Top Banner
SPECIFICATIONS FOR THESES AND DISSERTATIONS (T/D) MISSOURI UNIVERSITY OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY GRADUATE STUDIES Revised 7-16-2009
65

Specifications for Theses and Dissertations

Feb 14, 2017

Download

Documents

duonglien
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Specifications for Theses and Dissertations

i

SPECIFICATIONS FOR THESES AND DISSERTATIONS (T/D)

MISSOURI UNIVERSITY OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY

GRADUATE STUDIES

Revised 7-16-2009

Page 2: Specifications for Theses and Dissertations

ii

PREFACE

This manual establishes guidelines for masters’ theses and doctoral dissertations at

the Missouri University of Science and Technology. The final copy, which is deposited in

the Library, becomes a permanent and official record in the University Library where other

scholars and researchers will have access to it as a research document. Students are required

to complete the Scholar’s Mine form on line. The form can be found at

http://scholarsmine.mst.edu/. The form is required as it provides the Library with important

information for cataloging theses/dissertations. Students are also asked to submit a .pdf copy

of their thesis/dissertation. This is optional but is recommended. Also, doctoral dissertations

may be published on demand through U.M.I. Dissertation Publishing (ProQuest) and made

available to researchers throughout the world if the student executes a license or agreement

which permits this. UMI’s contract is non-exclusive which allows you to use your work and

have it published elsewhere in the future. In addition to standard xerographic methods,

UMI’s contract currently includes their right to “electronically publish” your work, which in

some cases will preclude the future acceptance of your work by some journals or other

publishers. It is recommended that the student strike through the words “electronically

publish” before signing. This form can be found on the web at

http://grad.MS&T.edu/currentstudents/ThesesDissertations.html (Publishing your

Dissertation), or a hard copy can be given to you. Pages 3 and 4 of this form are all that need

to be submitted.

All publishing agreements should be carefully read and negotiated before signing.

Any or all of the five exclusive rights comprising a copyright can be assigned separately.

These five items are the right to: 1) Reproduce the work; 2) Prepare derivative works; 3)

Distribute copies; 4) Perform the work publicly; and 5) Display the work publicly. (The

Page 3: Specifications for Theses and Dissertations

iii

Copyright Act, 17 U.S.C. SS 106.) Ordinarily, the publisher will need non-exclusive rights

to reproduce and distribute copies (items 1 and 3 above). The author many times wants non-

exclusive rights for items 1 and 3, also, as well as exclusive rights for items 2, 4 and 5 from

above.

The MS&T Graduate Council has established criteria for uniformity in the physical

format of theses and dissertations which have been compiled here for your use. Your

department and your advisor will guide in the content, format, and style of your manuscript,

and may specify certain aspects of style including footnote style and placement. Only one

standard or style manual should be followed for a single thesis or dissertation, unless using

publication thesis/dissertation option. Specific questions not covered in this manual should

be directed to the graduate studies assistant in your Office of Graduate Studies. You may

also refer to A Manual for Writers of Term Papers, Theses, and Dissertations, 6th ed., by

Kate L. Turabian, which is available at the Reference Desk of the MS&T Library.

In accordance with policy established by the Graduate Faculty, it is the responsibility

of the advisory committee to see that theses/dissertations are edited for spelling, grammar,

organization, stylistic consistency, completeness, and agreement between the Table of

Contents and the contents. The Graduate Studies Office is responsible for maintaining

specifications necessary for the processing, microfilming, binding and storing of theses and

dissertations, and for the maintenance of some uniformity of organization.

Page 4: Specifications for Theses and Dissertations

iv

TABLE OF CONTENTS

PREFACE............................................................................................................................... ii

SECTION

1. GENERAL REQUIREMENTS.............................................................................1

1.1. PRINT REQUIREMENTS......................................................................1

1.2. PAPER..................................................................................................... 1

1.3. MARGINS...............................................................................................1

1.4. LINE SPACING......................................................................................2

1.5. HEADINGS............................................................................................. 2

1.6. PAGINATION.........................................................................................3

1.7. QUOTATIONS........................................................................................3

1.8. BINDING................................................................................................ 4

1.9. COPYRIGHT...........................................................................................4

1.9.1. General Guidelines and Assessment Procedure........................4

1.9.1.1. Copyright protection..................................................5

1.9.1.2. Fair use......................................................................5

1.9.1.3. Requesting permission...............................................6

1.9.2. Theses/Dissertation Guidelines................................................7

2. FORMAT ............................................................................................................ 9

2.1. ORDER OF MATERIAL........................................................................9

2.2. TITLE PAGE...........................................................................10

2.3. ABSTRACT........................................................................................... 10

2.4. TABLE OF CONTENTS.......................................................................11

2.5. VITA...................................................................................................... 11

2.6. OPTIONAL SECTIONS.......................................................................11

2.6.1. Lists of Tables, Figures and Plates.........................................11

2.6.2. Preface or Acknowledgments.................................................11

2.6.3. List of Abbreviations..............................................................12

2.6.4. Glossary..................................................................................12

2.6.5. Appendices.............................................................................12

2.6.6. Footnotes/Endnotes................................................................13

Page 5: Specifications for Theses and Dissertations

v

2.6.7 Index........................................................................................13

2.6.8. Publication Thesis/Dissertation Option..................................13

3. TEXT..........................................................................................................................15

3.1. WRITING THE THESIS/DISSERTATION......................................................15

3.2. SUBDIVISION OF TEXT.................................................................................15

3.3. TABLES .......................................................................................................... 16

3.4. ILLUSTRATIONS............................................................................................. 16

3.5. MAPS AND PLATES........................................................................................17

3.6. CD ROMS.......................................................................................................... 19

4. REFERENCES .......................................................................................................... 20

