Thesis & Dissertation Guidelines
These guidelines provide students at Vanderbilt University with essential information about how to prepare and submit theses and dissertations in a format acceptable to the Graduate School. You can either explore the guidelines by topic below or review the complete Format Guidelines document .
General Information
Manuscript preparation.
- NEW: Dissertation Template
- Approved LATEX Template for Dissertations
Submission Requirements
Students in foreign language departments may submit manuscripts in a language other than English. The abstract, however, must be in English.
You may use a multi-part presentation format for combining original research that has been conducted in two or more related or non-related areas, or for presentation of combined journal articles (published or submitted for publication). You should organize the parts or articles into chapters, with well-defined subheadings, including an introduction, methods, results and discussion. Each chapter may contain its own list of references and appendices, or you may list them all at the end, depending on the custom of your discipline.When using this format, the thesis or dissertation should nonetheless consist of an integrated argument that binds the chapters together. You should include the appropriate preliminary pages, an introduction presenting the general theme of the research, and a conclusion summarizing and integrating the major findings. Any additional appendices related to the dissertation as a whole or any general references from the introduction, conclusion or transitional sections should come at the end of the dissertation.
When you have previously published portions of your thesis or dissertation as an article or book chapter, you must ensure the work may also be published as part of the dissertation or thesis. The standard provisions of copyright law regarding quoted and previously published material under copyright apply to the publication of theses and dissertations. Many publishers provide exceptions to work published as part of graduation requirements and this is often clearly outlined as part of the publication agreement signed by the author.In order to include your own previously published or co-authored material in your thesis or dissertation, you must comply with the following:
- You must be the first author, or obtain permission from your committee, to be uploaded as an Administrative file in Vireo.
- The article must be based on research completed while you were enrolled at Vanderbilt University.
- You must have permission from the publisher to reuse the work, which should be uploaded to VIREO as an Administrative file. The record of permission may take the form of the publishing agreement, a copy of the publisher’s webpage describing reuse rights, or an email approval from the publisher. You should also identify which chapters are associated with which articles when prompted within VIREO.
- If there are co-authors, you must obtain the permission of all co-authors to include the work in the thesis or dissertation as a matter of both copyright law and professional courtesy. Include these permissions (email approval is acceptable) as an Administrative file in VIREO.
- You must properly acknowledge previously published material and any co-authors within the text of your manuscript. This would typically take the form of a footnote, or, alternately, an italicized statement beneath the relevant chapter heading. The rubric should be: “This chapter is adapted from [Title] published in [Journal] and has been reproduced with the permission of the publisher and my co-authors [List co-authors]” and include the full citation required by the publisher, if any, or appropriate to your discipline.
If the work is submitted to the ProQuest database, ProQuest will scan the document to ensure it contains no copyrighted material without consent and proper citation.
Inclusion of Third-Party Content
If you are including content in your dissertation not authored or created by you, consider copyright issues. If your use of the content would exceed fair use under the Copyright Act, then you will need to seek the copyright holder’s permission in order to use the material. Obtaining copyright permissions often takes time and should not be left until the last minute.You should discuss questions about copyrighted material with your dissertation advisor or contact the VU Librarian for Copyright and Scholarly Communications at [email protected] for help evaluating fair use or obtaining permissions.
Your thesis or dissertation is automatically protected by copyright as soon as it is fixed in a tangible form, such as being saved as an electronic file. Although not required, it is good practice to include the copyright symbol, your name, and the year on the title page of your work (© 2017 by [your name]).You also may choose to register your copyright, which will gain you additional protections in case of litigation for copyright infringement. You can file a copyright registration online directly with the U.S. Copyright Office for a fee of $45.00.
You will be asked to agree to the license to deposit your submission to the Vanderbilt Institutional Repository. The Library, with the Vanderbilt Institutional Repository, enhances the metadata provided with your dissertation and adds your record to discovery tools like the Library Catalog and WorldCat, making it easily findable for scholars worldwide. The library also maintains the technical infrastructure of the repository. If you plan to make your dissertation open access, we can assist you in understanding the options for licensing. If your dissertation makes use of copyrighted content, you will want to think early on about whether you may rely on fair use or need to acquire licenses. We will be glad to meet with you to discuss the requirements of your particular project.PhD students also have the option to request deposit of your submission with ProQuest, at no additional cost to you. If you elect to deposit your submission with ProQuest, you must also agree to the ProQuest license. This agreement is entirely between you and ProQuest. Vanderbilt’s sole responsibility is to pass on the license agreement and your work to ProQuest. Please contact ProQuest Dissertation Publishing, at 1(800) 521-0600 or [email protected] with any questions.
The expectation of the Graduate School is that all theses and dissertations will be made publicly available absent these limited circumstances. You have the option to make your submission available immediately or to temporarily embargo its release for a limited period of time. Students may elect to embargo their work if they anticipate publication, are making a patent application, have restrictions imposed by sponsors, or privacy concerns. Metadata, including the abstract, about your submission will still be visible in the Vanderbilt Institutional Repository, thereby indicating that your submission was accepted. You should discuss any anticipated hold on publication with your advisor. If selecting the ProQuest publishing option, be sure that you make the same embargo selection under the Vanderbilt options. Once your submission has been released to ProQuest, we have no ability to retract it.If, after consultation with your advisor, you would like to request a temporary embargo, you can elect from the following:
- No embargo and release immediately for worldwide access
- Six (6) month embargo
- Twelve (12) month embargo
- Twenty-four (24) month embargo
If you, after consultation with your advisor, determine that you need to extend your embargo beyond your initial selection, you can only do so with permission from the Graduate School. If you have questions about your embargo, you may email [email protected]
The Graduate School recommends Campus Copy for procuring bound copies of theses and dissertations. You may contact them directly at 615-936-4544, or online at Printing Services .
These guidelines provide students at Vanderbilt University with essential information about how to prepare and submit theses and dissertations in a format acceptable to the Graduate School. The topics range from writing style to the completion of required forms. There are instructions and sample pages on the Graduate School website for guidance through this process.
There is a distinct difference between submitting a manuscript to a publisher and providing a completed thesis or dissertation to the Graduate School. A manuscript represents a pre-publication format; a thesis or dissertation is a final, completely edited, published document. Students should use these guidelines, not other style manuals, as the final authority on issues of format and style. Areas not covered in this document or deviation from any of the specifications should be discussed with a Graduate School format editor. Do not use previously accepted theses and dissertations as definite models for style.
