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ITB/Electronics
Master’s Thesis
The aim of a scientific thesis
• gained insight in methodology for planning and performance of a scientific project
• qualification to carry out a scientifically interesting task
• capability of communicating in writing and speech
• capability of using advanced literature• skills of documenting in a scientific way
To show:
• Fundamental levels:
Basic level Engineering diploma
Advanced level Master’s degree
Academic levels
Prerequisites
• Approved results of at least 60 ECTS in the Master´s Program
• Approved results of such courses which are of importance for the success of the specific thesis assignment, i.e., Advanced-level courses in the major subject
Thesis disposition• Preface (no pagination)
The preface is a product of the student. In the preface it is customary to thank those which considerably have contributed to the work.
Thesis disposition• Preface (no pagination)• Abstract (no pagination)
The Abstract is a summary of the work, and should contain all major parts of the work. Nothing which is not found in the report may be presented in the Abstract.
Thesis disposition• Preface (no pagination)• Abstract (no pagination)• Table of contents (no pagination)
Reference to pages where chapters and subsections may be found.
Thesis disposition• Preface (no pagination)• Abstract (no pagination)• Table of contents (no pagination)• 1. Introduction
Should give the reader an introduction to the work, the background, and the aim.
Thesis disposition• Preface (no pagination)• Abstract (no pagination)• Table of contents (no pagination)• 1. Introduction• 2. Theory
Presentation of theories used in the work.
Thesis disposition• Preface (no pagination)• Abstract (no pagination)• Table of contents (no pagination)• 1. Introduction• 2. Theory• 3. Process and results
The theory is applied on the subject. Results are presented.
Thesis disposition• Preface (no pagination)• Abstract (no pagination)• Table of contents (no pagination)• 1. Introduction• 2. Theory• 3. Process and results• 4. Discussion
Discuss the results and the method chosen, the strengths and weaknesses of the work.
Thesis disposition• Preface (no pagination)• Abstract (no pagination)• Table of contents (no pagination)• 1. Introduction• 2. Theory• 3. Process and results• 4. Discussion• 5. Conclusions
Here the work should be concluded and the major results presented. Suggestions of continuation and spin-off projects may be brought forward.
Thesis disposition• Preface (no pagination)• Abstract (no pagination)• Table of contents (no pagination)• 1. Introduction• 2. Theory• 3. Process and results• 4. Discussion• 5. Conclusions• References
The conventions must be followed unless your supervisor and/or examiner is recommending otherwise.
Thesis disposition• Preface (no pagination)• Abstract (no pagination)• Table of contents (no pagination)• 1. Introduction• 2. Theory• 3. Process and results• 4. Discussion• 5. Conclusions• References• Appendices
Here material is placed not needed for the comprehension of the work, e.g., extensive calculations, computer programs and data listing.
Thesis disposition• Preface (no pagination)• Abstract (no pagination)• Table of contents (no pagination)• 1. Introduction• 2. Theory• 3. Process and results• 4. Discussion• 5. Conclusions• References• Appendices
Three players in the examination drama
• Respondent = you
• Opponent = also you, but...
...in another student’s seminar
• Examiner = the referee
• Presenting identical theses to the examiner and opponent at least 14 days before examination date.
• After this date no changes whatsoever may occur in the thesis.
• An errata list (list of corrections) can be handed out in the beginning of the seminar.
The Respondent’s tasks
• Thoroughly penetrate the contents and give constructive criticism on:oral presentation written presentation technical contents and academic approach
• 15 minutes for review. Keep this time limit.
• A written review is given to the examiner and the respondent.
The Opponent’s tasks
• The examiner is not the supervisor• The task of the supervisor is
consultative• The task of the examiner is to criticize
and judge the result• The examiner is acting in place of the
government
The Examiner’s tasks
• Presiding at the seminar • Criticize the thesis work as regards:
oral and written presentation technical content and scientific approach
• If the thesis is not acceptable this is told either: in advance, or during the seminar
• The final thesis when revised is marked with Grade A - E
The Examiner’s tasks
• Criticize the opposition • If opposition is bad, the examiner takes
over • The work of the opponent is given
Pass/Godkänd or Fail/Underkänd • If opposition Pass, this is marked in the
green book of the opponent
The Examiner’s tasks
• Is the aim of the report in good agreement with what is performed?
• Do you find the main thread throughout the work?• Is the argumentation well supported by theory,
references, or the author’s own logical reasoning?• Is the Abstract really a summary of the entire work, or
is it limping? Is the Abstract reader friendly, or is it more like an alienated compilation of cut-outs from the report?
• Is it likely that the author has read and understood all the references used?
• Is the chosen method the best alternative in this context?
• Is the author showing creativity in the conclusions?• Is the report written according to the conventions
pointed out in this document?
Opposition
• elaborate thoroughly on the idea • allocate resources for e.g. supervision of
the thesis work• formally sign an agreement on the
employer’s sincere intention of supporting the student in order to achieve results efficiently
Application formThe application form is forcing the employer who came up with the idea of the thesis work or his/her superior to:
It is your insurance if the assigned supervisor says
”I don’t have time for that!”
Application form
Fill the Thesis Application Formcarefully!