ATTACHMENTS

A. LIST OF LEGAL CASES (COPYRIGHT ISSUES)..............................22

B. EXAMPLE OF THESIS TITLE PAGE..................................................23

C. EXAMPLE OF DISSERTATION TITLE PAGE...................................24

D. EXAMPLE OF PUBLICATION THESIS/DISSERTATION OPTION PAGE......................................................................................25

E. EXAMPLE OF ABSTRACT..................................................................26

F. EXAMPLE OF TABLE OF CONTENTS...............................................27

G. EXAMPLES OF BIBLIOGRAPHIC ENTRIES.....................................29

H. EXAMPLE OF VITA.................................................................31

I. EXAMPLE OF OUTLINE OF CONTENTS OF ELECTRONIC MATERIAL PLACED IN AN APPENDIX............................................32

THESIS AND DISSERTATION CHECKLIST FOR STUDENTS....................... 34

Page 6: Specifications for Theses and Dissertations

1

1. GENERAL REQUIREMENTS

1.1. PRINT REQUIREMENTS

All print must be letter-quality and must be clear, dense, and consistent throughout

the document. Print must be no smaller than 11 or 12 point. The same print style should be

maintained throughout. The use of italics or other special style types is not acceptable,

except for emphasis (titles of books, etc.), and then should be used only sparingly. Bold face

in the next larger point may be used for section headings, section titles, and other limited

applications such as appendix titles.

Word division should be kept to a minimum, and appropriate word division should be

determined by reference to a dictionary. Avoid hyphenation at the end of a page.

Quality is important. No form of correction tape or fluid can be used on the Library

copy.

1.2. PAPER

White bond paper of twenty-five percent or greater rag (cotton) content must be used

for the Library copy. The paper stock must be a minimum of 16-pound weight.

1.3. MARGINS

Each page of the T/D must have margins of not less than one and one-half inches on

the left-hand side (the side which will be bound), and one inch on the other three sides.

These margins are necessary for proper microfilming, binding, and trimming of the pages.

The page numbers should be placed in the upper right-hand corner of each numbered page,

Page 7: Specifications for Theses and Dissertations

2

one-half inch or 1.3 cm. down from the top and in line with the right-hand margin of the

typed copy.

1.4. LINE SPACING

T/Ds must be printed on one side of the sheet only, and the lines of type should be

separated by either one and one-half or two line spaces (double spacing is preferred because

of microfilming), except for footnotes, bibliographical entries, and long quoted passages

(extracts) which are normally single-spaced. Use double-spacing between footnotes, between

bibliographical entries, and between single-spaced quotations and text. Leave at least four

lines of blank space above and below figures and tables that are placed on pages with text

and/or other figures and tables.

The first line of each paragraph and all lines of other indented material must be

indented one-half inch from the left-hand margin of the typed copy. Quotations longer than

three typed lines are also preferred to be extracted, that is, indented one-half inch on both

right and left margins. Beginning and ending quotation marks are omitted from extracts, but

any internal punctuation is reproduced exactly as was in the original. All lines of other

indented material are also indented one-half inch. The number of lines between paragraphs

may be either double or triple-spaced or have more spaces if necessary. The selected

paragraph spacing must be retained throughout the body of the typed material.

1.5. HEADINGS

Major headings should be designated by Arabic numbers (1, 2, etc.). Each major

section so designated must start on a new page, and the heading must be centered at the top

of the page and typed in bold face and capital letters. Principal subheadings must be

Page 8: Specifications for Theses and Dissertations

3

designated with the section number and the number of the principal section (for example,

2.1, 2.2), placed flush with the left-hand margin of the typed copy one line above the

subsection’s lead paragraph and typed in bold face and capital letters. Additional

subheadings must be designated as 2.1.1, 2.1.2, 2.1.3, and so on. Subheadings at this level

should be placed at the beginning of a paragraph (typed on the same line as the first line of

the paragraph), and typed in bold face using capital and lowercase letters.

1.6. PAGINATION

All printed pages must be counted consecutively. All pages preceding the text must

bear lowercase Roman numerals, such as iii and iv. This sequence starts with the title page,

which should not bear a number. Next is the copyright page (if applicable) or blank page (if

no copyright page is to be used) which also is not numbered, but is counted. The rest of the

preliminary pages bear consecutive lowercase Roman numerals. All subsequent pages

containing the text, appendices, and references must bear Arabic numerals, such as 2, 3, and

4, and must be numbered from the second page of the text. The flyleaf pages are

unnumbered blank cover sheets. The page numbers should be placed in the upper right-hand

corner of each numbered page, one-half inch or 1.3 cm. down, and in line with the right-hand

margin of the typed copy. Title pages of appendices are counted in the page numbering

sequence but should not have page numbers typed on them.

1.7. QUOTATIONS

The form and wording of quotations should correspond exactly to the original text. If

individual words or parts of a quoted sentence are left out, the omission should be indicated

by an ellipsis. The omission should not distort or alter the original sense of the quotation. If

Page 9: Specifications for Theses and Dissertations

4

the author inserts a word or words to clarify or emphasize any part of a quotation, the

insertion should be enclosed in brackets: [ ]. Quotations exceeding three typewritten lines are

best quoted in EXTRACT form. In an extract the author of the T/D does not enclose the

words in his own quotation marks (though he or she must be faithful to any original

punctuation that was in the text.) Extracts are set apart from the text, typed single-spaced,

and indented five character spaces from each side margin of the typed copy.

Quotations from unpublished material or from oral communications or letters are

referenced in the same way as published material in the text. The corresponding citation in

the bibliography should give the nature of the source (e.g., Keller, W. [1993] personal

communication).

1.8. BINDING

The laser printed T/D, or acceptable copy provided by MS&T Quick Copy, or

equivalent reproduction process, must be submitted to the Office of Graduate Studies in

unbound form. The MS&T Library will send the T/D to the bindery off campus. Students

may contact personnel in the Library about obtaining bound copies of their T/Ds for their

own use.