Manuscripts consist of four major sections and must be placed in the order listed:
- Title Page (required)
- Copyright (optional)
- Dedication (optional)
- Acknowledgments/Acknowledgment of Support (optional)
- Table of Contents (required)
- List of Tables (required, if tables are in the body of the manuscript)
- List of Figures (required, if figures are in the body of the manuscript)
- List of Abbreviations/Nomenclature/Symbols (optional)
- Introduction (may be referred to as Chapter 1)
Body of Manuscript
- References (required)
- Appendices (optional)
The dedication is an optional portion of the academic manuscript. It is a personal message from the author in tribute to a person, group, or cause. Most dedications are brief statements beginning with “To…” or “For…” such as “To my family” or “For my daughter, Samantha.” The dedication, if any, is considered to be the sole work of the author and does not reflect endorsement of the views and opinions expressed therein by Vanderbilt University, the Graduate School, or the members of the faculty committee.
The acknowledgment is another optional portion of the academic manuscript. It is appropriately used to thank those people and organizations that have helped or encouraged the author in the process of obtaining the degree or otherwise making the graduate degree possible: advisers, the committee, labmates or members of one’s cohort, family, friends, etc. Typically, an acknowledgment is no more than 1 page in length.Acknowledgment of grant/contract or other financial support may be included on the acknowledgment page. Similarly, permission to reprint copyrighted material may be included here.The acknowledgment, if any, is considered to be the sole work of the author and does not reflect endorsement of the views and opinions expressed therein by Vanderbilt University, the Graduate School, or the members of the faculty committee.
The abstract is a separate document from the manuscript; it is not bound with the thesis or dissertation. Abstracts must be printed on white, 8 ½ x 11-inch paper. No page numbers are printed on the abstract. One copy is required. Abstracts must have the original signature(s) of the faculty advisor(s). The maximum length of the thesis abstract is 250 words. The maximum length of the dissertation abstract is 350 words, including the dissertation title. Majors are listed on the last pages of these guidelines. NEW: Abstract sample
The title page must be printed on white, 8 ½ x 11-inch paper. Committee member signatures on the title page must be originals. Spacing on the title page will vary according to the length of the title. The five lines following your name must be formatted exactly as found on the sample title page. The title page is considered page ‘i’ but the page number is not printed on the page. The month, day, and year representing the conferral date must be listed on the title page.
- NEW: ETD Title Page sample
- NEW: Title Page With Signatures sample
Use a standard font consistently throughout the manuscript. Font size should be 10 to 12-point for all text, including titles and headings. It is permissible to change point size in tables, figures, captions, footnotes, and appendix material. Retain the same font, where possible. When charts, graphs, or spreadsheets are “imported,” it is permissible to use alternate fonts. Italics are appropriate for book and journal titles, foreign terms, and scientific terminology. Boldface may be used within the text for emphasis and/or for headings and subheadings. Use both in moderation.
Measure the top margin from the edge of the page to the top of the first line of text. Measure the bottom page margin from the bottom of the last line of text to the bottom edge of the page. Page margins should be a minimum of one-half inch from top, bottom, left, and right and a maximum of one inch from top, bottom, left, and right. Right margins may be justified or ragged, depending upon departmental requirements or student preference.
The title page is considered to be page ‘i’ but the page number should not be printed on this page. All other pages should have a page number centered about ½ inch from the bottom of the page. Number the preliminary pages in lowercase Roman numerals. Arabic numerals begin on the first page of text. Pages are numbered consecutively throughout the remainder of the manuscript. The Introduction may be placed before the first page of Chapter 1, if it is not considered a chapter. The use of Arabic numbers may begin on the first page of the Introduction.
The entire text may be single-spaced, one and one-half spaced, or double-spaced. Block quotations, footnotes, endnotes, table and figure captions, titles longer than one line, and individual reference entries may be single-spaced. With spacing set, the following guidelines should be applied: Two enters after chapter numbers, chapter titles and major section titles (Dedication, Acknowledgements, Table of Contents, List of Tables, List of Figures, List of Abbreviations, Appendices, and References). Two enters before each first- level and second-level heading. Two enters before and after tables and figures embedded in the text. One enter after sub-level headings.
Chapters may be identified with uppercase Roman numerals or Arabic numbers. Styles used on the Table of Contents should be consistent within the text. Tables, figures, footnotes, and equations should be numbered consecutively throughout the manuscript with Arabic numerals. These may also be numbered consecutively by each chapter. Equation numbers should be placed to the right of the equation and contained within parentheses or brackets. Use uppercase letters to designate appendices.
Departments will determine acceptable standards for organizing master’s theses into chapters, sections, or parts. Usually, if a thesis has headings, a Table of Contents should be included. The dissertation must be divided into chapters. The use of parts, in addition to chapters, is acceptable.
Words and Sentences
Take care to divide words correctly. Do not divide words from one page to the next. Word processing software provides for “widow and orphan” protection. Utilize this feature to help in the proper division of sentences from one page to another. In general, a single line of text should not be left at the bottom or top of a page. Blank space may be left at the bottom of a page, where necessary.
Headings and Subheadings
Use headings and subheadings to describe briefly the material in the section that follows. Be consistent with your choice of “levels” and refer to the instructions on spacing for proper spacing between headings, subheadings, and text. First-level headings must be listed on the Table of Contents. Second-level and subsequent subheadings may be included.
Acronyms/Abbreviations/Capitalization
Abbreviations on the title page should appear as they do in the body of the thesis or dissertation. (Examples: Xenopus laevis , Ca, Mg, Pb, Zn; TGF-β, p53.) Capitalize only the first letter of words of importance, distinction, or emphasis in titles and headings. Do not alter the all-cap style used for acronyms (Example: AIDS) and organizational names (Example: IBM). Use the conventional style for Latin words (Examples: in vitro, in vivo, in situ ). Genus and species should be italicized. Capitalize the first letter of the genus, but not that of the species name (Example: Streptococcus aureus ).
