This document outlines the structure and contents of a typical BSc project. It discusses including an abstract, table of contents, introduction with an overview and purpose, related works, methodology, development steps, validation steps, and conclusion. The introduction provides background and problem definition. The methodology explains the research approach. Development and validation steps detail the process. References cite prior work.
2. Topics covered
Abstract
Table of contents
CHAPTER ONE Introduction
Overview
Purpose of the study
Project Aim and Objectives
CHAPTER TWO RELATED WORKS & TECHNICAL BACKGROUND
CHAPTER THREE
METHODOLOGY USED
DEVELOPMENT STEPS
VALIDATION
CONCLUSION
References
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3. Abstract
This is the first part of any final year BSc project. It should be written at
the final step of the final project as a full story of the BSc project, It
should be brief, clear, and easy to understand. The abstract explains
what you have done, how you did it, and why you did it.
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4. Table of Content
An automatic Table of Contents uses Styles to keep track of page
numbers and section titles for you automatically.
Microsoft Office (Word) application provides us with an excellent way
to create a table of contents automatically.
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5. CHAPTER ONE Introduction
OVERVIEW
The introduction contains the background of the BSc project. It explains the
project problem as well as the way would be solving. It also describes the
practical approaches you’d be using to solve these problems. Your
introduction should also be able to explain how the problems relate to your
field of study. Your introduction should be easy to understand and should be
backed up with facts. Try to make it engaging research. Don’t be boring.
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6. CHAPTER ONE Introduction
Purpose of the study
The goals of your project topic should be clearly defined in this section. You
should be able to provide practical reasons why you think this project is
important. This section will state hypotheses that need to be tested and
questions that are to be answered by your research. You should begin this
section with the statement ‘the purpose of this study is…’
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7. CHAPTER ONE Introduction
Project aim and objectives
The Project aim focus on what the research project is intended to achieve;
Project objectives focus on how the aim will be achieved. ... Project aims
focus on a project's long-term outcomes; Project objectives focus on its
immediate, short-term outcomes.
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8. CHAPTER TWO
RELATED WORKS
The related work section may also be called a literature review. The point of
the section is to highlight work done by others that somehow ties in with
your own work. It may be work that you're basing your work off of, or work
that shows others attempts to solve the same problem.
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9. CHAPTER THREE
THE METHODOLOGY USED
In the BSc Project, you will have to discuss the methods you used to do your Project.
The methodology section explains what you did and how you did it, allowing readers
to evaluate the reliability and validity of the BSc project. It should include:
The type of research you did
How you collected your data
How you analyzed your data
Any tools or materials you used in the research
Your rationale for choosing these methods
The methodology section should generally be written in the past tense.
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11. CHAPTER THREE
THE VALIDATION STEPS
The Secret Code of Software Validation…in 5 Easy Steps
Step 1: Create the Validation Plan. ...
Step 2: Define System Requirements. ...
Step 3: Create the Validation Protocol & Test Specifications. ..
Step 4: Testing. ...
Step 5: Develop/Revise Procedures & Final Report.
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12. CHAPTER THREE
THE CONCLUSION
For any research project and any scientific discipline, drawing
conclusions is the final, and most important, part of the process.
The final conclusion is critical, determining success or failure. If an
otherwise excellent experiment is summarized by a weak conclusion,
the results will not be taken seriously.
Generally, a researcher will summarize what they believe has been
learned from the research project.
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13. REFERENCES
This is the last part of your research proposal. All academic writings
require references and citations. This shows the readers that you
value the work done by others that have helped you formulate the
research proposal. It also shows the readers that you understand
your project topic. Citations should include the names of authors, the
title of publication, date of publication and depending on your
referencing style and any other necessary information.
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