1.9. COPYRIGHT

1.9.1. General Guidelines and Assessment Procedure. Copyrights are distinctly

different from issues of plagiarism. Citing your source and giving full credit are important to

avoid plagiarism, but do not satisfy copyright law. Copyright considerations are best done by

the author at the time of contemplated use, following a simplified procedure, as shown here.

This procedure starts with: 1) the fundamental definition of what copyright protection is;

Page 10: Specifications for Theses and Dissertations

5

then continues with 2) an analysis of fair use criteria that allows some use as non-infringing;

and ends with 3) requesting permission to use the material from the copyright holder, when

necessary. Each of these steps is detailed below. Copyrights and fair use are sometimes

clear and other times complicated. If difficult questions arise, it is best to request permission

or to seek legal advice. (See Attachment A.)

1.9.1.1. Copyright protection. Copyright protection covers the original work of an

author regardless of the medium used. Copyrights do not protect the ideas, principles,

concepts, discoveries or methods contained in the expression. (The Copyright Act, 17 U.S.C.

SS 102a.) Reproducing someone’s text, picture, graph, data table or chart, for example,

could require written permission of the copyright holder. Using the ideas, data or facts

contained therein and going on to transform, significantly add to or propose a new

relationship in a non-profit, academic setting could fall under fair use and not require written

permission.

1.9.1.2. Fair use. Fair use under copyright law allows use, including reproduction,

for teaching, research, scholarship, criticism and comment, as non-infringing determined by

four factors. (17 U.S.C. SS 107, effective June 1, 1991.) These factors need to be considered

at the time of contemplated use. The answers on balance will help decide if written

permission is needed. The four factors are:

·) Purpose of the use - Non-profit, educational use weighs in favor of fair use, but

anything involving sales moves into commercial use which will most likely not be considered

non-infringing. Even if the use is for non-profit, educational purposes, this alone does not

mean the use of another’s work is a fair use. Courts have refused to find fair use and have

found infringement in several cases as shown and summarized in Attachment A.

Page 11: Specifications for Theses and Dissertations

6

Significantly adding to or transforming would probably be fair use, but simply copying may

or may not be acceptable, based on the other three factors.

·) Nature of the work - If the item contemplated for use is written, non-fiction and

factual, this weighs in favor of fair use. Items such as photographs, fiction and audiovisual

are more difficult to defend as acceptable since the creativity content in expression is viewed

as higher by the courts.

·) Substantiality of the portion used - Here both quantitative as well as qualitative

considerations come into play. A small percentage of the written word, one quotation or a

single table or graph out of many, may weigh in favor of fair use, depending upon its

proportion or its significance to the whole work. If the item used is the “heart of the work”,

where everything comes together, the use could be considered infringing.

·) Effect on the potential market for the work - Unpublished works are very

sensitive, including your own, because of undetermined future value. If use of the item will

result in an adverse impact on the market or the value of the copyright owner’s work, this

will be a factor against a finding of fair use. Special care should be applied when looking at

use of computer programs, videotapes, questionnaires, interviews or survey instruments.

After analyzing these four factors, it may be necessary to request written permission

to use the copyrighted item.

1.9.1.3. Requesting permission. Requesting permission begins with obtaining the

name and contact address of the copyright owner(s). The five best sources to pursue will be

the author, the publisher, the university, the Copyright Office or the Copyright Clearance

Center (a private institution sponsored by the Association of American Publishers). The

MS&T library can be of help with information and directories in the reference section.

Because copyrights are often assigned, it is a good idea to place a telephone call confirming

Page 12: Specifications for Theses and Dissertations

7

ownership and address first, to save time or disappointment later.

Once the owner and address are confirmed, a brief letter for signature by the owner

should be created. A reference and description of the material to be used should be included

along with details of how, where and when it will be used. Above the signature line and date

at the end of the letter, type this statement as shown:

The undersigned copyright owner of the material described herein grants permission

for the above detailed use.

______________________________ _______________

Owner Date

This signed permission letter should be included and/or referenced in the final document (e.g.

T / D, paper, questionnaire, program, etc.) that includes the copyrighted item. Copies of the

signed permission letter should be kept on file both by the author and the Registrar’s Office.

Liabilities for infringement can include injunctions, impounding, and damages. A

finding of “willful infringement” carries with it the potential of a $100,000 damage award

for each infringing use. It could also mean requiring removal of the item from the thesis or

dissertation and republishing prior to graduation.

1.9.2. Theses/Dissertation Guidelines. The copyright page is counted as page ii, but

should not have the page number typed on it. The proper notice of copyright in the thesis or

dissertation follows:

AUTHOR’S FULL LEGAL NAME

Year degree awarded

Page 13: Specifications for Theses and Dissertations

8

ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

Register the copyright with the U.S. Copyright Office at the time of publication and pay the

required fee. Application forms may be obtained through the World Wide Web at

http://www.copyright.gov/forms/ (Adobe Acrobat Reader is required and available free on

this page.) A sample copyright form may be seen at the MS&T Library. A copyright is

valid for the lifetime of the author plus fifty years.

The copyright notice should be centered in the lower third of the page and the circled

“c” must be lower case (or the word Copyright can also be used—one or the other but not

both). The year of the copyright is the year in which the dissertation or thesis is deposited

with the Office of Graduate Studies.

This legal step is important in safeguarding some research, original writing, computer

programs, etc. It is important to register the copyright and give notice to have clear, legal

rights and in order to collect fees later (as in the case of computer program licenses).

Authors hold the copyrights unless student’s research was funded then MS&T owns

copyright, and the five rights that go with them exclusively (as detailed in the Preface) unless

signed away, in whole or in part, by the author’s signature to a contract or other agreement. If

authors expect monetary return, careful consideration must be given to each agreement and

the issue of payment dealt with directly and separately from other issues.