Figures commonly refer to photographs, images, maps, charts, graphs, and drawings. Tables generally list tabulated numerical data. These items should appear as close as possible to their first mention in the text. Tables and figures may be placed in appendices, if this is a departmental requirement or standard in the field. Tables and figures should be numbered with Arabic numerals, either consecutively or by chapter. Be consistent in the style used in the placement of tables and figure captions. Tables and figures may be embedded within the text or placed on a page alone. When placed on its own page, a figure or table may be centered on the page. When included with text, a table or figure should be set apart from the text. Tables and figures, including captions, may be oriented in landscape. Make sure to use landscape page positioning on landscape-oriented pages. Table data and figure data must be kept together, if the information fits on one page.
The submission process for theses and dissertations begins at the Graduate School. Forms must be digitally submitted to the Graduate School. View the Checklist for Graduation
The Vanderbilt Libraries have recently implemented VIREO , an Electronic Thesis & Dissertation review and submission system for the Graduate School. The Graduate School requires electronic submission of all theses and dissertations through this new platform. Format reviews now occur within the VIREO submission process. If you have questions or would like an in-person format review, contact administrators .Students will use their VUnet ID and password to log in and begin completing the appropriate information, as outlined below.
Verify Your Information
- Orcid ID (can obtain in VIREO)
- Department/Program, Degree, Major
- Phone & Address
License & Publication Agreements
- Vanderbilt License Agreement (required)
- ProQuest Publication (optional)
Document Information
- Title, degree month/year, defense date, abstract, keywords, subjects, language
- Your committee, Chair email
- Previously published material (optional)
- Embargo options
Upload Your Files
- Primary document: thesis/dissertation
- Additional files: supplemental, source, administrative (CV, Survey of Earned Doctorates (additional SED information is in the Ph.D. Dissertation Requirements accordion below))
Confirm and Submit
- Students will receive a confirmation email once submitted
Any documents you will be uploading into VIREO as administrative files should be saved as a PDF, and named with your last name, first name-file-conferral month and year. Examples:
- King, Amanda-IntraTermApp-032021.pdf
- King, Amanda-CV-052021.pdf
- King, Amanda-SED-052021.pdf
- King, Amanda-Title Page-052021.pdf
- King, Amanda-Permissions-052021.pdf
- King, Amanda-DGS Approval-052021.pdf
Intent to Graduate
Students planning to graduate at the end of the fall, spring, or summer term should submit the Intent to Graduate form through YES by clicking on Graduation – Intent. Note that all masters students should submit this form , even if they are receiving a master’s in passing to the PhD.
Format Review
A format review is required before thesis or dissertation approval. Review will take place through VIREO when you first upload your document. Allow time before the deadline for review and revisions. For questions contact [email protected] .
Submit one copy of the title page, with original signatures of the advisor and a second reader (either a member of the committee or DGS of the program). The date on the title page will reflect the month, day, year of degree conferral.
Submit one copy of the abstract with the signature of the advisor.
Intent to Graduate
Students planning to graduate at the end of the fall, spring, or summer term should submit the Intent to Graduate form through YES by clicking on Graduation – Intent.
Defense Results
Students must schedule the Defense Exam with the Graduate School two weeks prior to the exam. Students will bring the Defense Results Form (along with the Title Page & Abstract) to obtain committee signatures. Upload the signed title page and abstract as one administrative file (title page first followed by abstract) to VIREO as an administrative file, and have your department submit the defense results to the graduate school submissions portal.
Upload your signed title page as an administrative file in VIREO. The date on the title page will reflect the month, day, year of degree conferral. Be sure it is the date of conferral and not the date of your defense.
Upload your signed abstract as an administrative file in VIREO.
Survey of Earned Doctorates (SED)
Students finishing a doctorate degree are required to complete the SED survey . Information provided to the National Opinion Research Council remains confidential and will be used for research or statistical purposes. Submit the Certificate of Completion with your VIREO submission as an administrative file.
Curriculum Vitae
Submit your CV through your VIREO submission as an administrative file. Directions on preparing a curriculum vitae are available here.
Thesis and dissertation filing guidelines
Students who have enrolled in dissertation or thesis credits will prepare a manuscript to publish through ProQuest/UMI Dissertation Publishing. You own and retain the copyright to your manuscript. The Graduate School collects the manuscript via electronic submissions only. All manuscripts are made available through ProQuest Dissertations and Theses database (PQDT), in ProQuest/UMI’s Dissertation Abstracts International, and through the University’s institutional repository, ScholarWolf.
Getting started with campus resources:
- Office of Human Research Protection
- Campus computer Help Desk @One : (775) 682-5000
- ProQuest Help Line: (877) 408-5027 (8 a.m. - 5 p.m. ET, or 5 a.m. - 2 p.m. PT)
- For specific questions, call the Graduate School Graduation staff at (775) 784-6869
Jump to a section
- Important dates and milestones for graduating students
- Electronic manuscript submission
- Checklist to complete your electronic submission
- Instructions for completing thesis/dissertation committee approval page
- Formatting your dissertation or thesis
- Templates, samples and forms for filing
1. Important dates and milestones for graduating students
- Contact your advisor to discuss department considerations and potential dates for your defense.
- Contact the Graduate School to ensure your progression paperwork has been approved.
- View important dates and purchase a graduation application through MyNevada for your graduation semester.
- Doctoral students must submit their dissertation title for the commencement program.
- Schedule defense date with the entire advisory committee in accordance with graduation deadlines.
- Submit all forms and final manuscripts to the Graduate School by established deadlines.
2. Electronic Manuscript submission
ProQuest electronic submission site
Set up an account with ProQuest and wait for a password sent via email. ProQuest offers email and phone support, 1-877-408-5027 , frequently asked questions, etc. Visit the site early to familiarize yourself with the submission process.
3. Checklist to complete your electronic submission
- Master's Notice of Completion and Doctoral Notice of Completion Form - This form includes all committee signatures AND the Graduate Program Director’s signature.
- Master's Final Review Approval and Doctoral Final Review Approval Form - This form serves as the final approval from your advisor. The Graduate School will accept the dissertation/thesis after the date listed on the form. The approval date on the form indicates the student’s submission can be accepted.
- Committee Approval Page - Use the online Word document template (NO SIGNATURES and no page number). This page will be merged into your manuscript to acknowledge committee members.
- Filing for Copyright Registration (optional) - Students have the opportunity to register a copyright of their graduate work with the U.S. Copyright Office. It is strictly optional, and there is a $75.00 fee associated with the service, which is paid online with student submission.
