On National Teacher Day, meet the 2024-25 Kenan Fellows
Dissertations 5 ref, plagiarism, own crit-analysis
1. An LDU short course
presentation
Dissertations & Major Project
Writing
Week 5 of 5:
Referencing, bibliographies,
plagiarism & the ‘final stages’
Robert Walsha, LDU City campus, Calcutta House, CM2-22
2. Dissertations & Major Project
Writing week 5
This week’s topics:
• Referencing & Bibliographies;
• Plagiarism – and how to avoid it;
• The final stages:
– Writing & focusing your introduction &
conclusion
– Critical analysis of your own work, editing
& proofreading, troubleshooting.
• Damage limitation
4. Referencing & Bibliographies
• Everything in the next 17 slides should be
a reminder of what you hopefully know
well already ~
– it’s all about good practice in bibliographies
and referencing.
– In this sense, your dissertation/project should
be no different from what you have been
trying to do with other written assignments so
far.
5. Referencing & Bibliographies
• A Bibliography is a listing, placed at the very end
of your work, of every source referenced in your
assignment.
– In Psychology, the Bibliography section is called
‘References’.
• Referencing is what you do within the written
sections of your work to show evidence of where
you are incorporating any thinking or other
material that is not your own. In other words, you
reference to show where you are utilising material
derived from your various sources.
– In Psychology, referencing is referred to as ‘citations’.
7. Referencing & Bibliographies:
Your bibliography ...
• ... should provide a full listing in one place of
all the sources you have referred to in your
assignment.
• … should list sources in alphabetical order, by
author surname.
• … should not include page references - that is
the job of referencing.
• What should I include in my bibliography?
Basically, every source you have used in
working on your assignment. Only include
material you directly reference in your work.
8. Referencing & Bibliographies:
Format of your Bibliography
• There are two basic bibliography formats,
the ‘Cambridge’ (or‘British Standard’)
and the ‘Harvard’ Systems.
• This is Harvard:
Cambridge:
Ball, Stuart (1988), Baldwin and the
Stuart, Baldwin and the Conservative
Party: The Crisis of The Crisis London: Yale
Conservative Party: 1929-1931,of 1929-1931,
University Press, 1988.
London: Yale University Press.
Carlton, David (1969), ‘The Anglo-French
David, ‘The Anglo-French Compromise
on Arms Limitation 1928’, Journal of British
Compromise on Arms Limitation 1928’, Journal
Studies, 1969, no.
of British Studies, 8, pp. 141-62.
9. Referencing & Bibliographies:
Bibliographies
• You may benefit from breaking down your
bibliography into sub-sections, such as
‘Primary sources’, and ‘Secondary sources’
perhaps including sub-sub-sections such as:
‘books’, ‘journal articles’ and ‘web-based
sources’.
• What should not be included in a bibliography?
There are some things which you should not
include: for example, mentioning your lecture
notes is unnecessary, as is any general
reference materials such as dictionaries or
thesauruses.
10. Referencing & Bibliographies:
Bibliographies
• Please note that, in some disciplines, two lists
at the end of assignments is encouraged, both
listing their respective sources in alphabetical
order by surname:
– ‘References’: sources visited and referred
to in your written sections;
– ‘Bibliography’: other sources that were
useful to you, but which you do not
reference in your work.
Consult your supervisor over his/her
preferences with regard to this.
11. Referencing & Bibliographies:
Referencing
• Referencing provides proof of exactly where
you are taking ideas and facts from, at the
point of use of those ideas/facts in your
work.
• The italicised section above is the justification
for referencing: the reason why we must both
provide both references and a bibliography.
• There are different forms of referencing.
Certain departments favour one approach over
others, though with some departments you
may have a choice.
– Stick with department-favoured models or consult
your supervisor over your options.
12. Referencing & Bibliographies:
Referencing
Referencing options(?)
• (the ‘Harvard system’)
• ‘British Standard’ a.k.a. ‘Cambridge’
system, which may take two forms:
– ‘footnoting’; or
– ‘endnoting’.