Page 14: Specifications for Theses and Dissertations

9

2. FORMAT

2.1. ORDER OF MATERIAL

The following items marked with a single bullet are required; those indicated

otherwise may be optional, depending on your T/D. All materials should be arranged into the

following three sections: (1) the preliminary matter, (2) the text, and (3) the back matter:

Preliminary pages (front matter):

Front flyleaf (a blank cover sheet of paper)

Title page (see Attachments B and C)

Blank page or copyright notice

Publication thesis/dissertation option (if applicable) (see Attachment D)

Abstract (250 to 350 words, one page maximum; see Attachment E)

Preface (recommended but not required)

Acknowledgments

Table of Contents (see Attachment F)

List of Illustrations (if figures and plates are included in your T/D)

List of Tables (if tables are included in your T/D)

List of Maps (normally map is a figure for departments formerly in SOMEER)

List of Abbreviations

Glossary

Text:

Body of thesis or dissertation (includes text, illustrations, and tables)

Back Matter:

Appendices

Endnotes (Microfilm readers prefer footnotes)

Page 15: Specifications for Theses and Dissertations

10

Bibliography or references (See Attachment G)

Index

Vita (See Attachment H)

Addendum

Back flyleaf (a blank cover sheet of paper)

2.2. TITLE PAGE

The title page must conform to the style of the attached samples (see Attachments B

and C). Count as page i, but do not type a page number on it. Date this page with the year

that the degree is awarded. ...........When selecting the title, keep in mind that many computer

retrieval systems use the words in the title--and sometimes a few other descriptive words--to

locate documents. The thesis/dissertation will be a valuable source for other scholars only if

it can be located easily. The title should be a meaningful description of the subject of the

T/D. Formulae, symbols, superscripts, Greek letters, and so forth are not accessible in some

search systems. Be sure to use word substitutes.

2.3. ABSTRACT

Pagination should begin here (it will be numbered either iii or iv). THE ABSTRACT

CANNOT EXCEED 350 WORDS or ONE PAGE Double-spaced, WHICHEVER IS

SHORTER. (See Attachment E.)

The abstract should be a concise, clear statement of the important points which have

been brought out in the T/D. It should summarize the problems dealt with by the research,

the methods employed, and the major findings. As a digest of the entire T/D, the abstract

should be organized to correlate with the thesis/dissertation outline. It must be double-

spaced, and it must not contain more than 350 words. No abstracts exceeding one page will

Page 16: Specifications for Theses and Dissertations

11

be allowed.

The abstract should be self-contained, because it is often cited alone in secondary

publications; therefore, it must be intelligible without reference to the document itself.

2.4. TABLE OF CONTENTS

The Table of Contents must conform to the style of the attached sample. (See

Attachment F.) The pagination of these pages continues on from prior pages (iv, etc.). List

all parts of the T/D in the Table of Contents, except the title page, copyright or blank page,

and table of contents page. Capitalize the section titles and list the section headings word-

for-word as they appear in the text. Double-space between items, and single-space within

any heading/subheading that is longer than one line.

2.5. VITA

The vita should contain the full name and a reasonably complete biographical sketch

of the candidate. The date of birth is required (unless an exception is granted in writing to

the Office of Graduate Studies) and information about academic preparation is useful. The

vita should not exceed one page. (See Attachment H.)

2.6. OPTIONAL SECTIONS

2.6.1. Lists of Tables, Illustrations and Maps. When figures and/or tables are

included in the T/D, a List of Illustrations and/or Tables, as appropriate, is required. The

captions/titles in the List of Illustrations and List of Tables must be identical to the

captions/titles in the text. The List of Illustrations should include all photographs, charts,

plates, diagrams, or drawings included in the text. Separate lists must be made for maps.

Page 17: Specifications for Theses and Dissertations

12

Double-space between items on the lists, single-space within. The List of Tables and List of

Maps should follow the List of Illustrations and these pages should be numbered with

lowercase Roman numerals (page iv, v, etc.)

2.6.2. Preface or Acknowledgments. Following the tradition for books, the

acknowledgments may be included in the preface, in the introduction, or on a separate page

in the body of the text; but if they constitute a separate page, the acknowledgments must be

limited to one page or less. If these optional pages are used, number them with lowercase

Roman numerals. It is customary to acknowledge graduate fellowships, grants, travel funds,

and any special help you may have received outside your committee (from adjunct

professors, library staff, or others) that led to the completion of your research.

2.6.3. List of Abbreviations. (Optional) Number this list with small Roman

numerals and paginate consecutively from the preceding pages.

2.6.4. Glossary. (Optional) Arrange the words in the glossary alphabetically.

Position each word flush left, and follow it with a period, dash, or colon.

2.6.5. Appendices. Appendices, if included, should be placed after the text. If the

T/D contains only one appendix, do not designate by letter. Center the heading,

(“APPENDIX”), and the title, and start the text on the same page.

If the T/D contains more than one appendix, the format varies a bit. Provide each

appendix with a title sheet to identify its contents and to maintain a clear, logical break

between each appendix. For each appendix, insert the word, APPENDIX, in all uppercase

letters, and center it on the page, along with the appropriate appendix capital letter. Leave

two blank lines of space, and center the title beneath it. Count, but do not type a page

number on, each appendix title page. List the title page in the Table of Contents as the first

page of its corresponding appendix.

Page 18: Specifications for Theses and Dissertations

13

Page 19: Specifications for Theses and Dissertations

14

2.6.6. Footnotes/Endnotes. Footnotes or endnotes are optional and should follow

the format of the journal or style manual and be consistent through the entire document.

Many style/journal manuals prefer that footnotes be omitted and the major information for

the citation be included in the text of the work. Students should check with their advisors

and/or departments to determine which form to use. Footnotes should appear at the bottom

of the page containing the references. They may include long quotations. Example: “More

details on these experiments will be available in the master’s thesis by John Doe that will be

completed in spring 1998.” Footnotes are preferable to endnotes in dissertations because

when reading the work on microfilm with endnotes, the readers have to constantly turn the

reels and then attempt to relocate their previous positions on the film.