- Processing fee - $85 thesis / $95 dissertation. Log into your Student Center in MyNEVADA . Under the Finances section, click on the link “Purchase Miscellaneous Items.” Select the applicable processing fee to pay (Dissertation or Thesis) and complete the transaction. You will receive a receipt that generates overnight. Please keep this item as proof of payment for your records. Our office will automatically check for payment posted.
- NSF Survey of Earned Doctorates – For doctoral students only.
4. Instructions for completing thesis/dissertation committee approval page
- The Committee Approval Page (see forms links at bottom of page ): This interactive template has established borders.
- Use the accompanying template on page two of this handout to complete the Committee Approval form. Check spelling carefully and make sure that case (upper-case/capital and lower-case letters) and font style (regular or bold) follow the template. Spacing between lines will depend on how long your thesis/dissertation title is and how many committee members you have.
- Type the words as they appear on the template, i.e., on the first line “We recommend that the thesis/dissertation”, followed by the second line “prepared under our supervision by.”
- At brackets [1] enter your full name in ALL CAPITAL LETTERS and BOLD-FACED.
- Type the word “entitled” all in lowercase letters.
- At brackets [2] enter the complete title of your thesis/dissertation. The title should be in both CAPITAL and lower-case letters and must be Bold-Faced. If the title is long, use two or more lines, breaking the lines at appropriate words in the title. Do not hyphenate between lines.
- Type the words “be accepted in partial fulfillment of the,” and then, on the next line, “requirements for the degree of.”
- At brackets [3] enter the name of the degree being awarded, e.g., for Ph.D. enter “Doctor of Philosophy,” for Ed.D. enter “Doctor of Education”. The degree should be in all CAPITAL LETTERS and Bold-Faced. DO NOT enter the name of the graduate program, such as anthropology or economics.
- At brackets [4] type the full name of your thesis/dissertation advisor followed by his/her degree, followed by the word “Advisor”. For example, “Sonia A. Skakich, Ph.D., Advisor”. Use both capital and lowercase letters.
- Enter the subsequent committee members and type the full names of the rest of your committee members followed by their degrees and their roles in the committee (Committee Member or Graduate School Rep.) under each one. Use one line for each member. The Graduate School Representative should be the last committee member listed. Use both capital and lowercase letters.
- The last entry is reserved for the Dean of the Graduate School (which is already entered on the form).
- At brackets [5] enter the month and year of official graduation. The month must be May, August, or December. Enter the appropriate four-digit designation of the year (e.g., 2018).
5. Formatting your dissertation or thesis
The Graduate School requires standardized formatting for the dissertation and thesis documents. Students will follow a style guide (APA, MLA, etc.) to prepare their document; however, the document must comply with University formatting requirements listed below.
Margins and spacing
- Left margin: 1.5” from the left edge of the page.
- Right margin: 1.0” from the right edge of the page.
- Top margin: 1.0” from the top edge of the page.
- Bottom margin: 1.25” from the bottom edge of the page.
- All text should be double-spaced with the exception of captions, footnotes, long quotations, bibliographic entries of more than one line, and materials in tables and appendices.
Recommended fonts
Fonts should be easy to read. Times New Roman, Arial, or a similarly clear font is preferred; type size must be 10, 11, or 12 points. Script and italic typefaces are not acceptable except where absolutely necessary i.e. in Latin designations of species, etc.
In preparing your dissertation or thesis for electronic submission, you must embed all fonts. In Microsoft Word 2013, this is done by accessing the FILE menu; selecting OPTIONS, select SAVE. From the SAVE menu check the box labeled, ”Embed fonts in the file.” If the file size is a concern, check the box next to “Do NOT embed common system fonts."
Large tables, charts, etc., may be reduced to conform to page size, but the print must remain clear enough to be readable. You can also attach a PDF for electronic submissions.
Page numbering
Every page, with the exception of the title page, the copyright page, and the committee approval page is numbered in the upper right-hand corner, one-half inch from the top of the page and one inch from the right edge of the page. Do not underline or place a period after the number. Do not use a running header.
- The prefatory materials (abstract, acknowledgments, table of contents, etc.) are numbered in lower case Roman numerals (i, ii, iii, iv…). Insert a section break after the Roman numerals to create different page numbering styles.
- The first page of the main text and all subsequent pages are continuously numbered in Arabic numerals beginning with one until the final page number (1, 2, 3, 4…)
- Do NOT number appendices or pages of additional material with numbers such as 4a or A-1.
Tables and appendices
Tables and appendices are part of the document and must conform to the same margin and page numbering requirements.
Format and sequence of pages
Assemble pages in the following order:
- Title page *no page number* (create according to the example provided)
- Copyright Notice *no page number* (optional - see example)
- Committee Approval Page *no page number* (use the online template available on our forms page – NO SIGNATURES on this page)
- Abstract (begins lowercase Roman numerals i, ii, iii…)
- Dedication (optional)
- Acknowledgments (optional)
- Table of Contents
- List of Tables
- List of Figures
- Body of Manuscript (begins Arabic numbering 1, 2, 3…)
- Back Matter (appendices, notes, bibliography, etc.)
- Do not number the title page
- Center each line of type
- Use BOLD text type for the manuscript title
- The date listed is the month and year in which you will graduate. The only acceptable months are May, August, and December (graduation cycles).
Copyright page
No page number on this page. Although not required, we strongly recommend you insert a copyright notice in your manuscript following the title page. Essential components of the copyright notice include the copyright symbol, full legal name of the author, and year of first publication. Follow the format of the sample provided below.
Committee approval page
- No page number on this page
- Use the electronic PDF template provided below. This page will list the advisory committee members and graduate dean but will NOT include committee signatures. Combine the PDF into your manuscript to form a single PDF file. To do this in Adobe Pro, select "Organize pages," "Insert," and "From file."
- A window will open and you can drag your separate PDF files into this window to combine them into a single file.
- Choose the PDF documents in order of page sequencing (title page, committee page, main manuscript) and then combine files into a single PDF.
(Lower case Roman numeral “i” page number)
Abstracts are required for all theses and dissertations. ProQuest no longer has a word limit on the abstract, “as this constrains your ability to describe your research in a section that is accessible to search engines, and therefore would constrain potential exposure of your work.” ProQuest does publish print indices that include citations and abstracts of all dissertations and theses published by ProQuest/UMI. These print indices require word limits of 350 words for doctoral dissertations and 150 words for master’s theses (only text will be included in the abstract). You may wish to limit the length of your abstract if this concerns you. The abstracts as you submit them will NOT be altered in your published manuscript.