13. Referencing & Bibliographies:
Harvard Referencing
• The Harvard System makes its references in the
main text itself, and appears within brackets.
For example:
... The consequent publicity pushed the issue of
race relations to a very high place on the political
agenda (Seymour-Ure, 1974, pp. 99-136). The...
Under this system you must include:
(i) author surname
(ii) date of publication, and
(iii) page references.
14. Referencing & Bibliographies:
Harvard Referencing
ADVANTAGES:
• Efficient with space … cuts down a lot of repetition
between references and bibliography (in Cambridge).
For fuller information, cross-reference with the full
information located in the bibliography (title and
publication details are confined to the bibliography).
DISADVANTAGES:
• Long, difficult sentences are made longer by having
to include additional bracketed reference information
– and thus become even more confusing. For
students who struggle with grammar and written
communication, this can be a problem.
15. Referencing & Bibliographies:
Cambridge Referencing
• The Cambridge System makes its references via a
system of number references, corresponding to
detailed references …
• … at the bottom of the page (footnoting’) or
• … at the end of each chapter, or by chapter at
the end of the written sections (endnoting).
... The consequent publicity pushed the issue of race
relations to a very high place on the political agenda.3
Another blah blah blah blah blah more text blah blah
blah blah blah more text blah blah blah blah etc. etc. ...
_________
3
Colin Seymour-Ure, The Political Impact Of The Mass Media (London:
Constable, 1974), pp. 99-136.
16. Referencing & Bibliographies:
Cambridge Referencing
• To create and manage your references, use
Microsoft Word’s ‘Referencing’ function (called
‘Footnote’ in pre-Office 2003 versions of Word)
to create your references:
– when you reorder text, it will automatically re-
sequence your references in the new correct
order.
1. Click at the point at where you want to insert
a reference in your main text (e.g., the end of
a sentence).
17. Referencing & Bibliographies:
Cambridge Referencing
2. Click on
‘Insert’,
then, on the
drop-down
menu,
‘Reference’,
then click
on
‘Footnote’.
18. Referencing & Bibliographies:
Cambridge Referencing
3. Choose your options from
the command box (left),
then click on ‘Insert’.
A footnote number is
created, with a space to
enter the desired reference
text.
• Note: whether using Cambridge or
Harvard for your actual referencing,
you can also use footnoting to
include (small amounts of) useful
supplementary information that
would distract if in your main text.
(Larger useful additional information
should be placed in appendices).
19. Referencing & Bibliographies:
Cambridge Referencing:
BOOKS
• First reference to book sources:
– Include full author name(s), full title (italics or underline), place of
publication, publisher, date of publication, page reference(s)
13
Stanley Cohen, Folk Devils and Moral Panics: The Creation
of Mods and Rockers, Oxford: Blackwell, 1972, p. 137.
• Second & subsequent references to the same source
(short version):
– author surname, short version of title (italics or underline), page
reference(s).
16
Cohen, Folk Devils and Moral Panics, p. 137.
20. Referencing & Bibliographies:
Cambridge Referencing:
JOURNAL ARTICLES
• First reference to journal sources: include:
– full article author name(s), ‘full title of article’ (in quote-marks), in full
title of journal publication (italics or underline), place of publication,
publisher, volume, number, year of publication, page reference(s).
Richard S. Grayson, ‘Mods, Rockers and Juvenile
14
Delinquency in 1964: The Government Response’, in
Contemporary British History, London: Frank Cass,
vol. 12, no. 1, 1998, p. 33.
• Second & subsequent references to the same article in
the same source (short version):
– author surname, ‘short version of title’ (in quote-marks), page refs.
17
Grayson, ‘Mods, Rockers and Juvenile Delinquency’,
p. 33.
