Project Title
Author Name
September
201x
Dissertation
submitted in partial fulfilment for the degree of
Master of Science in xxx (insert your degree title)
Master of Science in xxx (insert your degree title)
Computing
Science and Mathematics
University of Stirling
University of Stirling
Summary of the dissertation within
one page. Unnumbered chapter headings, as above, are entered using the Unnumbered 1 paragraph style. The Unnumbered 1 style automatically starts
a new page.
This template starts the page numbering
at the foot of this page. While you are printing drafts, you might find it
useful to add the printing date and time into the footer – to help you, and
your supervisor, tell which version is most current.
Note:
You are required to submit one extra copy of your title page and Abstract.
It is suggested that the abstract be
structured as follows:
·
Problem: What you tackled, and
why this needed a solution
·
Objectives: What you set out to
achieve, and how this addressed the problem
·
Methodology: How you went about
solving the problem
·
Achievements: What you managed
to achieve, and how far it meets your objectives.
I understand the nature of plagiarism, and
I am aware of the University’s policy on this.
I certify that this dissertation reports
original work by me during my University project except for the following (adjust according to the circumstances):
·
The technology review in
Section 2.5 was largely taken from [17].
·
The code discussed in Section
3.1 was created by Acme Corporation (www.acme-corp.com/JavaExpert) and was
used in accordance with the licence supplied.
·
The code discussed in Section
3.5 was written by my supervisor.
·
The code discussed in Section
4.2 was developed by me during a vacation placement with the collaborating
company. In addition, this used ideas I had already developed in my own time.
Signature (you must delete this, then sign and date this page) Date
Acknowledge anyone who has helped you in
your work such as your supervisor, technical support staff, fellow students or
external organisations. Acknowledge the source of any work that is not your
own.
The table of contents below is
automatically generated from the paragraphs of style Heading N and Unnumbered N. To update this after revisions, right-click
in the table and choose Update Field
for the entire table.
Abstract....................................................................................................................... i
Attestation.................................................................................................................. ii
Acknowledgements................................................................................................... iii
Table of Contents...................................................................................................... iv
List of Figures............................................................................................................ v
1 Introduction........................................................................................................... 1
1.1 Background and Context................................................................................ 1
1.2 Scope and Objectives..................................................................................... 1
1.3 Achievements................................................................................................. 1
1.4 Overview of Dissertation................................................................................ 1
2 State-of-The-Art.................................................................................................... 2
3 Technical Chapters (change this to
something appropriate)................................... 3
3.1 First Section.................................................................................................... 3
3.1.1 First Subsection......................................................................................... 3
3.1.1.1 First Subsubsection............................................................................. 3
3.1.2 Second Subsection..................................................................................... 3
3.2 Second Section............................................................................................... 3
4 Conclusion............................................................................................................ 5
4.1 Summary........................................................................................................ 5
4.2 Evaluation...................................................................................................... 5
4.3 Future Work................................................................................................... 5
References................................................................................................................. 6
Appendix 1................................................................................................................ 7
Appendix 2 – User guide........................................................................................... 8
Appendix 3 – Installation guide................................................................................. 9
Similarly you can automatically generate a
list of figures from paragraphs of style Figure. To update this after revisions, right-click
in the table and choose Update Field
for the entire table.
1 Introduction
For editorial consistency, it is important
to use Word styles properly. Word 2003 onwards has so-called quick styles. If
the styles referred to below are not visible on the Home ribbon in the Styles
category, choose Apply Styles from
the down arrow at the bottom right of the Styles
category. Styles can then be applied from the drop-down box. To make a style
visible as a quick style, choose Apply
Styles, then click Styles (the AA icon), then click on the drop-down
list for a style, and then Add to Quick
Style Gallery.
Chapters are entered using the Heading 1
paragraph style. The Heading 1 style automatically moves to the start of a new
page, and supplies the next chapter number. The new paragraph when you press
Return after a heading automatically uses the Body First paragraph style (like this one, with no indent on the
first line).
However most text uses the Body Text
paragraph style (like this one, with 11 point Times New Roman, 1.5 line
spacing, single-sided pages). Enter most text using the Body Text paragraph
style. The new paragraph when you press Return after a Body First paragraph
automatically uses the Body Text paragraph style.
In general, use the default spacing that
headings and paragraphs give you. Avoid using new-lines or spaces to format
text. If you need to use quotes, preferably use single curly quotes ‘…’. If you
wish to emphasise something, usually use italic
font.
Remember
to Save frequently while you are working!
1.1 Background and Context
Give the background to your project and
context of what you have done. Sections are entered using the Heading 2 paragraph style – the Heading 2 style automatically supplies
the next section number.