Processing note
Each copy of your thesis or dissertation will be checked for margins, clarity of copy, and pagination. The Graduate School will run the manuscript through the Turn It In plagiarism tool.
Electronically submitted theses/dissertations are available in electronic format only; no hard copies will be produced. Students are responsible for binding any copies for personal use or for distribution to their advisor, department, or committee members.
Dissertation & Thesis Processing Fee
Mandatory processing fees are required for all theses ($85.00) and all dissertations ($95.00). Log into your Student Center in MyNEVADA. Under the Finances section, click on the link “Purchase Miscellaneous Items.” Select the applicable processing fee to pay (Dissertation or Thesis) and complete the transaction. You will receive a receipt that generates overnight. Please keep this item as proof of payment for your records. Our office will automatically check for payment posted.
Using copyrighted materials
You must certify in ProQuest that any copyrighted material used in your work, beyond brief excerpts, is with the written permission of the copyright owner. Attach copies of permission letters to the agreement form.
Copyright registration (optional)
Students have the opportunity to register a copyright on their graduate work with the U.S. Copyright Office. It is strictly optional, and there is a $75.00 fee associated with the service. Students submitting electronically pay online. Paying for the claim to copyright is a voluntary action, which allows a court of law to award monetary damages if the copyright is infringed. You may file a Registration of Copyright yourself by sending a properly completed application form, a nonrefundable filing fee of $45.00 and a nonreturnable copy of your thesis or dissertation to the United States Copyright Office. Application materials and instructions are available from:
Register of Copyrights Copyright Office Library of Congress Washington, D.C. 20559-6000 Information is also available at the Copyright Office’s website: lcweb.loc.gov/copyright
ScholarWolf repository
ScholarWolf - the University's institutional repository - assists in collecting, preserving, and distributing the university's intellectual output accessible to end-users on local and global levels with few if any barriers. The repository will provide long-term access to the items deposited and can accept works from all the University faculty/staff/students. A wide variety of items including Articles, Datasets, Presentations, Technical Reports, Thesis and Dissertations, Posters, Conference Papers, etc. in all file formats can be deposited into the repository. The repository supports creative commons licensing and open-access publishing without any cost.
The discovery services and search engine optimizations ensure that major search engines easily discover the uploaded content. This increases the visibility, citations, and overall impact of the research. All items deposited in the repository receive a persistent URL that can be used for citations. Various statistics are collected with the built-in statistics module and Google Analytics modules. Information on monthly/yearly views, number of downloads, demographic information, etc. is available for each deposited item upon request.
All the ETDs uploaded into ProQuest are automatically deposited into the University's ScholarWolf repository. The embargo period set in ProQuest during deposit is carried over to the ScholarWolf repository. Any changes to the embargo period after deposit can be made by contacting ProQuest at 1-800-521-0600 as well as the ScholarWolf administrator at [email protected] .
ScholarWolf FAQ
Do I need to upload my ETD into the ScholarWolf repository?
- No, ProQuest will automatically upload the ETD into ScholarWolf on approval from the Graduate School.
Can I extend the embargo period on my Thesis/Dissertation after uploading it to ProQuest?
- Yes, to change or extend the embargo period of your ETD you need to contact ProQuest at 1-800-521-0600 and the ScholarWolf administrator at [email protected] .
Can I make my ETD open access in the ScholarWolf repository?
- Yes, ScholarWolf supports open access with creative commons licensing. It is available as a free service to all the faculty/staff/students.
Alternative formatting for thesis or dissertation
These guidelines apply to those theses or dissertations which consist of a number of papers either previously published or being published concurrently with the submission of the thesis or dissertation. Acceptance and publication of the articles are not criteria for this alternative. Each of the papers should constitute a separate chapter of the overall work. Preceding the papers should be an introductory section. This section may be one or more chapters but should include:
- an overall introduction to the thesis/dissertation,
- a review of the appropriate literature, and
- a description of the methodology used in the study.
The student’s advisory committee should determine the format and specific content of this introductory section.
The number of individual papers constituting chapters of the thesis/dissertation is determined by the student’s advisory committee. These chapters may be formatted in the same style required by the journals to which they are to be submitted. However, the margins must conform to those of the overall thesis, i.e. left margin = 1.5"; right margin = 1"; top margin = 1"; bottom margin = 1.25". In addition, each page must be numbered consistent with the rest of the thesis/dissertation, that is, the first page of text is numbered 1 with each subsequent page numbered consecutively until the end, to include all appendices, indexes, etc.
Following the chapters consisting of individual papers, there must follow a summary, conclusions and recommendations section. This section may be formatted as one or more chapters.
Work reported in the articles should represent a major contribution by the student that is the review of the literature, the conceptual framework and/or research design for the reported work. The statistical analyses, summaries, conclusions, and recommendations should represent the student’s own work.
For publication purposes, other researchers may be named as additional authors. This would be especially appropriate when publication is dependent upon extensive revision of the initial manuscript submitted and the faculty involved assumes responsibility for the revisions, or when the student is using an existing database.
When a student chooses this option, the articles will be submitted to the journals agreed upon by the concerned academic unit. Responsibility for follow-up, revisions, etc., should be identified in a written document and agreed upon by the student and faculty member(s) involved.
6. Templates, samples and forms
Please be sure to read the above instructions before proceeding with documents.
Forms for filing a master's thesis Forms for filing a doctoral dissertation
Thesis filing templates and samples
- Committee Approval page for 3-member committee (TEMPLATE)
- Committee Approval page for 3-member committee with co-advisor (TEMPLATE)
- Committee Approval page for 4-member committee (TEMPLATE)
- Committee Approval page for 4-member committee with co-advisor (TEMPLATE)
Sample pages
- Thesis Title page (SAMPLE)
- Thesis Copyright page (SAMPLE)
- Thesis Committee approval page (SAMPLE)
Dissertation filing templates, samples and Survey of Earned Doctorates
- Committee Approval page for 5-member committee (TEMPLATE)
- Committee Approval page for 5-member committee with co-advisor (TEMPLATE)
- Committee Approval page for 6-member committee (TEMPLATE)
- Committee Approval page for 6 -member committee with co-advisor (TEMPLATE)
- Dissertation Title page (SAMPLE)
- Dissertation Copyright page (SAMPLE)
- Dissertation Committee approval page (SAMPLE)
Survey of Earned Doctorates
- Survey of Earned Doctorates - The Survey of Earned Doctorates (SED) is an annual census conducted since 1957 of all individuals receiving a research doctorate from an accredited U.S. institution in a given academic year. The SED is sponsored by the National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics (NCSES) within the National Science Foundation (NSF) and by three other federal agencies: the National Institutes of Health, Department of Education, and National Endowment for the Humanities. The SED collects information on the doctoral recipient's educational history, demographic characteristics, and postgraduation plans. Results are used to assess characteristics of the doctoral population and trends in doctoral education and degrees. Read more about the purpose and methods of the SED .
