Project Proposal Format
Project Proposal Format
A project (or thesis) proposal should have six components: title page, abstract,
objectives of proposed work, summary and conclusion, proposed schedule, and
references. In addition, a signature page should be attached to the front of the
proposal, which will be reviewed and approved by the Graduate Committee.
Guidelines for preparing these components are presented below. A sample
proposal is attached to demonstrate how these guidelines are applied.
The proposal is written in 3rd person. Often this results in passive voice. It should
not contain “I”, “we”, “me”, “mine”, “ours” or other first person words. The
proposal is a statement of future work, and the parts to be done should be in
future tense. Those items discovered in the state of the art can be in present or
past tense, while those items in the literature are typically in past tense.
The Project Proposal follows IEEE format for a paper or submission.
1 Signature Page
List the title of the proposal, your name, the supervising professor's name, your
advisor's name, the name of the co-advisor, and the names of the Graduate
Committee members. At the bottom of the page, list your address, student
number, phone number, and email address.
2 Title Page
List the title of the proposal, your name, and the supervising professor's name.
Often combined with the signature page on a proposal.
3 Abstract
The abstract should not exceed 150 words. Write one or two sentences on each
of these points: the motivation, tasks, and significance of the project.
The abstract provides the reader with a quick summary of the proposed project.
It may contain the hypothesis and a quick statement of work. An abstract allows
the reader to quickly determine if they should read the rest of the paper. These
are often read quickly by people performing research. A simple example is
below:
This paper proposes a new channel model for pedestrian mobile data
devices allowing improved digital video reception. The project will
measure channel conditions around SJSU in the downtown San Jose
area, and develop a model that matches the observed conditions. The
project will compare 2X4 MIMO and 4X4 MIMO OFDM using the new
channel model.
4 Objectives of Proposed Work
Present what the proposed work plans to accomplish. Explain the outcome
expected and its significance if your hypothesis is validated by experimental
work.
5 Introduction
Discuss the motivation and the need for the proposed work. Present background
information on the proposed work and describe current work in the subject area.
The introduction explains the project in quick simple terms. It allows introduction
of terms used in the rest of the proposal. The introduction typically exposes the
benefit that will be mentioned in the hypothesis. It can also set the position of the
project in a social or related to the state of the art. The introduction should state
what is unique or different in this project from all other projects. The introduction
is the first part of the process of:
• Tell them what you are going to say
• Say it
• Tell them you said it
5.1 Hypothesis
The hypothesis provides the reader with an understanding of what will be done,
and the expected benefit. It is normally in the form of “if X, then Y” or “Y results if
X”. Some simple examples of the Hypothesis are below.
VOIP spam can be reduced using a time of day call map
If an algorithmic ADC is changed from switched voltage to switched
current, the costs will be reduced
Asynchronous design can reduce clock tree power and be a benefit in
low power designs.
Four level logic can result in faster multiplier implementation
6.1 Method
Describe the methods that will be used to achieve the objective, what tools and
resources will be required, and how the hypothesis will be tested. The method
section includes block diagrams, flow charts, and other aids to enable the reader
to quickly understand how things will be accomplished and how measurements
will be taken.
6.3 Specification
The specification section has two major elements. The first of these are
environmental assumptions. The second are measurement methods. The
measurable results will be used to determine if the hypothesis was validated.
Examples of environmental assumptions:
• 0.13u process
• Synthesis library
• AWGN channel models
• Single fault model
• Limited set of network attacks
• FPGA type and speed
• Data converter specifications for DSP algorithms
• Compatible with 802.11n
Examples of measurement methods:
• reduction of Bit Error Rate using MAC error reporting hardware
• smaller die area by measuring layout
• reduction in Cycles per Instruction measured by Verilog test bench code
• packets per second filtered as measured with two network sniffers
9 References
List sources cited in the body of the proposal. In the report, number your
references consecutively and enclose the reference number in brackets, e.g.
"Pekmestzi [14] suggested the use of complex binary digit." The reference
sources cited in this section should be in IEEE reference format, e.g. K. Z.
Pekmestzi and G. D. Papadopoulos, "Cellular Two's Complement Serial-parallel
Pipeline Multiplier," Radio and Electronic Engineering, Vol. 49, pp. 575-580,
1979.