1.2 Scope and Objectives
Define the scope and objectives of your
project.
1.3 Achievements
Summarise what you have achieved.
1.4 Overview of Dissertation
Briefly overview the contents of what
follows in the dissertation.
2 State-of-The-Art
Summarise
current knowledge and what others have done in the various topics of your dissertation
– in the application area and in the various technologies that you might have
used or did use. Write for someone familiar with computing, but not necessarily
expert in the particular topics of your project. Give references to other work
by using cross-references to entries
in the References section, like this [2].
3
Technical
Chapters (change this to something appropriate)
Note: This part of the dissertation will normally
be expanded to be a series of chapters.
The technical body of the dissertation
consists of a number of chapters (just one here, but there will usually be
more). Follow a logical structure in how
you present your work. This will usually
be the phases of the software development cycle, the modules of your system,
etc. However, please do not write your
dissertation to read like a diary.
Include a chapter demonstrating what you
have achieved and how your system is used in practice – for example showing a
typical session as a series of pasted in screen shots, with an accompanying
commentary.
You should also include a chapter
explaining how you obtained feedback from your “customer” or potential users of
your system, what feedback you actually obtained, and your analysis and comments.
3.1 First Section
Subdivide your text into sections.
3.1.1 First Subsection
If necessary, also use subsections.
Subsections are entered using the Heading
3 paragraph style (all these heading styles are self-numbering).
3.1.1.1 First Subsubsection
If you really need subsubsections,
enter these using the Heading 4
paragraph style.
3.1.2 Second Subsection
And, as required, more subsections.
3.2 Second Section
As an example of a figure, consider Figure
1. Captions are entered using the Figure paragraph style. The figure below is placed in a Body Centre paragraph, which is set up in
this document to have an automatic Figure
paragraph following it. Figure has
automatic figure numbering, and it is possible to make cross-references to figures. Move large figures to the top of the
next page, past any other text,
rather than having a big gap in the text.

4 Conclusion
4.1 Summary
Summarise what you have achieved.
4.2 Evaluation
Stand back and evaluate what you have
achieved and how well you have met the objectives. Evaluate your achievements
against your objectives in section 1.2. Demonstrate that
you have tackled the project in a professional manner.
(The previous paragraph demonstrates the
use of automatic cross-references: The “1.2” is a Cross-reference
to the text in a numbered item of the document, it is not literal text but a field.
The number that appears here will change automatically if the number on the referred-to
section is altered, for example if a chapter or section is added or deleted
before it. Cross-references are entered using Word's Insert menu. Cross-references are set to update automatically when
printed, but may not do so on-screen beforehand; you can update a field
manually on-screen by right-clicking on it and selecting Update field from the
pop-up menu.)
4.3 Future Work
Explain any limitations in your results and
how things might be improved. Discuss how your work might be developed further. Reflect on your results in isolation and in
relation to what others have achieved in the same field. This self-analysis is
particularly important. You should give
a critical evaluation of what went well, and what might be improved.
Use the Reference
paragraph style to enter and cross-reference document references. Books [1], standards [2], reports [3], journal articles [4], conference papers [5], and web pages
[6] are conventionally presented in slightly different
ways.
[1]
Greene, D. and Williams, P. C. Linear Accelerators for Radiation Therapy,
Second Edition. IOP Publishing Ltd., Bristol and Philadelphia , 1997.
[2]
ISO. Language Of Temporal Ordering Specification, ISO 8807,
International Organization for Standardization, Geneva , 1989.
[5]
Ji, H. and Turner, K. J.
Specification and Verification of Synchronous Hardware using LOTOS. In Wu, J. Chanson, S. T. Gao,
Q. editors, Proc. Formal Methods for
Protocol Engineering and Distributed Systems (FORTE XII/PSTV XIX), pages
295-312, Kluwer Academic Publishers, London, UK, October 1999.
[6]
University of Stirling . Computing Science and
Mathematics Research Home Page, http://www.cs.stir.ac.uk/research, April 2002.
You may have one or more appendices
containing detail, bulky or reference material that is relevant though
supplementary to the main text: perhaps additional specifications, tables or
diagrams that would distract the reader if placed in the main part of the
dissertation. Make sure that you place appropriate cross-references in the main
text to direct the reader to the relevant appendices.
Note
that you should not include your program
listings as an appendix or appendices. You should
submit one copy of such bulky text as a separate item, perhaps on a disk.
If you produced software that is intended
for others to use, or that others may wish to extend/improve, then a user guide
and an installation guide appendices are essential.
If you produced software that is intended
for others to use, or that others may wish to extend/improve, then a user guide
and an installation guide appendices are essential.
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