Grad Coach

Dissertation Structure & Layout 101: How to structure your dissertation, thesis or research project.

By: Derek Jansen (MBA) Reviewed By: David Phair (PhD) | July 2019

So, you’ve got a decent understanding of what a dissertation is , you’ve chosen your topic and hopefully you’ve received approval for your research proposal . Awesome! Now its time to start the actual dissertation or thesis writing journey.

To craft a high-quality document, the very first thing you need to understand is dissertation structure . In this post, we’ll walk you through the generic dissertation structure and layout, step by step. We’ll start with the big picture, and then zoom into each chapter to briefly discuss the core contents. If you’re just starting out on your research journey, you should start with this post, which covers the big-picture process of how to write a dissertation or thesis .

Dissertation structure and layout - the basics

*The Caveat *

In this post, we’ll be discussing a traditional dissertation/thesis structure and layout, which is generally used for social science research across universities, whether in the US, UK, Europe or Australia. However, some universities may have small variations on this structure (extra chapters, merged chapters, slightly different ordering, etc).

So, always check with your university if they have a prescribed structure or layout that they expect you to work with. If not, it’s safe to assume the structure we’ll discuss here is suitable. And even if they do have a prescribed structure, you’ll still get value from this post as we’ll explain the core contents of each section.  

Overview: S tructuring a dissertation or thesis

  • Acknowledgements page
  • Abstract (or executive summary)
  • Table of contents , list of figures and tables
  • Chapter 1: Introduction
  • Chapter 2: Literature review
  • Chapter 3: Methodology
  • Chapter 4: Results
  • Chapter 5: Discussion
  • Chapter 6: Conclusion
  • Reference list

As I mentioned, some universities will have slight variations on this structure. For example, they want an additional “personal reflection chapter”, or they might prefer the results and discussion chapter to be merged into one. Regardless, the overarching flow will always be the same, as this flow reflects the research process , which we discussed here – i.e.:

  • The introduction chapter presents the core research question and aims .
  • The literature review chapter assesses what the current research says about this question.
  • The methodology, results and discussion chapters go about undertaking new research about this question.
  • The conclusion chapter (attempts to) answer the core research question .

In other words, the dissertation structure and layout reflect the research process of asking a well-defined question(s), investigating, and then answering the question – see below.

A dissertation's structure reflect the research process

To restate that – the structure and layout of a dissertation reflect the flow of the overall research process . This is essential to understand, as each chapter will make a lot more sense if you “get” this concept. If you’re not familiar with the research process, read this post before going further.

Right. Now that we’ve covered the big picture, let’s dive a little deeper into the details of each section and chapter. Oh and by the way, you can also grab our free dissertation/thesis template here to help speed things up.

The title page of your dissertation is the very first impression the marker will get of your work, so it pays to invest some time thinking about your title. But what makes for a good title? A strong title needs to be 3 things:

  • Succinct (not overly lengthy or verbose)
  • Specific (not vague or ambiguous)
  • Representative of the research you’re undertaking (clearly linked to your research questions)

Typically, a good title includes mention of the following:

  • The broader area of the research (i.e. the overarching topic)
  • The specific focus of your research (i.e. your specific context)
  • Indication of research design (e.g. quantitative , qualitative , or  mixed methods ).

For example:

A quantitative investigation [research design] into the antecedents of organisational trust [broader area] in the UK retail forex trading market [specific context/area of focus].

Again, some universities may have specific requirements regarding the format and structure of the title, so it’s worth double-checking expectations with your institution (if there’s no mention in the brief or study material).

Dissertations stacked up

Acknowledgements

This page provides you with an opportunity to say thank you to those who helped you along your research journey. Generally, it’s optional (and won’t count towards your marks), but it is academic best practice to include this.

So, who do you say thanks to? Well, there’s no prescribed requirements, but it’s common to mention the following people:

  • Your dissertation supervisor or committee.
  • Any professors, lecturers or academics that helped you understand the topic or methodologies.
  • Any tutors, mentors or advisors.
  • Your family and friends, especially spouse (for adult learners studying part-time).

There’s no need for lengthy rambling. Just state who you’re thankful to and for what (e.g. thank you to my supervisor, John Doe, for his endless patience and attentiveness) – be sincere. In terms of length, you should keep this to a page or less.

