Proper thesis formatting is essential for submission acceptance. Follow these standard guidelines (always verify with your institution's specific requirements, as they may vary).
Standard thesis structure (order may vary by discipline and institution)
Title page, abstract, table of contents, list of figures/tables, acknowledgements, and declaration.
Research background, problem statement, research questions, significance, and thesis scope.
Theoretical framework, critical synthesis of prior research, identification of research gap.
Research design, sampling strategy, data collection methods, ethical considerations, analysis plan.
Presentation of findings (Results) followed by interpretation, comparison with literature, and implications (Discussion).
Summary of contributions, limitations, future research recommendations, and complete reference list.
Standard margin measurements for binding and printing
Essential tips for submission-ready formatting
Apply built-in Word heading styles (Heading 1, Heading 2) to automatically generate Table of Contents and maintain hierarchy.
Use sequential numbering (Figure 1.1, Table 2.3) with descriptive captions. List all in separate Lists of Figures/Tables.
Use roman numerals (i, ii, iii) for preliminaries and Arabic numerals (1,2,3) for the main body. No page number on title page.
Use a reference manager (Zotero, Mendeley, EndNote) to ensure consistency and automate formatting.
Answers to common thesis formatting queries