2.6.7. Index. The index is optional and is recommended only for T/Ds of unusual

length. When prepared, the indexed matter must be alphabetized and be arranged according

to key words. In some cases, it may be necessary to have one item appear several times in

order to make the information most useful. The authors’ names or important references may

appear in the index; or there may be a separate index of authors apart from the subject index.

2.6.8. Publication Thesis/Dissertation Option. Publication option is allowed when

the T/D is prepared with the objective of publication in a professional journal. The Office of

Graduate Studies will accept conventional T/Ds written in the format prescribed by the style

manual of the intended journal. However, the T/D must adhere to MS&T margins and

minimum print size requirements. Each T/D should include the following sections:

Preliminary pages (including Publication Thesis/Dissertation Option page, see

Attachment D)

Introduction (required if T/D contains 2 or more journal papers)

Review of literature

Page 20: Specifications for Theses and Dissertations

15

Journal articles

Conclusions

Back matter

These sections will be needed in order to file the work as a thesis or a dissertation with the

space, and center the title beneath it. Count, but do not type a page number on, each

appendix title page. List the title page in the Table of Contents as the first page of its

corresponding appendix.

Page 21: Specifications for Theses and Dissertations

16

3. TEXT

3.1. WRITING THE THESIS/DISSERTATION

The completion of your graduate thesis/dissertation represents the culmination of a

graduate degree program. It will be the apex of your achievements at the university, and it

will reflect your research methodology, knowledge of the subject, and your insights and

thinking as a scholar. A dissertation is required for all doctoral programs. For masters’

programs, a thesis is optional in some departments. The work must be written on a subject

approved by your graduate advisory committee, and it must include the results of original and

significant investigation. The writing must be your own original work.

You should narrow the focus of your study so that your writing does not extend

beyond the objectives of your original theme. At the same time your T/D should be more

detailed (and perhaps longer) than most journal articles, because you will have been forced to

review in detail all data and literature in your area, thus becoming an expert in your field.

3.2. SUBDIVISION OF TEXT

The material which forms the body of the technical T/D must contain as a minimum

the following major sections (other headings for these divisions may be chosen, the topical

matter should be similar; be consistent when choosing, placing, and naming subheadings):

Introduction: State the problem, show the importance of the subject, and give the

reasons for its selection.

Review of Literature: Cite previous work in the field and/or allied fields.

Results and Discussion: Describe and discuss the actual work; include experimental

procedures and results, field work and results, criteria, and evidence. Subdivisions with

appropriate headings can be used as needed. Clarity is often enhanced by separating the

presentation of the method, the results, and the discussion of the results.

Page 22: Specifications for Theses and Dissertations

17

Conclusions: Each conclusion should be a simple declarative statement of fact drawn

from the results but without discussion.

3.3. TABLES

Table numbers and titles are placed at the top of the table. Tables are numbered

consecutively in each section using Arabic numbers. For example, the first table in section

one would be numbered Table 1.1, the second table would be Table 1.2, and so on.

3.4. ILLUSTRATIONS

All photographs, photostats, or other photocopied illustrations must be mounted flat

and unwrinkled on regulations size sheets, and their dimensions must conform as nearly as

possible to the text margins. Scanning is recommended. Folded inserts in the body of the

text are discouraged because they are difficult to bind and may be cut through the folds when

the pages are trimmed. The use of pockets is also discouraged except under the conditions

described in the MAP section below. All illustrations must have captions that identify and

explain the depicted material. They should be designated with Arabic numbers based on the

section in which they appear. For example, the first figure in the first section would be

Figure 1.1. The quality of the illustrations must equal that required for publication in a

refereed journal.

Graphs and other line illustrations, which are to be bound with the text, must be so

placed as to be read easily from the bottom and right side. Graphs must be so oriented that

the abscissas are either to the bottom or to the right side of the page, and the ordinates to the

left side or bottom. The lettering on the face of all figures must be parallel to the side that is

intended to be the bottom of the figure in its reading position. The figure number and

captions for the graphs must be at the bottom of the pages as in other illustrations. In some

instances, when necessary, the figure number and caption may appear on the page facing the

Page 23: Specifications for Theses and Dissertations

18

graph. Graphs, including lettering and numbering of scales, must not exceed the limits of the

one inch and one and one-half inch margins. Lettering must be of publication quality.

Freehand lettering is not acceptable.

3.5. MAPS AND PLATES

Maps and line illustrations should be designed for reduction so that they will fit the

mandatory margins of an 8.5 x 11 inch page. When larger sizes are needed and their

inclusion can be justified, they can be folded and inserted in a pocket placed inside the book

cover of the bound thesis or dissertation. Such oversized maps or line illustrations are

designated as plates. Three standard plate sizes may be used for pocket insertion: 1) 17" x

22"; 2) 22" x 34"; and 3) 34" x 44". When required, the need for 11" x 17" plates can be met

by designing them for binding on facing pages.

