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Study · Planning 28 June 2026

An 8-week thesis timeline

A thesis doesn't stall because it's hard — it stalls because it's big and vague. Break it into weeks and it becomes manageable.

Weeks 1–2: Topic, question and sources

Start from a clear research question — narrow enough to answer, meaningful enough to be worth it. Gather 15–20 reliable sources and keep citation notes from day one.

Deliverable: one paragraph stating the question, plus a draft table of contents.

Weeks 3–4: Methodology and data

Decide how you'll answer the question: qualitative, quantitative or mixed. If there's an empirical part, start collecting/processing data now — it's the most unpredictable piece.

Help: research methodology guide.

Weeks 5–6: Writing

Write in whatever order helps, not necessarily front to back. Many start with the literature review and results, leaving the intro and conclusion for last. Aim for a steady pace (e.g. 500 words/day) rather than marathons.

Week 7: Revision

Leave the text for 1–2 days, then read it critically: argument flow, chapter links, clarity. Check every claim is backed by a source and that all citations appear in the bibliography.

Week 8: Formatting, Turnitin and submission

Apply your department's specs (cover page, margins, citation style), build a table of contents and run a plagiarism check before submitting. Leave time for small fixes.

Full steps in the thesis and dissertation guide.

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