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University of Hohenheim

Institute for Crop Production and Grassland Research (340)

Prof. Dr. Wilhelm Claupein

Guidelines for Thesis Writing


(Bachelors and Masters)

Compiled by

R Valluru
S Gruber

December 2008
Guidelines for Thesis Writing
Page 2 of 18

Graduate students often struggle to organize their hard


work into a potentially strong project/thesis to fascinate
academics for higher grades. Although, the type of
work you have done in the last few months/years plays
a key role for making ‘the best thesis’, the style and
format, which you have adopted to distribute your
innovative ideas to the scientific community might be
an important factor. Here, these tips and points might
help you for making not only a good thesis with
professional appearance, but also help to put you on
the top in your future efforts.

Institute for Crop Production and Grassland Research (340), University of Hohenheim, Stuttgart, Germany
Guidelines for Thesis Writing
Page 3 of 18

Table of Contents
1 Getting started 4

2 Cover page 4

3 Thesis structure 5

3.1 Title page 5

3.2 Table of contents 5

3.3 List of abbreviations 6

3.4 List of tables 6

3.5 List of figures 6

3.6 Introduction 6

3.7 Materials and methods 6

3.8 Results 7

3.9 Discussion 7

3.10 Summary/conclusions 8

3.11 References 8

3.12 Appendices 8

3.13 Authors declaration 9

3.14 Dedication and acknowledgements 9

3.15 Review of literature 9

4 Style and format 9

4.1 Main text 9

4.2 References 10

4.3 Page layout 11

4.4 Fonts 11

4.5 Numbering 12

4.6 Tables 12

4.7 Titles 13

4.8 Figures 14

5 Appendices 15

5.1 Cover page 15

5.2 Declaration 16

5.3 Criteria for thesis evaluation 17

Institute for Crop Production and Grassland Research (340), University of Hohenheim, Stuttgart, Germany
Guidelines for Thesis Writing
Page 4 of 18

1 Getting started

Before start your thesis writing, resume a few questions and answers in your mind to serve yourself
better, “what have you thought to do?”, “what have you done?”, “what you want to write”. As you
are going to put forward a new research problem with possible solutions into the doors of the
scientific world, your thesis should likely answer the basic questions that may arise in the potential
usage of the results in the future. However, it is not necessary to provide all information that are
directly or indirectly related to your research, but ensure providing the basic knowledge for the
comprehensive understanding of the whole idea.

You thesis will become a formal document. That means it may be used by specialists and non-
specialists for knowledge dissemination. Importantly, sometimes your research results may provide
potential future paths for further development. Thus, your thesis should be precise with basic
knowledge. In cases where your thesis does not meet the minimum knowledge provision, you may
have high chances of being asked for revising the text to meet the standard information. Under
extreme situations, you may need to carry out the lacking part of the research, although it might be
unusual.

2 Cover page

Cover page is optional. If you are interested, you can define the bound thesis copy, by providing
basic information. Collectively, these can be grouped under “Cover Page”, which can also become
the front page of the thesis (Appendix A). It generally contains information like

ƒ Title of the thesis


ƒ Author name, followed by previous qualification if applicable
ƒ Department, University
ƒ Name of the Supervisor
ƒ Month and year of submission

Institute for Crop Production and Grassland Research (340), University of Hohenheim, Stuttgart, Germany
Guidelines for Thesis Writing
Page 5 of 18

3 Thesis structure

Although writing styles often vary from thesis to thesis and university-to-university, the
most widely accepted and generalized thesis formats may be composed with all necessary
information.

You original thesis text starts now. Broadly you can divide this section into different
sections/subsections with appropriate headings for easy understanding of the thesis. It may
contain components such as (titles in bold are essential, rest are either optional or
according to necessity)

3.1 Title page


3.2 Table of contents
3.3 List of abbreviations
3.4 List of tables
3.5 List of figures
3.6 Introduction
3.7 Materials and methods
3.8 Results
3.9 Discussion
3.10 Summary/conclusions
3.11 References
3.12 Appendices
3.13 Author’s declaration
3.14 Dedication and acknowledgements
3.15 Review of literature

3.1 Title page

Title page should be the same as cover page. Although it is not necessary to follow the
same order, or same page, it should contain the information mentioned in the cover page
section (Appendix A).

Institute for Crop Production and Grassland Research (340), University of Hohenheim, Stuttgart, Germany
Guidelines for Thesis Writing
Page 6 of 18

3.2 Table of contents

The different parts of the thesis are presented in a sequential manner along with page
numbers which allows for easy reference to the reader. The contents may be divided and
sub-divided when necessary. Do not insert too many sub-chapters, and limit the hierarchy
to 3 levels.