21. Referencing & Bibliographies:
Cambridge Referencing:
EDITED (ANTHOLOGY) TITLES
• First reference to edited collections: include:
– full article author name(s), ‘full title of article’ (in quote-marks), in
full editor name(s) (ed.(s)), full title of publication (italics or
underline), place of publication, publisher, date of publication,
page reference(s)
15
Gordon A. Craig, ‘Churchill and Germany’, in Robert Blake
and Wm. Roger Lewis (eds.), Churchill, Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 1993, p. 25.
• Second & subsequent references to the same article
in the same source (short version):
– surname article author(s), ‘short version of title’ (in quote-marks),
page reference(s).
18
Craig, ‘Churchill and Germany’, p. 25.
22. Referencing & Bibliographies:
If these same references were in Harvard …
… they’d look like this (bracketed within the main text)!
• Books:
(Cohen, 1972, p. 137)
• Journals:
(Grayson, 1998, p. 33)
• Articles in Edited titles:
(Craig, 1993, p. 25)
(NB, with Harvard, the reader has to cross-reference with the
Bibliography to find out the nature of the source, i.e., whether it
is book, journal, other).
23. Referencing & Bibliographies:
referencing e-based sources
• This example is for web-site referencing (Cambridge)
1. Author 2. Full title of 3. The
name, if document in title of the
known ‘ ’ quote marks. complete work, if
applicable (italics
or underline)
Richard Davis, ‘New Zealand Labour Government and the ALP, 1939-40’,
The Electronic Journal of Australian and New Zealand History, 1996.
<http://www.jcu.edu.au/aff/history/ articles/davis.htm> (5 Feb 2007).
5. The
4. Date
full http address 6. The date of
of publication (or
(URL) your access in
last revision) if
within < > angle ( ) brackets
known
brackets
24. Referencing & Bibliographies:
referencing e-based sources
• … and if it was Harvard …
In your references:
(Davis, 1996)
In your bibliography:
Davis, Richard (1996), ‘New Zealand Labour
Government and the ALP, 1939-40’, The Electronic
Journal of Australian and New Zealand History. <http://
www.jcu.edu.au/aff/history/articles/davis.htm>
(5 Feb. 2007).
25. Referencing & Bibliographies:
Other sources
• Apply the logic of conventional referencing to other
sources. For example, referencing a TV documentary
might follow this format:
7
‘Taking On The Taliban: the Soldiers’ Story’, Panorama, BBC
documentary, first broadcast 5 Nov. 2007.
• Newspapers:
8
James Bloom, ‘Power from the final frontier’, Guardian
‘Technology’ section, 1 Nov. 2007, p.1.
• Surveys, polls, etc.:
9
Gallup poll on ‘British Attitudes to Race Relations’ (following
the publication of the MacPherson Report), Apr. 1999.
26. Referencing & Bibliographies:
Referencing primary sources
• Interviews:
– Referencing (Cambridge):
13
Interview with Gordon Brown, MP (5 Nov. 2007).
17
Interview with Matt Phillips, Communications Manager,
British Phonographic Industry (16 Apr. 2006).
– Referencing (Harvard): use footnotes as above, or in main text:
(Interview with Gordon Brown, MP, 5 Nov. 2007)
(Interview with Matt Phillips, 16 Apr. 2006).
– In the bibliography:
Interview with Gordon Brown, MP (5 Nov. 2007).
Interview with Matt Phillips, Communications Manager, British
Phonographic Industry (16 Apr. 2006).
27. Referencing & Bibliographies:
Referencing primary sources
• Private papers:
– Referencing (Cambridge):
13
L.S. Amery, 14 Jul. 1918, in Barnes, John & Nicolson, David (eds.), T
he Leo Amery Diaries: vol.1, London: Hutchinson, 1980, p.226.
17
Austen Chamberlain to Ida Chamberlain, 20 Jan. 1924, AC5/1/303,
Birmingham University Library.
