Recommendations should also be
for Further Work made for future research in related areas. Page numbering should be a
continuation from the previous section.
References A listing of all references from which data has been abstracted for the
purposes of the thesis. Preferably, the references should be listed in
the order in which they are referred to in the body of the thesis. Page
numbering is a continuation of previous sections.
Appendices Appendices are used to store important calculations, proofs, tables or
code which would interrupt the flow of qualitative descriptions in the
body of the thesis. Each appendix has its own page numbering
scheme. For example, Appendix A would have numbers A-1, A-2,
etc. Appendix X would have numbers X-1, X-2, etc.
Index This is generally an optional section in which common words or
phrases, occurring in the body of the thesis are referenced to page
numbers. Modern word-processors make the task of compiling an
index considerably easier and hence authors may wish to include
them. Page numbering can be a continuation of the Appendix Format.
25
Thesis Complexity by Chapter
Complexity Chapter Function
Lay-reader Abstract
Lay-reader 1 Introduction
2 Literature Review
Expert 3 Methodology and Implementation
4 Experimental Procedures for Methodology Assessment
5 Experimental Results and Observations
6 Broad Context Discussion of Results and Relevance
Lay-reader 7 Conclusions and Recommendations for Further Work
- - References
- - Appendices
Chapter Complexity and Linking
Complexi Sectio Function Comments
ty n
Lay- X.1 Overview Provides an overview of the chapter
reader and its structure, and a description of
what is intended to be achieved by
providing this documentation
A description of why and how this
chapter follows on from the previous
chapter
X.2
Expert X.3
X.4
X.5
:
Lay- X.N Summation A summary of what the chapter
reader contains
A description of how this leads into
the next chapter
Referencing
1. SMITH, A. and Jones, B., "New Techniques in Integral Calculus", International
Journal of Mathematics, Volume 6, No. 23, 1977, Pages 221-229
2. HARRIS, D., "Dynamic Control of a.c. Servo-Motors", 2nd Edition, Addison
Wesley Publishers, 1992, Pages 34-77
26. BROWN, F., Nguyen, P. and Tanh, H., "Interfacing Power Electronics to
Modern Computers", Proceedings, 43rd IEE International Conference on
Electrical Engineering, Seattle, USA, 1989, Pages 231-234.
26
Grammatical Tense
Most thesis authors experience major difficulties with tense in their documents. Many
theses become a muddled mixture of past, present and future tense. To alleviate this
problem, a simple solution is to treat the thesis as a historical document which will be read
many years from the date of publication. The following grammatical procedure can then be
adopted:
(i) All general discussions and all discussions of experiments, equipment, etc. are
written in the past tense (e.g., "The test-tubes were acquired from a standard
batch that was available at the time of experimentation...")
(ii) References to mathematical formulae are written in the present tense (e.g.,
"Equation 7.2 highlights the relationship between...").
(iii) References to objects (sections, tables, diagrams, etc.) in the thesis are in the
present tense (e.g., "Section 2.9 contains a discussion on...")
(iv) References to future work are also written in the past tense (e.g., "It was
determined that future developments could lead to an increase in...")
Many authors are concerned about writing in the past tense but they need not be. The fact
that something is written in the past tense does not mean that it no longer exists - only that it
existed as a matter of historical record at the time of research.
Unless one is highly skilled in English grammar, it is unwise to attempt to write a thesis in
the present tense. The outcome of such a direction is that complex conflicts arise between
the movement from historical record to current events to future predictions.
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ANNEX-1
The thesis titled .................................................................................................................
.....................................................................................................................................................
.......................................................Submitted by.....................................................
.........................................Roll No....................................Session.....................................
......................has been accepted as satisfactory in partial fulfillment of the requirement for
the degree of................................................................................................................
.......................................................................................................on...............................
BOARD OF EXAMINERS
1. ( Signature ) Chairman
Name of the supervisor
Designation & Address
2. ( Signature ) Member
Name of the Internal Member
Designation & Address
3. ( Signature ) Member
Name of the Internal Member
Designation & Address
4. ( Signature ) Member
Name of the Head of Dept (Ex-
officio)
Designation & Address
5. ( Signature ) Member
Name of the External Member (External)
Designation & Address
28
APPENDIX - A
CANDIDATE’S DECLARATION
It is hereby declared that this thesis or any part of it has not been submitted elsewhere for the
award of any degree or diploma.
29
APPENDIX - B
ACADEMIC FEES
* Caution Money may be refunded if the student withdraws officially from the entire course
including project or at the end of his academic program and the amount will be determined
from the statement of clearance from all Departments/Institutes/Offices.
30