3.3 List of abbreviations

The long forms of abbreviations and units of measurements used in the thesis should be
given as a list.

3.4 List of tables

A list of tables along with their page numbers should be given for easy and quick
reference.

3.5 List of figures

A list of figures along with their page numbers should be given for easy and quick
reference.

3.6 Introduction

This is the first chapter of the thesis. The introduction should state the background and
reasons of the research problem. Typically, it should deal with “what…why…how”
approach, by discussing previous literature that support your basic hypothesis and
research work. Provide the necessary background for clear understanding and putting the
reader into the context of your main hypothesis. Do not summarize your results. At the
end of the introduction clearly mention the aims/objectives and hypotheses of the
proposed topic of research that you intend to test in a sequential manner. Shortly,

Situation >> problems >> open questions >> what can we do >> how can we solve
the problem (lab, field etc.) >> aims/objectives >> hypotheses

Institute for Crop Production and Grassland Research (340), University of Hohenheim, Stuttgart, Germany
Guidelines for Thesis Writing
Page 7 of 18

3.7 Materials and Methods

The second chapter of the thesis should cover the materials that were used/required for the
experiments and the different procedures and protocols followed. Experimental designs
and methods of statistical analyses should be mentioned. Methods should be described
precisely that enough to allow replicates. For field experiments, the following details might
be worthwhile to mention.

ƒ Site description including geography, climate, and soil properties,


ƒ Experimental designs such as RBD, CRBD, split-plot etc.,
ƒ Inputs of the experiments such as plant material used, treatments imposed, other
inter- and intra-cultural practices carried out,
ƒ Information on sampling methods, observations, and devices and equipment
used along with their manufacturer details,
ƒ Methods of analysis for chemical substances along with their manufacturer
details,
ƒ Statistical procedures and softwares’ with due acknowledgement of their
respective developers.

3.8 Results

The findings of the research work should be presented in this chapter. Tables and figures
should be given and important points should be explained textually. Statistical analyses
should be presented in both tables and figures with appropriate significance levels. Do not
interpret the results, just describe them. Multiple comparisons might reveal more
information, but don’t mess-up all results. Key results may be highlighted in bold. This
section may be broken into several sub-sections. The headings/sub-headings should be
short, informative and represent the actual message.

3.9 Discussion

The discussion should not contain repetition of the results. Rather it should explore the
implications of the results by considering the relevant published research, which may be
in agreement/disagreement with your hypothesis. It should be as concise as possible, but
be provided in a logical manner. Collectively, this section should have coordination
between your results and previous literature. It is not necessary all the time that your
results should support previous reports, however, while interpreting the results should be
done in an acceptable manner.

Institute for Crop Production and Grassland Research (340), University of Hohenheim, Stuttgart, Germany
Guidelines for Thesis Writing
Page 8 of 18

If your results have new findings that are not yet published anywhere, don’t hesitate to
discuss those findings, but provide closely related literature to support that hypothesis. Key
findings may be kept in bold and avoid common words like good, bad, positive, negative
etc. because they are misunderstandable.

The majority of literature used should be from peer-reviewed, international journals and
should be from recent years. However, in such cases where scare literature exists, using
old (past 5-10 years) literature may be appropriate. Also if there is a ‘classical’ reference,
you should mention it. Try to use primary sources of literature, which originally proposed
the main idea. Do not use internet-sources, which are not reliable. However, you can use
information from official pages such as FAO statistics or governmental pages. Altogether,
only a few www- references should be used.

3.10 Summary/conclusions

The summary should state clearly the main objectives & conclusions of the research and
give a clear explanation of their importance and relevance. In conclusions part, you
should make comprehensive statements of your own research findings. These should not
mess-up with any reported findings other than your research. In future perspectives, you
should provide information as to how your research results will be beneficial for future
research.

3.11 References

All publications cited in the text should be presented in a list of references following
summary. The entire thesis text should be carefully checked to ensure that the spelling of
authors’ names and dates are exactly the same in the text as in the reference list.

Any missing references in the list may cause inconvenience to the future readers. In the
text, references should be arranged in a chronological order based on author name, and
alphabetical order in the reference list. Try to avoid usage of internet sources, as they may
not available in the future.

3.12 Appendices

Appendices should be placed at the end of the thesis. They represent important material to
support your hypothesis, but too large to fit in the main frame of the text. Generally, they

Institute for Crop Production and Grassland Research (340), University of Hohenheim, Stuttgart, Germany
Guidelines for Thesis Writing
Page 9 of 18

contain detailed background data tables, detailed formulas, maps etc. You can also
provide interesting illustrations. Although appendices do not contain any text information,
a title could be provided for each appendix.