– Referencing (Harvard ): use footnotes as above, or in main text:
(Amery diary, 14 Jul. 1918, 226)
(A. Chamberlain to Ida Chamberlain, 20 Jan. 1924, AC5/1/303)
– In the bibliography:
[name of collection] [location of source]
L.S. Amery Barnes, John & Nicolson, David (eds.), The
Leo Amery Diaries: vol.1, London: Hutchinson,
1980.
Austen Chamberlain MSS Birmingham University Library.
28. Referencing & Bibliographies:
Referencing primary sources
• Public papers (government, business, etc.):
– Referencing (Cambridge):
13
Cabinet decision to go to war, CAB 23/100 folders 474-83; see also:
FO 800/317 folder 84.
17
ATOC minutes of Extraordinary General Meeting, 2 Mar. 2005.
– Referencing (Harvard ): use footnotes as above, or in main text:
(CAB 23/100 folders 474-83); FO 800/317 folder 84)
(ATOC EGM minutes, 2 Mar. 2005)
– In the bibliography:
[name of collection] [location of source]
Cabinet Papers (CAB) (23 series) Public Record Office, Kew
Foreign Office (FO) (800 series) Public Record Office, Kew
Papers of the Association of Train ATOC Headquarters, London
Operating Companies (ATOC)
29. Referencing & Bibliographies:
Referencing primary sources
• Other:
– Referencing (Cambridge):
13
Observations of staff interaction by author during work experience in
Waitrose Product Buying department, London, 27 Jul.-17 Aug. 2007.
– Referencing (Harvard ): use footnotes as above, or write in main
text:
… certainly no evidence of outward intimidation or bullying, during the period in
which the current author was undertaking her work experience (27 Jul.-17 Aug.
2007).
– In the bibliography:
Observational studies:
The present author’s work experience at Waitrose Product Buying Department,
London (where it was agreed with line managers that log records could be
taken examining the interaction of the Asia buying team).
30. Plagiarism – and how to
avoid it
• Plagiarism is the passing off of others’ ideas or writing
as if they were your own.
• It is a serious offence to Plagiarise. There are serious
penalties if you are found to have taken material from other
sources and failed to credit them.
• It is easy to accidentally commit plagiarism through error
or slackness, yet the penalties for being found to have
committed plagiarism are no less forgiving.
– Because of the length of time involved in producing larger projects
and dissertations, it is easier to accidentally commit plagiarism in
these than it is with most other assignments.
– This is because, if your note-taking is less than thorough, when writing
up weeks or months later, you can easily forget whether ideas or
words are your own or someone else’s.
• So how can you guard against committing plagiarism
accidentally?
31. Plagiarism – and how to
avoid it
At note-taking / research stages:
• Be thorough & focused with your research note-
taking –
– always record the source details at the top of the page;
– Always record page number information by the side of
every piece of information you record – whether you are
quoting or summarising in your own words;
– For any paragraphs, sentences or even phrases that you
take word-for-word (for possible quotation in your work),
remember to place the word-for-word information in
your notes in quotation marks ‘ ’;
– Always record where the idea originates and where
your thoughts are your own.
32. Plagiarism – and how to
avoid it
At the writing-up stages – referencing
• Remember, referencing is all about being
transparent with where you are obtaining source
information:
– Solid, thorough, honest referencing constitutes your
primary means of conveying where you are obtaining
material to build your argument – and therefore avoiding
accidental plagiarism.
• Get in the habit of inserting references early:
– i.e., from your first-draft onwards, or …
– … if this disrupts your written flow, then insert references
immediately after writing your first draft;
– Update your references in a similar way with each
subsequent redraft;
33. Plagiarism – and how to
avoid it
At the writing-up stages – referencing (cont.)
• Be thorough, methodical & consistent with your
referencing:
– Many students under-use referencing. There’s nothing
wrong with multiple references on a single page;
– By contrast, there may be something suspicious if there
are only ever 1 or 2 references per page (sections
commenting purely on your own research are an
exception).
– Remember, you must not only reference ‘direct quotes’
(where you are using the words of others) …
– … but also reference where you summarise the ideas of
others in your own words.