Map scales should be those normally used by state and federal map agencies. In the

English system of measurement, these scales are commonly at 1/12000; 1/24000; 1/48000;

1/62500, or their multiples. With the metric system (Systeme International), the common

scales are in even thousands and then powers of ten, such as 1000, 5000, 10000, 50000,

100000, etc. All maps and line illustrations must have a clearly defined title block, which

includes as a minimum: the title; locations or area mapped; author or source; a bar scale; and

north and magnetic north direction. At the bottom of the title block, the following must

appear: author of the T/D, map from 19() thesis or dissertation, ----- Department, MS&T, and

reference to the organization or agency from which the topographic or planimetric basemap

was reproduced. For soil, rock or strata definition, geologic map symbols and/or appropriate

letter symbols must be presented in the map’s legend and clearly indicated in the appropriate

areas on the map. Area patterns and specific locational symbols should be used to

Page 24: Specifications for Theses and Dissertations

19

differentiate soil, rock or geologic units rather than colors because of the high cost of

publication and reproduction of colored maps. The T/D may include the appropriate number

of maps, charts and diagrams to assist in meeting the objectives of the research, but only a

maximum of five pocket inserts will be allowed when properly justified. All originals will be

retained in the candidate’s department file; thus, if a copy disappears from a thesis or

dissertation in the library, another copy can be reproduced and substituted. Because of the

binding problem with foldouts and pockets, individuals using them should be aware that they

and their departments are guaranteeing the satisfactory processing of the binding of the

thesis. Maps and line illustrations to be inserted in the pocket must be folded for easy

insertion. The plate number and title of the map or line illustration, the title of the thesis or

dissertation, and the candidate’s name must be prominently displayed on the outside of each

folded sheet. These can be typed or printed by computer on a gummed label that can be

attached to the sheet. A numbered page facing the pocket must list the plates by number and

title. In addition, the following instruction must appear as indicated below:

PLEASE RETURN PLATE TO THE POCKET. COPIES

OF THIS PLATE ARE AVAILABLE AT A NOMINAL

CHARGE IN THE DEPARTMENT OFFICE

Output from a computer will appear in a variety of forms. Printed and graphic

output is of primary concern here. Printed materials produced by either a line printer or a

character printer will appear in the T/D appendix in one of two forms: 1) an original, printed

on thesis grade paper, or 2) a listing on plain white paper which is then photographically

reproduced by Technical Services. Graphic output on a cathode ray tube will be

Page 25: Specifications for Theses and Dissertations

20

photographed and treated as such.

3.6. CD ROMS

For master’s theses, two copies of any electronic materials should be submitted with

the thesis. One copy will be available for checkout along with the printed volume. The

second copy will be retained for archival purposes and will be stored along with the archival

microfilm copy that the MS&T Library makes.

For doctoral dissertations, three copies will be needed- - one for checkout, one

archival copy, and one to send to University Microfilms along with the paper copy. UMI will

use that disk to make copies when they receive a request to purchase.

See attachment of sample page of appendix and title page. (Attachment I)

Page 26: Specifications for Theses and Dissertations

21

4. REFERENCES

It is very important to give credit when using or presenting the words, work, and

ideas of others, and a serious omission when such credit is not given. Care should be taken

that references are cited appropriately in the T/D. If in doubt about how to cite references,

including references to electronic text, refer to Kate Turabian’s reference book, to the

Modern Language Association (MLA) Handbook, or to one of the other commercially

prepared guides or journal style sheets.

The bibliographic references should be started on a new page and placed at the end of

the text under the heading BIBLIOGRAPHY. A bibliography is considered to represent a

comprehensive search of the pertinent literature. Other citations lists, incorporating only

directly cited sources, are known as “references”. The style of reference citation should

correspond either to the style used in Attachment F or to that used by journals in the field of

the candidate’s discipline. Reference in the text to a citation in the bibliography may be

made by stating the name of the author and the year of publication, by using consecutive

superior numbers, or by using superior numbers or symbols that correspond to footnoted

citations at the bottom of the same page containing the reference. There are thus three types

of lists which are acceptable for a bibliography: 1) an unnumbered alphabetical list; 2) a

numbered list in which the numbered citations correspond to the sequence of references in

the text; and 3) a footnoted list at the bottom of the page containing the references (the

footnotes may be consecutive or new on each page). If reference is made to a specific piece

of information or a specific statement of an author, or if a quotation is made, the page from

which it is taken must be indicated, preferably at the location of the text citation, rather than

in the full citation appearing in the Bibliography or Reference list.

Page 27: Specifications for Theses and Dissertations

22

The citations in the bibliography should be listed in one consecutive series.

Traditionally, it was alphabetically by the author’s last name, but more recent innovations

have included order of citation in the text and other logical formats. Usually, bibliographies

would not be separated into types, such as articles, books, periodicals, and documents, unless

the candidate was writing a non-technical study about an author whose publications fell into

those categories. For all other bibliographic forms and rules, refer to those that are accepted

by the refereed journals in the candidate’s discipline. Some style manuals expect the first

line to be outdented, followed by indented left margins. The main objective is accuracy,

clarity, brevity, and uniformity.

Page 28: Specifications for Theses and Dissertations

23

ATTACHMENT A

LIST OF LEGAL CASES (COPYRIGHT ISSUES)

1. Withal v. Crow - 309 F. 2d 777 (8th Cir 1962) -A choir director who distributed copies of a song to his students.

2. Rubin v. Brooks/Cole Pub. - 836 F.Supp. 909 (d. Mass. 1993) -Authors of a college text who included a psychological instrument in their text.

3. Marcus v. Rowley - 695 F. 2nd 1171 (9th Cir. 1983) -A teacher who copied eleven pages of another teacher’s work into a 24 page instructional pamphlet.

4. Basic Books v. Kinko’s Graphics Corp. - 758 F.Supp. 1522 (S.D.N.Y. 1991) -A teacher who instructed an off-campus copy shop to make copies of anthologies compiling various book sections and articles.

5. Encyclopedia Britannica Educ. Corp. v. Crooks - 558 F.Supp. 1247 (W.D.N.Y. 1983) -A school tapes educational broadcasts for later viewing by students.

Page 29: Specifications for Theses and Dissertations

24

ATTACHMENT B. EXAMPLE OF THESIS TITLE PAGE Center text vertically on the page.

EFFECTIVE LAND-USE OF THE MISSOURI

DAM SITE AREAS

by

JOHN HENRY MINER

A THESIS

Presented to the Faculty of the Graduate School of the

MISSOURI UNIVERSITY OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY

In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree

MASTER OF SCIENCE IN CERAMIC ENGINEERING

2008

Approved by

John D. Snow, AdvisorRalph L. WinterC. Randolf Fall

Year is year degree is awarded; not year thesis completed.