3.13 Author’s declaration

The author should give a signed declaration stating the originality of the research work.
This indicates that the work was done entirely by the author and the elements in the thesis
are not a copy of or similar to any other thesis submitted/published elsewhere (Appendix
B).

3.14 Acknowledgements and dedication

It is important to acknowledge and thank your supervisor(s), other people and


organizations who helped with the research work and thesis writing. Also it looks
appropriate if you offer sincere thanks to the funding agency, if you are supported by any.
Finally, it is authors wish whether to dedicate the thesis to their loved ones or not.

3.15 Review of literature

Review of literature is optional. If you are interested in providing a comprehensive outlook


on your research area, and work done in the past, you are free to include a separate
chapter as review of literature. However, it is not compulsory. If you have chosen to
provide a review of literature, this chapter should follow the introduction chapter.

4. Style and format

4.1 Main text

The text of the thesis should be written in precise manner. As the total text is a mixture of
sections/headings/sub-headings/main text, each section should contain relevant
information. Sentences should be written in short way. Latin names of a plant or animal
species should be written in italics. The L. for ‘Linné’, however should not be italicized.
Latin names must be written completely when mentioned first time and have to be
abbreviated if mentioned further. The entire thesis should be written in ‘past tense’ with
consistent style of writing. However, when discussing points of your views and according
to the context, you can often use ‘present tense’ also. Entire text should be organized in

Institute for Crop Production and Grassland Research (340), University of Hohenheim, Stuttgart, Germany
Guidelines for Thesis Writing
Page 10 of 18

1.5 spacing with full justification, with small indentation at the beginning of the second
paragraph onwards.

Avoid sentences like “Claupein has written in the year 2008 that the grain yield…”, and
write in a better way like “The grain yield was higher in….(Claupein, 2008)”. Numerals
less than 10 should be written in letters. Use scientific language while writing and avoid
terms like “I have found” or “We have found”. Try to use indirect language such as “the
site was located at…”. Take enough care that there are no blanks or other errors. Search
for common errors such as blank full stop, blank blank etc. Do this systematically for the
last check of your thesis. Do not insert any foot notes except for the tables.

4.2 References

References should be limited. In most cases, 40–50 references are probably sufficient for a
master thesis and ca. 20 for a bachelor thesis. Arrange them in chronological order in the
text. Citation of the secondary literature should succeed the primary literature. Format all
references in the following style.

ƒ One author – mention author name and year – (Claupein, 2008).


ƒ Two authors – mention two authors name and year – (Claupein & Gruber, 2008).
ƒ More than two authors – mention first author and et al. year (Claupein et al.,
2008).
ƒ In case, more than two references are included for supporting the hypothesis,
arrange in year wise - (Claupein, 2006; Gruber & Claupein, 2007; Valluru et al.,
2008).

In the references list, references should be arranged alphabetically based on author’s


name. For name of the journals, write full name of the journal. Use the following system
for arranging your references and note the proper position of the punctuation. All
references should be arranged in hanging style except first line.

Journal citations:

Wingler A. 2008. The role of sugars in integrating environmental signals during the
regulation of leaf senescence. Journal of Experimental Botany 57: 391–399.

Wingler S.A., Purdy S.K. 2008. The role of sugars in integrating environmental signals
during the regulation of leaf senescence. Journal of Experimental Botany 57: 391–
399.

Institute for Crop Production and Grassland Research (340), University of Hohenheim, Stuttgart, Germany
Guidelines for Thesis Writing
Page 11 of 18

Wingler A., Purdy S., MacLean J.A. 2008. The role of sugars in integrating environmental
signals during the regulation of leaf senescence. Journal of Experimental Botany 57:
391–399.

In press articles:

Wingler A., Purdy S., MacLean J.A. 2008. The role of sugars in integrating environmental
signals during the regulation of leaf senescence. Journal of Experimental Botany,
doi:10.1016/jtplants/2008.05.0599. (in press).

Dissertations and Theses:

Wingler A. 2008. The role of sugars in integrating environmental signals during the
regulation of leaf senescence. Dissertation, University of Hohenheim, Germany, pp
125.

Citation from a book:

Wingler A. 2008. The role of sugars in integrating environmental signals during the
regulation of leaf senescence. Science Publishers, New Delhi, India, pp 125.