Abstract or executive summary

The dissertation abstract (or executive summary for some degrees) serves to provide the first-time reader (and marker or moderator) with a big-picture view of your research project. It should give them an understanding of the key insights and findings from the research, without them needing to read the rest of the report – in other words, it should be able to stand alone .

For it to stand alone, your abstract should cover the following key points (at a minimum):

  • Your research questions and aims – what key question(s) did your research aim to answer?
  • Your methodology – how did you go about investigating the topic and finding answers to your research question(s)?
  • Your findings – following your own research, what did do you discover?
  • Your conclusions – based on your findings, what conclusions did you draw? What answers did you find to your research question(s)?

So, in much the same way the dissertation structure mimics the research process, your abstract or executive summary should reflect the research process, from the initial stage of asking the original question to the final stage of answering that question.

In practical terms, it’s a good idea to write this section up last , once all your core chapters are complete. Otherwise, you’ll end up writing and rewriting this section multiple times (just wasting time). For a step by step guide on how to write a strong executive summary, check out this post .

Need a helping hand?

dissertation number of pages

Table of contents

This section is straightforward. You’ll typically present your table of contents (TOC) first, followed by the two lists – figures and tables. I recommend that you use Microsoft Word’s automatic table of contents generator to generate your TOC. If you’re not familiar with this functionality, the video below explains it simply:

If you find that your table of contents is overly lengthy, consider removing one level of depth. Oftentimes, this can be done without detracting from the usefulness of the TOC.

Right, now that the “admin” sections are out of the way, its time to move on to your core chapters. These chapters are the heart of your dissertation and are where you’ll earn the marks. The first chapter is the introduction chapter – as you would expect, this is the time to introduce your research…

It’s important to understand that even though you’ve provided an overview of your research in your abstract, your introduction needs to be written as if the reader has not read that (remember, the abstract is essentially a standalone document). So, your introduction chapter needs to start from the very beginning, and should address the following questions:

  • What will you be investigating (in plain-language, big picture-level)?
  • Why is that worth investigating? How is it important to academia or business? How is it sufficiently original?
  • What are your research aims and research question(s)? Note that the research questions can sometimes be presented at the end of the literature review (next chapter).
  • What is the scope of your study? In other words, what will and won’t you cover ?
  • How will you approach your research? In other words, what methodology will you adopt?
  • How will you structure your dissertation? What are the core chapters and what will you do in each of them?

These are just the bare basic requirements for your intro chapter. Some universities will want additional bells and whistles in the intro chapter, so be sure to carefully read your brief or consult your research supervisor.

If done right, your introduction chapter will set a clear direction for the rest of your dissertation. Specifically, it will make it clear to the reader (and marker) exactly what you’ll be investigating, why that’s important, and how you’ll be going about the investigation. Conversely, if your introduction chapter leaves a first-time reader wondering what exactly you’ll be researching, you’ve still got some work to do.

Now that you’ve set a clear direction with your introduction chapter, the next step is the literature review . In this section, you will analyse the existing research (typically academic journal articles and high-quality industry publications), with a view to understanding the following questions:

  • What does the literature currently say about the topic you’re investigating?
  • Is the literature lacking or well established? Is it divided or in disagreement?
  • How does your research fit into the bigger picture?
  • How does your research contribute something original?
  • How does the methodology of previous studies help you develop your own?

Depending on the nature of your study, you may also present a conceptual framework towards the end of your literature review, which you will then test in your actual research.

Again, some universities will want you to focus on some of these areas more than others, some will have additional or fewer requirements, and so on. Therefore, as always, its important to review your brief and/or discuss with your supervisor, so that you know exactly what’s expected of your literature review chapter.

Dissertation writing

Now that you’ve investigated the current state of knowledge in your literature review chapter and are familiar with the existing key theories, models and frameworks, its time to design your own research. Enter the methodology chapter – the most “science-ey” of the chapters…

In this chapter, you need to address two critical questions:

  • Exactly HOW will you carry out your research (i.e. what is your intended research design)?
  • Exactly WHY have you chosen to do things this way (i.e. how do you justify your design)?

Remember, the dissertation part of your degree is first and foremost about developing and demonstrating research skills . Therefore, the markers want to see that you know which methods to use, can clearly articulate why you’ve chosen then, and know how to deploy them effectively.