/images/cornell/logo35pt_cornell_white.svg" alt="guidelines for thesis submission"> Cornell University --> Graduate School
Submitting your thesis/dissertation.
Submission of the final thesis/dissertation must be within 60 days of the final exam. Students who miss the 60 day submission deadline are ineligible to register in future terms.
The Graduate School uses ProQuest to administer the electronic thesis/dissertation (ETD) submission and committee approval process that results in publication in ProQuest Dissertations and Theses (PQDT) database and Cornell’s Library Repository, eCommons. Before initiating the electronic process, students are required to complete the Survey of Earned Doctorates (for doctoral students only). A SED Certification of Completion is provided to the student when the survey has been completed. Once the survey is completed, the final ETD can then be submitted to the Graduate School using the ProQuest system. The SED Certification of Completion is required for submission to ProQuest.
ProQuest Submission Steps
In order to complete the submission process, you will need to have the following:
- A single PDF file of your thesis or dissertation
- Your abstract
- Supplemental material
- SED Certification of Completion
Step 1: Begin Submission Process
Master’s students go to Cornell Master’s ProQuest site, doctoral students go to Cornell Doctoral ProQuest site. Click on the “sign up and get started today” button and follow instructions to begin the submission process.
Submission Process: Submission steps are outlined on the left menu. You will see the items checked off as you progress through the submission steps. You must click “Save & Continue” at the bottom of each page, even pages on which you do not enter any information. Using the left menu, you can return to any page and make changes until the point of final submission.
Step 2: Publishing Options
Traditional Publishing: “Traditional Publishing” is automatically selected and is included in the Cornell Thesis and Dissertation filing fees.
Delayed Release: ProQuest provides six months, and one and two year embargoes. The Graduate School recommends you discuss the publishing options with your advisor. If your advisor is unavailable or has no opinion, the conservative approach is to choose a two-year embargo.
Step 3: Read and Agree to ProQuest and University Distribution License
Both ProQuest and Cornell University distribution licenses will be presented for your acceptance.
Step 4: Enter Thesis/Dissertation Information
In addition to the mandatory information, such as title and abstract, you will have the opportunity to select up to three categories (subject areas) and six key words that describe your ETD. This information will make it easier for others to find your work when searching the web.
Step 5: Upload PDF and Supplemental Files
Upload PDF: Whether you use the PDF conversion tool provided by ProQuest or you convert your document to PDF yourself, review your PDF to ensure your formatting remains as you intended after conversion.
Supplementary Materials: If supplementary materials – such as audio, video, and spreadsheets – are an integral part of your ETD, you can submit them as supplementary files during the online submission process.
Step 6: Upload Required Documents
The SED Certification of Completion if you are a Ph.D. candidate is required for submission to ProQuest.
Step 7: Register for Copyright
You can complete this process through ProQuest for a fee, or you complete the process independently through the U.S. Copyright Office.
Step 8: Order Copies
If you would like to purchase additional copies of your thesis/dissertation for yourself, your field, or your committee members, you may order bound copies through ProQuest (Order Copies page). The required bound archival copy for the library is automatically ordered for you and included in the Cornell thesis and dissertation filing fees.
Select the “Decline – do not order” option if you don’t wish to order additional copies.
Bound copies can also be ordered through Cornell Print Services .
Step 9: Review and Submit
Once the thesis editor has reviewed the formatting of your thesis/dissertation, you will receive an email to let you know whether any corrections are required. You will then have five days to make the changes and upload the revised PDF. You will not be certified for graduation until the formatting of your ETD has been fully approved by the Graduate School. You will receive a confirmation email of final acceptance.
Step 10: Submitting Revised PDF (if needed)
You will receive an email describing the formatting changes needed with instructions and a link for resubmission.
The header image is the default header image for the site.
Thesis & dissertation guidelines, the graduate school’s dissertation and thesis guidelines provide a comprehensive list of all materials that must be included when you submit your dissertation or thesis, and how to format your dissertation or thesis..
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Thesis and Dissertation Guide
- « Thesis & Dissertation Resources
- The Graduate School Home
- Introduction
- Copyright Page
- Dedication, Acknowledgements, Preface (optional)
- Table of Contents
- List of Tables, Figures, and Illustrations
- List of Abbreviations
- List of Symbols
- Non-Traditional Formats
- Font Type and Size
- Spacing and Indentation
- Tables, Figures, and Illustrations
- Formatting Previously Published Work
- Internet Distribution
- Open Access
- Registering Copyright
- Using Copyrighted Materials
- Use of Your Own Previously Published Materials
Submission Steps
- Submission Checklist
- Sample Pages
IV. Submission
A Checklist and Sample Pages are provided at the end of this Guide. To expedite the submission process, your work must conform to these guidelines before you submit your document electronically . Please take time before submission to review and comply with these guidelines. You will be required to resubmit your document if revisions are needed, which delays your graduation clearance processing.
Read and follow all information on The Graduate School's Electronic Thesis and Dissertation website.
Completed theses and dissertations must be submitted by the deadlines posted on the Graduation Deadlines website . You are encouraged to submit your document as early as possible to provide ample time for necessary revisions before graduation.
You need to successfully apply to graduate in ConnectCarolina before submitting your document. Your Committee Composition and Exam Report forms (with all approval signatures) should be submitted to The Graduate School before submitting your document.
The time between initial submission and final approval by The Graduate School may also vary due to factors such as proximity to deadlines and your projected graduation date. You will be contacted once your thesis or dissertation has been reviewed by The Graduate School, and you are expected to submit required revisions in a timely manner; please see further details below. Please continue to monitor your email account for notifications until the document is approved.