Citation from a book chapter:

Wingler A. 2008. The role of sugars in integrating environmental signals during the
regulation of leaf senescence. In: MacLean JA, Purdy S,(Eds.), The role of sugars in
plant metabolism. CRC Publishers, London, UK, pp 125.

Internet sources:

Wingler A. 2008. Micronutrients effect on root rhizobia and its colonization. Available:
http://www.healingdaily.com/detoxification-diet/sugar.htm (25.06.2008).

4.3 Page layout

All pages should be arranged and produced in A4-size paper. Tables and illustrations
should also be according to the page size. Pages should be printed on one side only. Set
the page margins 25 mm on top, right and bottom of the pages, while the left margin
should be kept 35 mm to allow binding.

All pages should be numbered except the title page. Table of contents, lists of
abbreviations, lists of tables and figures should be numbered in Roman numerals. Original
numbering (Arabic numerals such as 1, 2, 3…) should be start from introduction.

Institute for Crop Production and Grassland Research (340), University of Hohenheim, Stuttgart, Germany
Guidelines for Thesis Writing
Page 12 of 18

4.4 Fonts
In order to maintain text consistency, the font style should be common throughout the
thesis. Standard fonts such as ‘Times Roman’ or ‘Arial’ should be used for the body text.
However for headings/sub-headings, you may use another font.

The font size should be used 12 in case of ‘Times Roman’. However, in case of ‘Arial’, font
size of 11 may be sufficient. In case of headings/sub-headings, font size 16 with bold, for
sub-headings 14 with bold may be used.

For example:

2. Materials and Methods (‘Arial’ 16, bold)


2.1 Plant material (‘Arial’ 14, bold)

A single F1 hybrid plant, generated from crossing individual genotypes of partially


inbred-lines of the perennial ryegrass (Lolium perenne L.) varieties Perma and Aurora,
was self-pollinated to give a seed yield of something over 200 seeds. Germination was
good and initially 200 plants were raised. After the first 3yr 192 plants remained
following the loss of a few weak plants. The F1 population has subsequently stabilized at
188 plants. These plants show good vigour and have been maintained successfully by
regular vegetative propagation of small subsets of tillers for over 10yr… ….

4.5 Numbering
Numbering should be done in Arabic numerals throughout the thesis except for the front
pages, as indicated above. To avoid confusion to the readers, up to 3 levels numbering
would be appropriate. Generally for chapters should be level 1, headings should be level
2, sub-headings should be level 3. It should be
At 1 level – 1.XXX
At 2 level – 1.1 XXX
At 3 level – 1.1.1 XXX
Tables, figures and appendices should be numbered accordingly.

Institute for Crop Production and Grassland Research (340), University of Hohenheim, Stuttgart, Germany
Guidelines for Thesis Writing
Page 13 of 18

4.6. Tables
Tables should be numbered as they appear in the text. Try to avoid excessive tabulation
and duplication data. The captions should be short and informative so that it is possible to
understand a graph/table without surrounding text. They should be inserted close to the
place where they were mentioned first time. Do not reproduce table data into figures.
Statistical significance levels should be clear and should indicate in the legends along with
number of replication. Generally tables should be arranged in between text for easy
interpretation. Try to arrange the table always to the left margin of the page. Title has to be
given top of the table. Try to avoid too many decimal points, according to the value of
your results. If you have a yield value of 1500.868 t ha-1 it makes no sense to give the
decimals. For results, up to two decimals, and for statistical significance, up to 3-4
decimals might be sufficient. The values which are not significant indicate with ´NS´.
Avoid vertical lines and too many horizontal lines (see example).

For example:

Table 1. Correlations between tissue polymeric fructan content and selected


growth parameters

*, **, *** indicates significance at P< 0.001, 0.01, 0.05, respectively.


NS
indicates non-significant. (n=38).

4.7 Titles
Title should be informative and short. Generally it should contain independent, dependant
variables, crop and conditions/regions etc.
For example:

Effect of “independent variable” on “dependant variables” in “crop” under


“conditions/regions”.

However, it is always flexible and should be written according to your context.