– Consistency of referencing style is important and will also
help you to be sure all the required information is present.
34. Plagiarism – and how to
avoid it
At the writing-up stage – ‘in-text signposting’
• Referencing is not the only means by which you can attribute
your use of evidence from other sources – and thus avoid
charge of plagiarism.
– You can also augment this with selected in-text
attributions, where helpful for the readability of the work to
do so. See ‘signposting’ the ideas of others in week 4 (Academic
Writing).
– Here is an example from Psychology, using Harvard:
As Liverant (1960) has pointed out, we may indeed
inherit an intellectual potential, but that potential will
vary depending upon the environment we encounter
during development.
E.Jerry Phares, Introduction to Personality, (3rd edn.), 1991, p.429
35. Plagiarism – and how to
avoid it
At the writing-up stage – ‘in-text signposting’
– Here is another example:
It is open to question whether any real understanding had
ever existed between the two parties. Stephen Brooke
raises this doubt in his account of the Labour Party
during wartime, claiming that debates about
reconstruction within the Coalition ‘invariably fell along
party lines’ and that ‘in terms of policy and ideology Labour
retained a distinctive programme’.16
…
_________
16
Brooke, 1992, pp.9-10.
Nick Ellison, ‘Consensus Here, Consensus there …’, in Jones & Kandiah (eds.), The Myth Of
Consensus, 1996, p.19-20
36. Plagiarism – and how to
avoid it
At the writing-up stage (cont.)
• If you are thorough with both referencing and
in-text signposting, then any information left
non-attributed in your work will rightly be
recognised as your own contribution to the
debate – and therefore not require referencing!
Top stuff!
37. Plagiarism – and how to
avoid it
• ‘Legitimised’ Plagiarism: ‘a grey area’ of ‘virtual
plagiarism’ that can still land people in trouble
… avoid!
– Quotations of others’ work should not be an excuse to do
no thinking or writing of your own.
– Therefore, avoid overuse of over-large quotations.
Large quotes should be an exception rather than the rule,
reserved for especially important or particularly quotable
information.
– A bad assignment, with large chunks of quoted material –
properly referenced but with minimal linking sentences of
the student’s own – may not technically constitute full-
blown plagiarism, but can still land students in trouble.
This kind of ‘legitimised plagiarism’ should be avoided –
you will not get good grades for uncritically lifting others’
views, no matter how well referenced that material is.
38. Plagiarism – and how to
avoid it
• ‘Legitimised’ Plagiarism (cont)
– Most of your presentation of others’ ideas should involve
summarise the point in your words, ‘flitting in and out’
of quotation as necessary. Let’s look again at the
example above, with the relevant section now highlighted.
See how this academic maintains effective written flow by
using only selected key passages from the argument of
Brooke that he is presenting in order to build his own
argument.
Stephen Brooke raises this doubt in his account of the
Labour Party during wartime, claiming that debates about
reconstruction within the Coalition ‘invariably fell
along party lines’ and that ‘in terms of policy and
ideology Labour retained a distinctive programme’.16
39. Focusing & writing your
introduction & conclusion
Your introduction:
• When should I start writing my introduction?
• Your Introduction should be set up to be a
powerful ‘signposting’ tool, that eases the
reader into your topic & explains exactly what
will be looked at.
• Don’t forget, an Introduction should properly
‘introduce’ the topic:
– This may sound obvious, but bear in mind:
– Depending on the nature of your project, there will be
a range of things your Introduction should be
addressing in order to be properly fulfilling in Intro
function.
A checklist of things your Introduction could or
should do
40. Focusing & writing your
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44. Focusing & writing your
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47. Focusing & writing your
introduction & conclusion
Your introduction:
• Remember, consideration of what to include in an
introduction should always be measured by whether it is
helpful to include that information;
• If you wish, you can use an introduction to make a bold
assertion – provided you later explore and justify this in
your main body.
• That stated, don’t be sensationalist for the sake of it …
but try to make your writing engaging to the reader.