Importantly, this chapter requires detail – don’t hold back on the specifics. State exactly what you’ll be doing, with who, when, for how long, etc. Moreover, for every design choice you make, make sure you justify it.

In practice, you will likely end up coming back to this chapter once you’ve undertaken all your data collection and analysis, and revise it based on changes you made during the analysis phase. This is perfectly fine. Its natural for you to add an additional analysis technique, scrap an old one, etc based on where your data lead you. Of course, I’m talking about small changes here – not a fundamental switch from qualitative to quantitative, which will likely send your supervisor in a spin!

You’ve now collected your data and undertaken your analysis, whether qualitative, quantitative or mixed methods. In this chapter, you’ll present the raw results of your analysis . For example, in the case of a quant study, you’ll present the demographic data, descriptive statistics, inferential statistics , etc.

Typically, Chapter 4 is simply a presentation and description of the data, not a discussion of the meaning of the data. In other words, it’s descriptive, rather than analytical – the meaning is discussed in Chapter 5. However, some universities will want you to combine chapters 4 and 5, so that you both present and interpret the meaning of the data at the same time. Check with your institution what their preference is.

Now that you’ve presented the data analysis results, its time to interpret and analyse them. In other words, its time to discuss what they mean, especially in relation to your research question(s).

What you discuss here will depend largely on your chosen methodology. For example, if you’ve gone the quantitative route, you might discuss the relationships between variables . If you’ve gone the qualitative route, you might discuss key themes and the meanings thereof. It all depends on what your research design choices were.

Most importantly, you need to discuss your results in relation to your research questions and aims, as well as the existing literature. What do the results tell you about your research questions? Are they aligned with the existing research or at odds? If so, why might this be? Dig deep into your findings and explain what the findings suggest, in plain English.

The final chapter – you’ve made it! Now that you’ve discussed your interpretation of the results, its time to bring it back to the beginning with the conclusion chapter . In other words, its time to (attempt to) answer your original research question s (from way back in chapter 1). Clearly state what your conclusions are in terms of your research questions. This might feel a bit repetitive, as you would have touched on this in the previous chapter, but its important to bring the discussion full circle and explicitly state your answer(s) to the research question(s).

Dissertation and thesis prep

Next, you’ll typically discuss the implications of your findings? In other words, you’ve answered your research questions – but what does this mean for the real world (or even for academia)? What should now be done differently, given the new insight you’ve generated?

Lastly, you should discuss the limitations of your research, as well as what this means for future research in the area. No study is perfect, especially not a Masters-level. Discuss the shortcomings of your research. Perhaps your methodology was limited, perhaps your sample size was small or not representative, etc, etc. Don’t be afraid to critique your work – the markers want to see that you can identify the limitations of your work. This is a strength, not a weakness. Be brutal!

This marks the end of your core chapters – woohoo! From here on out, it’s pretty smooth sailing.

The reference list is straightforward. It should contain a list of all resources cited in your dissertation, in the required format, e.g. APA , Harvard, etc.

It’s essential that you use reference management software for your dissertation. Do NOT try handle your referencing manually – its far too error prone. On a reference list of multiple pages, you’re going to make mistake. To this end, I suggest considering either Mendeley or Zotero. Both are free and provide a very straightforward interface to ensure that your referencing is 100% on point. I’ve included a simple how-to video for the Mendeley software (my personal favourite) below:

Some universities may ask you to include a bibliography, as opposed to a reference list. These two things are not the same . A bibliography is similar to a reference list, except that it also includes resources which informed your thinking but were not directly cited in your dissertation. So, double-check your brief and make sure you use the right one.

The very last piece of the puzzle is the appendix or set of appendices. This is where you’ll include any supporting data and evidence. Importantly, supporting is the keyword here.

Your appendices should provide additional “nice to know”, depth-adding information, which is not critical to the core analysis. Appendices should not be used as a way to cut down word count (see this post which covers how to reduce word count ). In other words, don’t place content that is critical to the core analysis here, just to save word count. You will not earn marks on any content in the appendices, so don’t try to play the system!

Time to recap…

And there you have it – the traditional dissertation structure and layout, from A-Z. To recap, the core structure for a dissertation or thesis is (typically) as follows:

  • Acknowledgments page

Most importantly, the core chapters should reflect the research process (asking, investigating and answering your research question). Moreover, the research question(s) should form the golden thread throughout your dissertation structure. Everything should revolve around the research questions, and as you’ve seen, they should form both the start point (i.e. introduction chapter) and the endpoint (i.e. conclusion chapter).