Institute for Crop Production and Grassland Research (340), University of Hohenheim, Stuttgart, Germany
Guidelines for Thesis Writing
Page 14 of 18

4.8 Figures

Figures are simple indicators for easy interpretation of your data. If possible tables may be
substituted by figures, but the values have to be shown in the annexure. Giving clear
labels and legends to the figures is important to allow for easy understanding by the
reader. Although colour figures look attractive, try to avoid in thesis, as colour figures may
not be reproduced with full clarity. Legends should be given clearly. Try to indicate
standard error values as vertical/horizontal bars. X and Y axis-parameters should be clear
and their units should be provided. Try to use common scale for all the co-figures in one
figure, as it may highlight your significance standards. According to the requirement, data
may be presented as either bar diagram or line diagram or some other form, but make sure
that the type of diagram should represent your data at best. For correlation diagrams,
provide correlation coefficient. In case of more than two sub-figures in one figure, use
alphabet to indicate the respective sub-figure. Title has to be kept below the figure. Do not
use 3-D figures, if there is no need. Significance levels and standard errors should be
included in the figure. Do not write the numerals of the value in the figure.
For example:

Fig.1. xxxxx

Institute for Crop Production and Grassland Research (340), University of Hohenheim, Stuttgart, Germany
Guidelines for Thesis Writing
Page 15 of 18

5. Appendices
5.1 Appendix A: Cover page

UNIVERSITY OF HOHENHEIM
Institute for Crop Production and Grassland Research (340)

Prof. Dr. Wilhelm Claupein

Title of the Thesis

Master/Bachelor Thesis
submitted by

Name of the student


Place of resident

August 2008

Institute for Crop Production and Grassland Research (340), University of Hohenheim, Stuttgart, Germany
Guidelines for Thesis Writing
Page 16 of 18

5.2 Authors declaration

Declaration

I hereby declares that the thesis entitled “----“ has been carried out in the Institute for Crop
Production and Grassland Research, University of Hohenheim, Stuttgart, Germany under the
guidance of Prof. Dr. Wilhelm Claupein. The work is original and has not been submitted in part or
full by me for any degree or diploma at any other University.

I further declare that the material obtained from other sources has been duly acknowledged in the
thesis.

(Signature of the student)

Date:
Place: Hohenheim, Stuttgart, Germany

Institute for Crop Production and Grassland Research (340), University of Hohenheim, Stuttgart, Germany
Guidelines for Thesis Writing
Page 17 of 18

5.3 Criteria for Thesis evaluation

Planung/Konzeption/Planning and conception A B C D fail

Zeitmanagement/ Selbstständig, sinnvolle Zeiteinteilung


Time management Independent, sensible, timing

Abgrenzung des Problems/ Präzise, selbstständig, realistisch – unklar, diffus


Defining of the problem Precise, independent, realistic, unclear, vague

Selektion der angewandten Qualitative Auswahl, Überblick über Methoden – mangelnder Überblick,
Methoden/ keine Selektion
Selection of the methods Qualitative choice, overview about methods, lack of overview, no
selection

Durchführung/Execution

Fleiß, Engagement/ Hoch interessiert – nicht vorhanden


Diligence, commitment Highly interested, not available

Selbstständigkeit/ Selbstständig – nur unter Anleitung


Independence Independent, only under guidance

Wiss. Arbeiten/ Überlegt, konzentriert, eigene Ideen, Organisation, Gestaltung –


Research work unkonzentriert, nachlässig
Thought over, concentrated, own ideas, organization – unconcentrated,
careless

Schriftliche Ausführung/Written execution

Gliederung/ Selbstständig, strukturiert, logisch – chaotisch


Structure Independent, structured, logical – chaotic

Problemstellung, Klar abgegrenzt, roter Faden, konkret – diffus


Zielsetzung/ Clearly defined, red thread, concrete, vague
Definition of problems and
objectives
Zusammenfassung/ Knapp, präzise – schwammig
Summary Scarce, precise – porous

Darstellung der Ergebnisse/ Angemessen, Auswahl vernünftig, objektiv – unangemessen, subjektiv


Presentation of results adequate, rational choice, impartial – inadequate, subjective

Literatur/ Aktuell, richtig zitiert, angemessen – veraltet


Literature Up to date, rightly cited, adequate – old, outdated

Sprache/ Präzise, wiss. Terminologie, Rechtschreibung, Fehler etc.


Language Precise, research terminology, correctly written, mistakes etc.

Format/ Korrekt?! Abkürzungen, Tabellenüberschriften, Abbildungsunterschriften


Format etc.
Correct, abbreviations, naming of table, legends etc.

Institute for Crop Production and Grassland Research (340), University of Hohenheim, Stuttgart, Germany
Guidelines for Thesis Writing
Page 18 of 18

WARNING

Piracy is criminal. Do not follow copy & paste technique from the
internet. Do not translate sentence or paragraph from other authors,
unless you are sure that this is a free-citation. Otherwise it is criminal
with the consequence that your thesis is not accepted. This may
disqualify your thesis even several years later.

Institute for Crop Production and Grassland Research (340), University of Hohenheim, Stuttgart, Germany

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