• You could open your Introduction (and, indeed, other
sections) with a well-chosen quote. Stylistically this may
be desirable, but only do so if you have a quote perfectly
suited to the purpose.
48. Focusing & writing your
introduction & conclusion
Your introduction:
• Keep your introduction to a reasonable size:
– It depends greatly on what needs to be stated, but as
a general rule, think between 1/7th and 1/10th of your
overall written sections (e.g., excluding appendices
and bibliography).
– Maybe a little bigger still if your Intro contains a
necessarily sizeable ‘literature review’ and/or
‘research methods’ aspects (i.e., not in separate
sections)
• What should I call my Introduction?
– ‘Introduction’ is fine,
– though you might wish to title it more specifically, i.e.
‘An introduction to …’, might do, or any other
variations.
49. Focusing & writing your
introduction & conclusion
Your conclusion:
• You should have a final concluding (usually fairly
short) chapter in which you ‘wrap up’ your
project in its entirety. This should:
– Summarise / bring together all the main points you
have dealt with;
– stress key findings; and:
– if appropriate, make recommendations (if not in its
own section following: ‘Recommendations’ sections
being more of a characteristic of cat. B projects) ~
A: Issue-structured (arts-humanities model)
B: Experiment / survey / results-led (i.e., scientific-model)
50. Focusing & writing your
introduction & conclusion
Your conclusion:
• Should I use the conclusion to introduce any
new points?
– No, except perhaps if you need to briefly
contextualise what you have discussed as part of a
wider or related issue.
A checklist of things your Conclusion could or
should do
51. Focusing & writing your
Conclusion checklist (tick when/if ac& conclusion
introduction hieved)
f your
should draw to gether the key findings o
main body chapters. , where
should make ove rall concluding remarks
t
appropriate summa rising how the differen
to
themes and finding s may be seen to relate
one another;
could benefit fro m referring back to the
w the
question / title, and pointing to ho d…
question has succ essfully been addresse
ressed:
- … or rea sonably successfully add
don’t claim more than your project
n
deserves – it’s bette r to admit its limitations (i
retend
a considered, academic way) than to p
these don’t exist;
52. Focusing & writing your
Conclusion ch
Conclusion ch
sh ececklistictickhehen/af & conclusion
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these don’t exist;
53. Focusing & writing your
introduction & conclusion
Your conclusion:
• Should I present my own opinions in the
Conclusion?
– Yes, of course, provided …
• … you write these academically;
• … the points you are making are to ‘wrap up’
discussion of your topic(s), reminding the reader of
your findings or bringing together points previously
addressed individually;
• … that it is not opinion better placed in your main
sections, as part of your main body discussion –
remember the Conclusion is not the only place for
original thinking: it is primarily for summarising key
themes & findings established in the main body.
54. Critical analysis of your own work:
editing, proofreading, ‘troubleshooting’
• Weeks 1 & 2 concentrated on the critical
analytical questioning that is essential to
obtaining the best evidence to build an
effective dissertation / project ~ how to get
the best material from the work of others.
• Critical analysis questioning must also be
applied to your own work, which is as
vital as critically analysing the assertions
of others’.
55. Critical analysis of your own work:
editing, proofreading, ‘troubleshooting’
– Use the following slides to routinely self-
diagnose the standard of your work from
your first draft onwards.
– In the final stages of writing, careful critical
analysis of your work is a powerful
‘troubleshooting’ tool for gauging the
effectiveness of your work on multiple fronts;
– Use the checkboxes to tick off ‘’ all the
categories only when you feel you have
reached sufficiently high standards.
56. Critical analysis of your own work:
editing, proofreading, ‘troubleshooting’
Critical analysis is all about YOU
being YOUR severest critic!! (you will
get constructive feedback from your
supervisor, but only you can be your best
critic …).