- Create an account on the ProQuest submission site . Be sure to use an email address that you check regularly (including your junk/spam folder) to prevent delays in communication that will impact graduation clearance. Once the account is created, you can use it to log in and complete the following steps at any time.
- Read and review the information on the ProQuest Instructions page to answer any questions that you may have as you prepare to submit your thesis or dissertation.
- You may convert your document to a PDF a number of ways. You may use the conversion tool provided on the submission site. Other options include using Adobe software (available on campus) or programs and applications such as Microsoft Word 2010 that allow you to print to PDF or save files as a PDF.
- If converted properly, the conversion to PDF format should not affect the quality of the original document.
- See the ProQuest submission site PDF FAQs for more information.
- Review the ProQuest Publishing Options page and select the appropriate publishing options for you. For more information about publishing options, see the section on Distribution above. Select Save & Continue.
- Read and agree to the ProQuest Traditional Publishing Agreement .
- Provide the requested contact information. Be sure to include current, accurate information so that ProQuest and The Graduate School can contact you about your submission. Select Save & Continue.
- Pay careful attention to capitalization and spelling, as this information will be displayed online exactly as it is entered. The keywords and abstract information that you enter will be used to provide online database access to your thesis or dissertation, so accuracy is important.
- Please review the section on your Abstract when submitting this information, especially the tips on keywords and word limits.
- Acceptable media types and information about supplemental files can be found on the ProQuest FAQ page.
- The Graduate School recommends using common file formats that do not require specialized software to open and use. This will increase the likelihood of readers having ready access to the contents of your supplemental files as they review your entire thesis or dissertation.
- The Graduate School recommends that you take care to identify supplemental files as your own. If possible, embed your name and document information within the file contents. You are also encouraged to include your name as a part of the file name. When supplemental files are made accessible online, the file name and the specific contents of the file are the only way to identify to whom the work belongs.
- Electronic file size is limited to 1000 MB total of all files added together. Files can be uploaded in zipped folders.
- Although the ProQuest submission site discusses mailing in documents with very large supplementary files on a CD, DVD, or USB drive, UNC-Chapel Hill will not accept submissions in this manner.
- Choose whether or not you would like ProQuest to file a copyright on your behalf. Please see the section on Registering Copyright for more information. Select Save & Continue.
- Please note The Graduate School cannot take responsibility for your printing job.
- You may order your copies through the ProQuest site at the time of submission or at a later date.
- The Print Stop and Copy Center in the UNC Student Stores will also send documents out to a library bindery on behalf of students. The Print Stop handles payments, provides on-campus customer service, and takes care of the shipping and order tracking. For more information, visit the Print Stop on the third floor of Student Stores or call 919-962-7016.
- You may also find other companies online that offer printing or binding services for theses and dissertations.
- Pay for any applicable fees with a credit card. Expect your card to be charged after you graduate.
- Submit your document by selecting the Submit Dissertation/Thesis button.
- Allow sufficient time for The Graduate School staff to review your document, generally within ten business days of submission. You will be notified via email if revisions are needed, and you must complete all required revisions in a timely manner, usually within 72 hours. Be sure to include an email address that you check regularly in the contact information requested by ProQuest. This email address will be used to contact you with revisions and final approval.
- Once you receive notice that The Graduate School has accepted the final document, no revisions or re-submissions are accepted.
For more details about submission, please visit The Graduate School's Electronic Thesis and Dissertation site and the Frequently Asked Questions on the ProQuest site.
Previous: Copyrighting
Next: Checklist
Checklist: Submitting My Dissertation or Thesis
Main navigation.
The following checklist includes all items that should be prepared in order to complete the submission of your dissertation or thesis, using the Axess Dissertation and Thesis Center
We recommend that you take all necessary steps in order to upload your dissertation or thesis in time to meet all of the applicable posted deadlines and give your Final Reader plenty of time to approve the dissertation or thesis once it has been uploaded.
Prior to Online Submission
- Enroll in the quarter for which you intend to submit
- File online “Application to Graduate” through Axess by the appropriate deadline.
- Note: if a committee member is missing, or has been assigned an incorrect role, meet with your department who maintains reading committees and changes permitted within policy.
- For thesis: The name of your Thesis Advisor and designate them as your Final Reader.
- Submit the Reading Committee Signature Page requirement in the Axess eForms platform, following the published instructions .
- Confirm with your department that your candidacy is valid through your degree conferral date.
- Confirm with your department that you have completed all required university milestones, especially the university orals milestone.
- Review Copyright Considerations for Authors of Electronic Theses and Dissertations . Discuss embargo and other release options with your co-authors and advisor before preparing the submission online.
- For students submitting a dissertation: Complete the Survey of Earned Doctorates .
During Online Submission
Ensure your electronic dissertation or thesis is formatted following these guidelines:
- One electronic copy of the dissertation or thesis in PDF format.
- For D.M.A Composition students, score page size is 11" x 17".
- Type size 10, 11, or 12 point. Smaller fonts are acceptable for tables, captions, etc.
- Font style is New Times Roman. If applicable, mathematic/scientific notation fonts are embedded in the PDF file.
- Line spacing of dissertation or thesis text is 1.5 or 2.
- Margins are 1.5 inches on the binding edge and 1 inch on all other sides.
- Text is divided correctly.
- Title page is formatted correctly.
- No signature page ii or copyright page iii is included (Axess automatically inserts a copyright and augmented signature page during submission).
- Pagination begins with the first page of the Abstract, which should be page “iv”; or, if formatted for double-sided printing with the Abstract to appear on the right page, then pagination begins with a blank page as page "iv". Pagination is continuous and placement of numbers is consistent throughout the manuscript.
- The dissertation or thesis is ready-for-publication in appearance. All pages and sections are in order.
- The dissertation or thesis contains no unnumbered pages, except for the title page which is not paginated, but is assumed page 'i'.
- PDF file size does not exceed 1 GB.
- PDF file has no encryption or other security measures applied.
- One version of the abstract, containing no special text formatting or HTML, entered into an online submission form.
- File size(s) do not exceed 1 GB.
- Short description or label is applied to each file after upload.
- Maximum 20 supplemental files.
- Agree to Stanford University publication license.
- Optional: Limit amount of dissertation or thesis content available via third-party distributors.
- Optional: Creative Commons license selected and applied.
- Optional: Delayed release (embargo) of the dissertation or thesis.
