Dissertations: or, the Art of Knowing Yourself
On the last day of my final year of Secondary School, my English class teacher gave us all little good-luck cards, which was very sweet. On the inside of mine, and in flawless fountain-pen calligraphy, she wrote: “Dear Stuart, wishing you the greatest fortune. Remember ‘This above all – to thine own self be true’”. Following this seemingly excellent instruction, I came to the University of Glasgow to study English Literature, where I quickly learned that the character who spoke these immortal Shakespearian lines wasn’t, perhaps, the most reliable source of advice.
Try writing a methodological journal during your dissertation
Keeping a methodological journal matters a lot to both the product and process of your dissertation. In terms of product, a written-up account of what you did is crucial to detailing to justifying and detailing what you did. In a methodology chapter, every step you took must be detailed and rationalised clearly. An effectively kept journal is a gift in the writing up stage after the project is over.
A lesson learnt!
My undergraduate dissertation was not good. I probably shouldn’t even admit it, but I did everything I’d now advise students not to do. Friends (who tease me for being overly organised…) will smirk to discover that I left far too much to the last minute. Ok, all of it.
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