These are the most important
components of your thesis or report. Put your biggest effort into getting
them perfect. Most professors read the Abstract, Introduction and Conclusions chapters of a thesis first, then they dive into the
main body text afterwards. This means that you have to be particularly careful
in wording these sections, since there is some content overlap. If you
just copy and paste text between them, people will notice and it won’t leave
them with a very favourable impression. Many people read technical
reports in the same order – in fact, some people actually never read anything but the Abstract, Introduction and Conclusions!
There
are some fairly specific rules related to these thesis (or technical report)
components that you must know about. There are also some common sense guidelines
that are useful to know – the main
one being the advice above not to cut and
paste text. Another is that you write these three thesis/report
components last. Yes, that’s right – you write the Introduction
and Abstract last – after you have written the entire report or
thesis contents. (You can be stubborn and write them first if you
like; just be prepared to do them twice, because you’ll find they have to be
completely rewritten in the end anyway.)
The
fact that these are written last generally means they are often the most
poorly written – since most people naturally start to burn out as they approach
the end of such a large writing project. However, keep in mind that these
are the sections that will get the most attention and scrutiny – so you
absolutely have to make them your best content in the document. Here’s a
general overview of how to write these important sections, presented in the
typical order in which they are written.
What goes in your ‘Introduction’?
A
good technical report/thesis Introduction does four things:
1.
It introduces the problem and motivation for the study.
- Tell the reader what the topic of the report is.
- Explain why this topic is important or relevant.
2.
It provides a brief summary of previous engineering and/or scientific work on
the topic.
- Here you present an overview what is known about the problem. You would typically cite earlier studies conducted on the same topic and/or at this same site, and in doing so, you should reveal the yawning void in the knowledge that your brilliant research will fill.
- If you are writing a thesis, you’re going to need a full-blown literature review with very specific details of all of the scientific or engineering work done on the topic to date. This literature review is usually contained in its own chapter, particularly for PhD theses. In the introduction, just present a brief overview, sufficient to establish the need for your research.
3.
It outlines the purpose and specific objectives of the project.
- These are linked to solving the problem or filling the knowledge gap identified above.
- Often, the specific objectives are listed in point form. Sometimes a numbered list is used.
4.
It provides a ‘road map’ for the rest of the report.
- This is so that the reader knows what’s coming and sees the logic of your organization.
- Describe (in approximately one sentence each) the contents of each of the report/thesis chapters.
What
doesn’t go in your Introduction?
- Never put any results or
decisions in the Introduction. Just because you are writing it last
doesn’t mean you should give away the story. After all – it’s called the “Introduction”
for a reason.

What goes in your ‘Conclusions’ chapter?
The
purpose of this chapter is to provide a summary of the whole thesis or
report. In this context, it is similar to the Abstract, except
that the Abstract puts roughly equal weight on all thesis/report
chapters, whereas the Conclusions chapter focuses primarily on the
findings, conclusions and/or recommendations of the project.
There
are a couple of rules – one rigid, one common sense, for this chapter:
- All material presented in this chapter must have appeared already in the report; no new material can be introduced in this chapter. (rigid rule of technical writing)
- Usually, you would not present any new figures or tables in this chapter. (rule of thumb)
Generally,
for most technical reports and Masters theses, the Conclusions chapter
would be~3 to 5 pages long (double spaced). It would generally be longer
in a large PhD thesis. Typically you would have a paragraph or two for each
chapter or major subsection. Aim to include the following (typical)
content.
- Re-introduce the project and the need for the work – though more briefly than in the intro;
- Re-iterate the purpose and specific objectives of your project.
- Re-cap the approach taken – similar to the road map in the intro; however, in this case, you are re-capping the data, methodology and results as you go.
- Summarize the major findings and recommendations of your work.
- Make recommendations for future research.
What goes in your ‘Abstract’?
(generally
called the Executive Summary in technical reports)
In
short, everything goes in the Abstract. Its purpose is to
provide a summary of the whole report or thesis. In this context, it is
similar to the Conclusions chapter, except that the Abstract gives
the individual chapters more even weighting and is typically much shorter
overall.
There
are also a few rules for the Abstract.
- All material presented in the Abstract must appear in the report body as well; no new material is allowed. (rigid rule of technical writing)
- Do not present any figures or tables in the Abstract. (rigid rule of technical writing)
- Do not cite references the Executive Summary. (if you need to, then you are getting too detailed)
Generally,
the Abstract would fit on one page (single spaced) with approximately
one paragraph for each chapter. Here is the typical content.
- Present the project topic and the need for the work.
- State the specific objectives of the project.
- Re-cap the approach taken, major decisions and results.
- Summarize the major conclusions and recommendations of your work.
It’s
important to keep in mind that some universities put very stringent length
restriction on theses Abstracts, which makes them even harder to write.
If you are faced with this challenge, don’t deal with it by leaving out
your results and conclusions. Everything above must still be covered; but
you will have to be extremely brief and articulate. Generally, you will
not be able to get into any details on the methodologies and decisions.
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