Finalising and completing a thesis or dissertation

Thesis or dissertation: How do you go about finalising and completing a thesis or dissertation? To produce a pitch perfect document, you need to understand what the finished product will look like. A thesis or dissertation is a complex tapestry made up of different, yet interrelated, strands neatly woven together. These strands are held in place by a ‘golden thread’ of supported arguments. To complete your dissertation, you need to follow a well-documented pattern that sets out how to stitch the strands together. You will, therefore, produce a structured, integrated and coherent thesis satisfying the protocols and standards of scholarship.

How textbook helps: The book about finalising and completing a thesis or dissertation is a useful resource for novice and experienced researchers. It helps students create an intellectually rigorous and structurally sound study. It helps you provide your readers, and examiners, with rationalised arguments and reasoned logic. By following our straightforward steps, you will pique your audiences’ interest. What’s more, you will keep them engaged with, and energised by, your research, from beginning to end.

Student story: Sandra was at the stage of finalising and completing her thesis. She was, however, frustrated. She was not happy with her final draft, believing it lacked academic integrity. Sandra was particularly concerned that she did not know how to put the final touches to her document. Reading our book reminded Sandra to do three things. First, review and revise her references. Second, tighten and strengthen her abstract. Third, adopt a critical and scholarly writing style. By following these steps, she submitted a substantiated, integrated and well-argued piece of academic work. Sandra, and, most importantly, her examiners, were satisfied with the end result.

“Following the book’s steps, I finished my thesis much quicker than I thought possible. Thesis Upgrade helped me bring order and consistency to my overall document. The final version was a professionally presented and polished dissertation that made complete sense.” Sandra Curtis, MSc Sales Management.