- Written permission from the appropriate copyright holder(s) to reproduce any copyrighted material in the dissertation or thesis. Each letter is formatted and uploaded as a single PDF file. Maximum 10 permission files.
After Online Submission
- Confirm via Axess that your designated Final Reader certifies the submission by noon of the final submission deadline date .
- For students submitting a dissertation, if you haven't done so already: Complete the Survey of Earned Doctorates .
Theses and Dissertations
Defense and submission.
Below is an overview of the main steps in preparing, defending, and submitting your thesis or dissertation. For detailed instructions on each step, see The Graduate School's Guide for Electronic Submission of Thesis and Dissertation (PDF) , in addition to this video recording from a workshop given on the subject.
- Schedule your defense and apply for graduation in DukeHub ( defense and graduation deadlines ).
- At least 30 days before your defense: Confirm or update your defense committee.
- Give your thesis/dissertation to your advisor for inspection, and prompt your advisor to send a letter to [email protected] stating that it is complete and ready to defend. Note: For students in School of Medicine Ph.D. programs, their advisor letters are generated through T3.
- Request your DGSA to send a departmental defense announcement to [email protected] . Note: For students in School of Medicine Ph.D. programs, their departmental defense announcements are generated through T3.
- At least 2 weeks before your defense: Submit your complete, correctly formatted dissertation/thesis to ProQuest (initial submission). Also provide it to each member of your committee.
- Optional: After you receive an email through ProQuest from the Graduate School administrator who reviewed your thesis/dissertation format, you may make an appointment for a brief, virtual meeting with the administrator to discuss any questions you have about the defense process or the recommended formatting revisions.
- A few days before your defense, The Graduate School will generate your final examination certificate and email it to the chair/co-chair(s) of your examination committee and the DGSA of your department. Note: For students in School of Medicine Ph.D. programs, their final examination certificates are generated and released through T3.
- Defend your dissertation. After your final examination, your committee members will vote on whether you passed or failed. Your chair and DGS will record the votes on your final examination certificate, sign it, and submit it to The Graduate School. Your committee may vote that you passed but still require minor edits or corrections before final submission.
- As soon as possible after your defense, submit to [email protected] the Non-Exclusive Distribution License and Thesis/Dissertation Availability Agreement (“embargo agreement”) signed by yourself and your thesis/dissertation advisor.
- Within 30 days after your successful defense, or by the established final submission deadline (whichever is first): Submit the final version of your dissertation/thesis to ProQuest.
Guide for Electronic Submission of Thesis and Dissertation (PDF)
We provide the following templates for your convenience and to help you eliminate common formatting errors. However, all submitted theses and dissertations must meet the specifications listed in the ETD guide . The manuscript must be a completed document, formatted correctly, with no sections left blank.
- Word Template for Thesis/Dissertation (Word)
- LaTeX Template for Thesis/Dissertation (ZIP)
Notes about the LaTeX Template
- This LaTeX template is for both master's and Ph.D. students. Master's theses must also have an abstract title page.
- Neither The Graduate School nor OIT supports LaTeX beyond providing this template.
Ph.D. and master’s students are required to apply for graduation in DukeHub by the established application deadline for the semester in which they plan to graduate.
Review the full graduation guidelines on the Graduation Information and Deadlines page.
When you submit your thesis or dissertation electronically, you will also permit Duke University to make it available online through DukeSpace at Duke Libraries. See the pages below for more information about ETDs:
- ETDs Overview
- ETD Availability
- ETD Copyright Information
- ETD Technical Help
Check out the writing support offered by The Graduate School, such as writing spaces, consultations, and access to online writing workshops, communities, and resources.
IMAGES
VIDEO
COMMENTS
These guidelines provide students at Vanderbilt University with essential information about how to prepare and submit theses and dissertations in a format acceptable to the Graduate School. You can either explore the guidelines by topic below or review the complete Format Guidelines document. Thesis & Dissertation Guidelines General Information Manuscript Preparation NEW: Dissertation ...
• Submit final thesis or dissertation. Find upcoming deadlines on the . Thesis, Dissertation, Performance and Oral Presentation Deadlines Calendar. Below are the steps necessary to submit a dissertation or thesis. Step 1: Format Review . Upload your thesis or dissertation to the Electronic Theses and Dissertations (ETD) website. Make
Thesis and dissertation filing guidelines. Students who have enrolled in dissertation or thesis credits will prepare a manuscript to publish through ProQuest/UMI Dissertation Publishing. You own and retain the copyright to your manuscript. The Graduate School collects the manuscript via electronic submissions only.
Submitting Your Thesis/Dissertation. Submission of the final thesis/dissertation must be within 60 days of the final exam. Students who miss the 60 day submission deadline are ineligible to register in future terms. The Graduate School uses ProQuest to administer the electronic thesis/dissertation (ETD) submission and committee approval process ...
The Graduate School's dissertation and thesis guidelines provide a comprehensive list of all materials that must be included when you submit your dissertation or thesis, and how to format your dissertation or thesis. Electronic Dissertation & Thesis Basics. Supplemental Materials. Supplemental Media. Format for the Body.
Dissertation and Thesis Guidelines. The submission of your electronic thesis or dissertation (ETD) is the final step in the awarding of your degree. The finished document is a scholarly work, and something to be proud of — the result of a long period of preparation and research. Allowing enough time for all the required steps, paying ...
Submit your document by selecting the Submit Dissertation/Thesis button. Allow sufficient time for The Graduate School staff to review your document, generally within ten business days of submission. You will be notified via email if revisions are needed, and you must complete all required revisions in a timely manner, usually within 72 hours.
A thesis should be prepared in accordance with the standards of the discipline for which the thesis is being written. The Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association, The Chicago Manual of Style, and the MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers (among others) all provide discipline-specific guidelines for preparing a master's thesis (or similar culminating experience).
During Online Submission. Ensure your electronic dissertation or thesis is formatted following these guidelines: One electronic copy of the dissertation or thesis in PDF format. Page size is standard U.S. letter size (8.5" x 11"). For D.M.A Composition students, score page size is 11" x 17". Type size 10, 11, or 12 point.
Below is an overview of the main steps in preparing, defending, and submitting your thesis or dissertation. For detailed instructions on each step, see The Graduate School's Guide for Electronic Submission of Thesis and Dissertation (PDF), in addition to this video recording from a workshop given on the subject. Schedule your defense and apply for graduation in DukeHub (defense and graduation ...