57. Critical analysis of your own work:
editing, proofreading, ‘troubleshooting’
1. ‘Structural / focus / coverage
considerations’;
2. ‘The academic nature of my work’;
3. ‘Bibliography and referencing: technical’;
4. ‘Constructive use of sources to “build an
argument”’;
5. ‘Readability’ & effective written
communication’;
6. ‘Stats and figures’;
7. ‘The importance of consistency’.
58. Critical analysis of your own work:
editing, proofreading, ‘troubleshooting’
1. ‘Structural / focus / coverage
considerations’
Is the structure sensible … overall?
Is the structure sensible … within each
individual chapter / section?
Is everything covered relevant … and in
the right place?
Is there appropriate fullness of coverage?
Is there a sensible, logical progression
through each component theme?
59. Critical analysis of your own work:
editing, proofreading, ‘troubleshooting’
2. ‘The academic nature of my work’
Have I written in the ‘third person’
consistently throughout?
To the best of my ability, does my work
aspire to sound academic writing
practices – i.e., attempt to be balanced,
unbiased, impartial in observation &
accurate in reflecting the research /
views of others’?
60. Critical analysis of your own work:
editing, proofreading, ‘troubleshooting’
2. ‘… academic nature …’ (cont)
Have opportunities to introduce ‘original
thinking’ have been seized upon, with
arguments based on prior discussion
(i.e., the literature) and defended well?
Is there sufficient analytical depth to my
investigation?
61. Critical analysis of your own work:
editing, proofreading, ‘troubleshooting’
3. ‘Bibliography and referencing: technical’
Is my referencing OK:
– Accurate?
– Thorough?
– Consistent in style throughout?
… including page number or full web
pathway information?
Is my bibliography accurate, thorough,
consistent, complete, etc..
62. Critical analysis of your own work:
editing, proofreading, ‘troubleshooting’
4. ‘Constructive use of sources to “build an
argument”’
Am I using others’ material (in my words
or theirs) effectively, i.e., in order:
to build / progress my arguments?, or:
to compare & contrast with
information/views from elsewhere?, or:
to let me convey information useful to get me
to a point where I can satisfy 1. or 2.; or:
help me wrap up & move to the next point?
… all fully credited by accurate, honest
referencing?
63. Critical analysis of your own work:
editing, proofreading, ‘troubleshooting’
4. ‘Constructive use of sources …’ (cont)
Have I presented all the information &
arguments correctly, fairly & accurately –
with no misrepresenting of others’ ideas?
Have I analysed & evaluated the source
evidence fairly & with sufficient depth? Is
there anything more I need to say? Have
I said too much?
Have I identified strengths? …
weaknesses? … flaws in thinking?
(If required) is my primary research well
interpreted & effectively presented?
64. Critical analysis of your own work:
editing, proofreading, ‘troubleshooting’
5. ‘Readability’ & effective written
communication
Have all necessary technical terms been
explained (and checked for accuracy)?
Have all unnecessary technical terms &
jargon been replaced?
Does my Introduction properly introduce?
Do my main sections deliver on promises
signposted in my Introduction?
65. Critical analysis of your own work:
editing, proofreading, ‘troubleshooting’
5. ‘Readability’ & ... communication’ (cont)
Is my ‘signposting’ - linking - use of
connectives present and effective …
within and across chapters?
Does my Conclusion emphasise and
draw together all my key findings from
my main sections?
Is there sufficient clarity throughout in
terms of remembering periodically to
‘refer the reader back to the question /
title’)?
66. Critical analysis of your own work:
editing, proofreading, ‘troubleshooting’
5. ‘Readability’ & … communication’ (cont)
Is there sufficient descriptive material to
ensure good linking and flow between
all the points I raise?;
Is my paragraphing sensible (1 ‘topic
sentence’ + thereafter only ‘support
sentences’, per single paragraph)?;
Have I achieved effective clarity of written
expression: proper identification &
tackling of difficult points, sentences
worked & reworked to ensure any
possible ambiguities or potential
misunderstandings have been
removed?