Page 30: Specifications for Theses and Dissertations

25

ATTACHMENT C. EXAMPLE OF DISSERTATION TITLE PAGE Center text vertically on the page.

EXPERT SYSTEMS FOR THE SELECTION AND EVALUATION OF

TWO-PHASE CONVECTIVE HEAT TRANSFER COEFFICIENTS

by

ELIZABETH ELAINE CARNOT

A DISSERTATION

Presented to the Faculty of the Graduate School of the

MISSOURI UNIVERSITY OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY

In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree

DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY

in

MECHANICAL ENGINEERING

2008

Approved by

Robert Smith, Advisor

James B. Brown

Charles R. Jones

D. F. Ling

Hardy Davidson

Year is year degree awarded, not year dissertation completed.

Page 31: Specifications for Theses and Dissertations

26

ATTACHMENT D.

EXAMPLE OF PUBLICATION THESIS/DISSERTATION OPTION PAGE*

PUBLICATION THESIS/DISSERTATION** OPTION

This thesis (or dissertation**) has been prepared in the style utilized by the Journal of

Corrosion Science. Pages 1-17*** will be submitted for publication in that journal.

Appendices A, B and C have been added for purposes normal to thesis/dissertation writing.

*This page is to be placed immediately following the copyright page and is numbered iii.

**Type thesis or dissertation, as appropriate.

***Be sure page numbers given here are correct in final copy.

Page 32: Specifications for Theses and Dissertations

27

Page 33: Specifications for Theses and Dissertations

28

ATTACHMENT E. EXAMPLE OF ABSTRACT

ABSTRACT

This thesis/dissertation focuses on the development and implementation of classical

mechanics to describe coherence parameters for ion-atom collisions. Such studies require a

complete description of the quantum numbers n, l, and m which characterize the bound

electron. For hydrogenic systems, the shape and rotational tendencies of the charge cloud

can also be expressed in terms of parameters which define the classical Kepler orbit. In order

to make such a study, the classical trajectory Monte Carlo method has been modified to yield

pre- and post-collision information regarding the coherence nature of the electronic states.

In order to benchmark the theoretical developments, cross sections have been

calculated for a series of collision systems. This measure of reactability provides a test of a

theory’s ability to describe fundamental three-body interactions.

The theoretical improvements described in this thesis have allowed for the first time detailed

comparisons for complex targets at energies where the ionization channel and a large number

of product states preclude conventional methods. It will be shown that the CTMC results of

the z-component of the dipole moment for H++He provides the only reasonable calculations

for comparison with available experimental measurements above 50 keV. By virtue of the

versatility of this method, analysis is made with regard to the dipole moment formation as a

result of proton interaction with various target atom species. By construction of a predefined

initial state, the conclusion formulated in this work is that alignment of the post-collision

charge distribution is intimately related to that of the pre-collision charge distribution.

Page 34: Specifications for Theses and Dissertations

29

ATTACHMENT F. EXAMPLE OF TABLE OF CONTENTS

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Page

PUBLICATION THESIS OPTION......................................................................................... iii

ABSTRACT ......................................................................................................................... iv

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS......................................................................................................... v(Table of Contents is not to be listed)

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.................................................................................................. vii

LIST OF TABLES................................................................................................................. viii

LIST OF MAPS....................................................................................................................... ix

SECTION

1. INTRODUCTION................................................................................................... 1

2. REVIEW OF LITERATURE..................................................................................9

2.1. -----------......................................................................................................... 11

2.2. -----------......................................................................................................... 12

3. RESULTS.............................................................................................................. 18

3.1. -----------........................................................................................................ 20

3.2. -----------........................................................................................................ 24

3.2.1. -----------............................................................................................28

3.2.2. -----------............................................................................................29

3.2.2.1. ----------................................................................................30

3.2.2.2. ----------...............................................................................32

4. DISCUSSION........................................................................................................ 34

Page 35: Specifications for Theses and Dissertations

30

4.1. -----------........................................................................................................ 35

4.2. -----------........................................................................................................ 37

5. CONCLUSION...................................................................................................... 38

APPENDICES

A. TITLE................................................................................................................... 39

B. TITLE.................................................................................................................... 42

BIBLIOGRAPHY................................................................................................................... 44

VITA .................................................................................................................................... 48

PLEASE NOTE:

Capitalization and wording of headings/subheadings should be the same in the Table of

Contents as in the text.

Single space run over lines within headings, double space between headings/subheadings.

Titles should not encroach on page number areas. Need clear delineation between text and

page numbers.

Page 36: Specifications for Theses and Dissertations

31

ATTACHMENT G. EXAMPLES OF BIBLIOGRAPHIC ENTRIES

Books:

The Chicago Manual of Style: For Authors, Editors, and Copywriters. 13th ed. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1982.

Gibaldi, Joseph and Walter S. Achtert. MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers. 2nd ed. Modern Language Association of America, 1984.

Sheridan, Marion C., The Motion Picture and the Teaching of English. New York: Appleton-Century Crofts, 1965.

Turabian, Kate L. A Manual for Writers of Term Papers, Theses and Dissertations. 5th ed. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1987.

Articles:

Markowitz, William. “Time, Measurement and Determination of,” Encyclopedia Americana, 1965, XXVI, 631-33f. “Gladstone, William Ewart,” The Dictionary of National Biography, XXII, 705-54.

Government Documents:

AAS-NASA Symposium on the Physics of Solar Flares. Proceedings of a Symposium held at the Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Maryland, October 28-30, 1963, ed. Wilmot N. Hess. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1964.

U.S. Congressional Record. Vol. CXII.

Periodicals:

Dwork, Bernard M. “On the Zeta Function of a Hypersurface: III,” Annals of Mathematics, 2d ser., LXXXIII (May 1966), 457-519.

