| Becker, Howard S. (with a chapter
by Pamela Richards). Writing for Social
Scientists: How to Start
and Finish Your Thesis, Book, or Article. 1986.
Students in any discipline will find
Becker's advice helpful. Sample chapter titles: "Persona and
Authority," "Learning to Write as a Professional,"
"Getting It out the Door," and "Terrorized by the
Literature."
Bolker, Joan. Writing Your Dissertation
in Fifteen Minutes a Day: A Guide to Starting,
Revising, and Finishing
Your Doctoral Thesis. 1998.
By a co-founder of the Harvard Writing
Center, now a clinical psychologist who specializes in helping dissertators.
In her words, "This book is a collection of successful field-tested
strategies for writing a dissertation; it's also a guide to conducting
an experiment, with you as your own subject, your work habits as
the data, and a writing method that fits you well as the goal."
Highly recommended by dissertators.
Booth, Wayne C., Gregory G. Colomb,
and Joseph M. Williams. The Craft of
Research.
Thorough and sophisticated treatment
of the research process: moving from a topic to a research problem,
building a convincing argument, drafting, and revising. Also includes
a helpful chapter on "Communicating Evidence Visually."
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Cone, John D., and Sharon L. Foster.
Dissertations and Theses from Start to Finish:
Psychology and Related
Fields. 1993.
Practical advice on such subjects as
finding and refining topics, selecting a committee, and managing
time; overviews of the proposal and of each dissertation chapter;
material on measurement, statistics, and data handling.
Gillis, Christina M. Scholarly
Arguments: Strategies for Writing Persuasive Proposals
in the Humanities.
1993.
According to the Grants Information Center,
provides "very brief general advice for proposal writers for
humanities research." Available in the UW Memorial Library
Grants Information Center (HG177.5/U6/G55/1993).
Locke, Lawrence F., Waneen Wyrick
Spirdoso, and Stephen J. Silverman. Proposals
That Work: A Guide
for Planning Dissertations and Grant Proposals. 4th
ed.,
2000.
A useful general guide for students writing
proposals. Annotated bibliography; annotated samples of experimental,
qualitative, quasi-experimental, and grant proposals.
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Meloy, Judith M. Writing the Qualitative
Dissertation: Understanding by Doing. 1994.
Based on a study of dissertations and
on data collected from faculty and students. Shares their comments
and offers questions to consider at various stages of the process
in brief chapters that include "Selecting and Working with
a Committee," "Preparing and Defending the Proposal,"
and "Connecting Focus, Literature, and Ownership."
Peters, Robert L. Getting What
You Came For: the Smart Student's Guide to Earning a
Master's or Ph.D.
Rev. ed., 1997.
Packed with practical advice ranging
from choosing a school to finding a job. Chapters on the dissertation
deal with the committee, topic, proposal, writing, and defense.
Przeworski, Adam, and Frank Salomon.
"The Art of Writing Proposals." New York:
Social Science Research
Council, 1995. 25 Feb. 2002<http://weber.ucsd.edu/~proeder/Proposals.pdf>
Rudestam, Kjell Erik, and Rae R. Newton.
Surviving Your Dissertation: A
Comprehensive Guide
to Content and Process. 1992.
Treats the dissertation process from
finding a topic to the oral defense. Chapter on results gives detailed
information on presenting statistical information in tables and
graphs. Section on process, subtitled "What You Need to Know
to Make the Dissertation Easier," includes practical advice
on managing time and dealing with writing anxiety, including "Twelve
Tricks to Keep You Going When You Write."
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Simon, Marilyn K., and J. Bruce Francis.
The Dissertation Cookbook: From Soup to
Nuts, A Practical Guide
to Start and Complete Your Dissertation. 2nd ed., 1998.
Although some readers might find the
relentless cookbook metaphor and the sloppy editing annoying, many
graduate students highly recommend this book, which supersedes the
hard-to-find Proposal Cookbook. Contains sections on each chapter
of the five-chapter dissertation common in the social and behavioral
sciences, as well as sections on getting started, choosing a topic,
types of research, instruments, statistics, samping, and appraising
data. Most of the information is relevant for writers at the proposal
stage. Many practical tips, hands-on exercises, and checklists.
Sternberg, David. How to Complete
and Survive a Doctoral Dissertation. 1981.
Still in print and in demand for its
practical, symphathetic advice, offered in a readable, entertaining
style.
Zerubavel, Eviatar. The Clockwork
Muse: A Practical Guide to Writing Theses, Dissertations, and Books
(Cambridge: Harvard UP, 1999).
Working from the premise that "It
is methodicalness and routinization. . . that help us produce theses,
dissertations, and books," (p. 3), Zerubavel presents a detailed
process for coming up with a realistic writing schedule and deadlines.
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