67. Critical analysis of your own work:
editing, proofreading, ‘troubleshooting’
6. ‘Presenting stats and figures’
Is the chosen data always relevant?
Is my diagram-based information clearly
presented?
Have I sufficiently commented upon (in
writing) my findings, & is my analysis
of the data solid/ interpretation correct?
Have I presented my findings well, with
no hint of ambiguity?
Have I introduced appropriate
cautionary / qualifying remarks?
68. Critical analysis of your own work:
editing, proofreading, ‘troubleshooting’
7. ‘The importance of Consistency’
Consistency of referencing & bibliography
has been emphasised. What about:
consistency of written expression /
communication (throughout and within
individual sections)?
consistency of argument (throughout and
within individual sections)?
consistency of presentational style
(throughout and within individual
sections)?
Notes de l'éditeur
Note that some depts. (Law only?) may prefer ‘Latin terms’ instead of ‘Short Version’ for second/subsequent references. ‘ Op cit.’ ‘ Ibid’ (… plus several other terms for law). Where you have a choice, ‘Short version’ is best, as when you move text around while revising your work, you can lose track of which ‘Ibid’s belong to which source.
Should I write my introduction early on or at the end of my writing up? There is much to be said for writing the introduction only when you know exactly what the main chapters are going to say. However, it may be helpful to draft the intro at the outset, as this can help you to clarify your thoughts. A better plan may emerge out of the process! This ‘working introduction’ will have to be amended as your main chapter-writing goes through various stages of completion and adjustment: as with any written assignment, you will still be developing your thinking and approach as you write and refine your work. Thus, you should be constantly refining your introduction ‘as-you-go’. Only at the very end of the project will you know for certain exactly where your argument is taking you, and the introduction should be adjusted to reflect this.
Your dissertation Introduction checklist (cont): Anything that needs commenting about the title: any information that will help to clarify any ambiguity that may exist surrounding the question? Any technical terms that would benefit instant definition? Any helpfulness in explaining how you will interpret the title ?
Your dissertation Introduction checklist (cont): Must contain: background / context / sufficient historical context (brief) / wider research/subject area context
Your dissertation Introduction checklist (cont): Must identify overall aims / focus + if adopting issue-based breakdown, key underpinning themes that cut across the chapters.
Your dissertation Introduction checklist (cont): why you feel the topic is of interest / demands attention (is it possible to state why your study is important – ‘important’ being a relative concept?) Maybe something about your own interest and how this developed.
Your dissertation Introduction checklist (cont): IMPORTANT – for issue-structured projects, provide a chapter-by-chapter overview of what is to come. But make sure you deliver on promises.
Your dissertation Introduction checklist (cont): Example of chapter-by-chapter breakdown.
Your dissertation Introduction checklist (cont): Review the literature / comment on research methods IF appropriate and IF not already in sections of their own .
Remember: The consideration of what to include in an introduction should always be measured by whether it is helpful to include that information . You should always be imagining that your work is being by someone of reasonable intelligence, but who knows little or nothing about the subject! If appropriate, you might use the introduction to make a bold assertion . If so, the project must later on explore and justify this initial comment. Don’t be sensationalist for the sake of it – it doesn’t become academic work! That said, don’t be boring and stuffy in the way your write: remember the introduction plays an important role in capturing the interest of the reader. Therefore, be clear, concise, and try to write in a way that will engage the reader’s attention. You could open your introduction (and indeed other chapters) with a quotation . Stylistically this may be desirable, but not all work benefits from this: only do this if you have located a quote which is ideally suited for the purpose.
Yet, despite all these things that could or definitely should be included, you must keep your introduction to a reasonable size . Unless it includes the literature review and discussion of methods, an introduction should rarely exceed 10% of the total written content (excluding bibliography and appendices). What should I call my introduction?
Conclusions & Recommendations You should have a final concluding (usually fairly short) chapter in which you wrap up your project in its entirety, summarising all the main points you have dealt with, stressing key findings, and, if appropriate, making recommendations.