Smith, H.A. “Tensor Products of Locally Convex Algebras,” Proceedings of the American Mathematical Society, XVII, 1 (1966), 124-32.

Unpublished Works:

Amidon, Edmund. “Interaction Analysis: Recent Developments.” Paper read at the American Educational Research Association convention, February 1966, Chicago, Illinois.

Teller, Edward. Personal interview. July 12, 1962.

Page 37: Specifications for Theses and Dissertations

32

Zeller, Eli. “Rocks into Blocks,” Dissertation University Champaign-Urbana, 1918.

Web Citations:

“Title of web article,” web address, date last accessed. NO color for hyperlinks.

Page 38: Specifications for Theses and Dissertations

33

ATTACHMENT H. EXAMPLE OF VITA

VITA

Usamah M.S. Altaf was born in Makkah, Saudi Arabia, on January 6, 1965. In May

1986, he received his B.S. with Honors in Electrical Engineering from the University of

Petroleum and Minerals, Dhahran, Saudi Arabia. He did his summer training at Saudi

ARAMCO during the summer of 1985. After teaching for three semesters in the Electrical

and Computer Engineering Department of Umm al-Qura University, Makkah, Saudi Arabia,

he joined the Saudi Arabian Armed Forces as a First Lieutenant and worked for an additional

three and a half years. He was promoted to Captain in 1992. In May 1993, he received his

M.S. degree in Electrical Engineering from the University of Missouri-Columbia, Columbia,

Missouri, USA. In May 2008, he received his Ph.D. in Engineering Management from the

Missouri University of Science and Technology, Rolla, Missouri, USA.

He has published conference and journal papers, some of which are listed with the

references of this research and one of which won the best conference paper award. In 1994,

along with two other colleagues, he won the 26th Annual Structural and Graphics Packaging

Design Competition Honorable Mention Award of the Institute of Packaging Professionals

for an innovative toothpaste tube design that was dedicated for children.

Usamah M.S. Altaf has been a member of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics

Engineers (IEEE) since 1985. He has been a member of the American Society of

Engineering Management (ASEM) since 1993. He was inducted into Alpha Iota Delta and

Tau Beta Pi Honor Societies in 1994 and 1995, respectively.

.

Page 39: Specifications for Theses and Dissertations

34

ATTACHMENT I. EXAMPLE OF OUTLINE OF

CONTENTS OF ELECTRONIC MATERIAL

PLACED IN AN APPENDIX

APPENDIX B

VISUAL BASIC CODE, PRINTOUTS & PLOTS ON CD-ROM

Page 40: Specifications for Theses and Dissertations

35

1. INTRODUCTION

Included with this T/D is a CD-ROM, which contains the VISUAL BASIC CODE of all

fourteen original warrant-pricing models, the statistical test printouts and plots from the Phase II,

Phase III and Phase IV of this study. Each module of the VISUAL BASIC CODE has been

developed using VISUAL BASIC for Microsoft Excel 97. All documents have been prepared as

Microsoft Word 97 document files (Windows 98). An outline of the contents of the CD-ROM is as

follows.

2. CONTENTS

Info.TXT

VISUAL BASIC Programs:

Code.DOC

Printouts & Plots:

Phase II.DOC

Phase III.DOC

Phase IV.DOC

Page 41: Specifications for Theses and Dissertations

36

THESIS AND DISSERTATION CHECKLIST FOR STUDENTS

The Thesis/Dissertation templates use several callouts similar to the one shown below to draw the user’s attention to certain important guidelines to be followed in the Thesis/Dissertation.

Users should remember to remove these callouts before they turn the copy over to the Office of Graduate Studies.

Provide copy of style manual used if different from MS&T Specifications for Thesis and Dissertations.

Paper must be 25% or greater rag (cotton) bond and minimum of 16 lb. weight.

Same type style must be used for the text throughout.

Margins must be 1.5 inches left, and 1 inch right, bottom and top.

Print must be no smaller than 11 point or 12 pitch. Spacing between rows is to be double spaced or one and one-half space. All print must be legible (text, figure legends, table titles, information presented on figures and tables, etc.)

Order of material must conform to Specifications and include as a minimum: front flyleaf title page blank page or copyright page abstract (not to exceed one page or 350 words whichever is less) table of contents list of figures list of tables body of thesis/dissertation bibliography vita (must show date of birth) back flyleaf

Must have at least three lines of type on a page. Do not hyphenate at the bottom of a page. Avoid splitting the last entry on the page on the Table of Contents pages, Lists of Illustrations and Tables, and on the references pages. Also avoid the creation of orphans (printing the first line of a new paragraph as the last line on a page) and widows (printing the last line of a paragraph as the first line of a new page.)

Pages must be numbered sequentially and properly throughout thesis/dissertation (including appendices). Page numbers are to be placed one-half inch or 1.3 cm. down from the top of the page.

Remove Me after reading the contents

Page 42: Specifications for Theses and Dissertations

37

Title pages must conform to examples. Follow the dissertation or thesis example, whichever is appropriate.

If subheadings are used, there cannot be 1.1 without 1.2, 1.1.1 without 1.1.2, etc.

Table number and title must be at top of the tables and figure number and captions should be at the bottom of the figures.

All headings, figure captions, and table titles should be identical to the Table of Contents, List of Illustrations and List of Tables. (Capitalization and wording should be the same in both places).

Equation numbering should be done sequentially and consistently.

References should be listed with consistency and accuracy in form.

Appendices must have a title and be lettered A, B, etc. (If only one appendix, it must have a title but is not designated by a letter.)

Provide a “letter of permission” from the author/publisher if any copyrighted material is used (e.g. figures and tables, etc). This applies also to one’s own previously published work which is reproduced in a thesis or dissertation.

The thesis/dissertation should be of professional quality and appearance (for example, neatness, no hand-drawn figures or tables, legibility of copied material, etc.)