I hope this post has provided you with clarity about the traditional dissertation/thesis structure and layout. If you have any questions or comments, please leave a comment below, or feel free to get in touch with us. Also, be sure to check out the rest of the  Grad Coach Blog .

dissertation number of pages

Psst… there’s more (for free)

This post is part of our dissertation mini-course, which covers everything you need to get started with your dissertation, thesis or research project. 

You Might Also Like:

Dissertation and thesis defense 101

36 Comments

ARUN kumar SHARMA

many thanks i found it very useful

Derek Jansen

Glad to hear that, Arun. Good luck writing your dissertation.

Sue

Such clear practical logical advice. I very much needed to read this to keep me focused in stead of fretting.. Perfect now ready to start my research!

hayder

what about scientific fields like computer or engineering thesis what is the difference in the structure? thank you very much

Tim

Thanks so much this helped me a lot!

Ade Adeniyi

Very helpful and accessible. What I like most is how practical the advice is along with helpful tools/ links.

Thanks Ade!

Aswathi

Thank you so much sir.. It was really helpful..

You’re welcome!

Jp Raimundo

Hi! How many words maximum should contain the abstract?

Karmelia Renatee

Thank you so much 😊 Find this at the right moment

You’re most welcome. Good luck with your dissertation.

moha

best ever benefit i got on right time thank you

Krishnan iyer

Many times Clarity and vision of destination of dissertation is what makes the difference between good ,average and great researchers the same way a great automobile driver is fast with clarity of address and Clear weather conditions .

I guess Great researcher = great ideas + knowledge + great and fast data collection and modeling + great writing + high clarity on all these

You have given immense clarity from start to end.

Alwyn Malan

Morning. Where will I write the definitions of what I’m referring to in my report?

Rose

Thank you so much Derek, I was almost lost! Thanks a tonnnn! Have a great day!

yemi Amos

Thanks ! so concise and valuable

Kgomotso Siwelane

This was very helpful. Clear and concise. I know exactly what to do now.

dauda sesay

Thank you for allowing me to go through briefly. I hope to find time to continue.

Patrick Mwathi

Really useful to me. Thanks a thousand times

Adao Bundi

Very interesting! It will definitely set me and many more for success. highly recommended.

SAIKUMAR NALUMASU

Thank you soo much sir, for the opportunity to express my skills

mwepu Ilunga

Usefull, thanks a lot. Really clear

Rami

Very nice and easy to understand. Thank you .

Chrisogonas Odhiambo

That was incredibly useful. Thanks Grad Coach Crew!

Luke

My stress level just dropped at least 15 points after watching this. Just starting my thesis for my grad program and I feel a lot more capable now! Thanks for such a clear and helpful video, Emma and the GradCoach team!

Judy

Do we need to mention the number of words the dissertation contains in the main document?

It depends on your university’s requirements, so it would be best to check with them 🙂

Christine

Such a helpful post to help me get started with structuring my masters dissertation, thank you!

Simon Le

Great video; I appreciate that helpful information

Brhane Kidane

It is so necessary or avital course

johnson

This blog is very informative for my research. Thank you

avc

Doctoral students are required to fill out the National Research Council’s Survey of Earned Doctorates

Emmanuel Manjolo

wow this is an amazing gain in my life

Paul I Thoronka

This is so good

Tesfay haftu

How can i arrange my specific objectives in my dissertation?

Trackbacks/Pingbacks

  • What Is A Literature Review (In A Dissertation Or Thesis) - Grad Coach - […] is to write the actual literature review chapter (this is usually the second chapter in a typical dissertation or…

Submit a Comment Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time I comment.

  • Print Friendly
  • Formatting Your Dissertation
  • Introduction

Harvard Griffin GSAS strives to provide students with timely, accurate, and clear information. If you need help understanding a specific policy, please contact the office that administers that policy.

  • Application for Degree
  • Credit for Completed Graduate Work
  • Ad Hoc Degree Programs
  • Acknowledging the Work of Others
  • Advanced Planning
  • Dissertation Submission Checklist
  • Publishing Options
  • Submitting Your Dissertation
  • English Language Proficiency
  • PhD Program Requirements
  • Secondary Fields
  • Year of Graduate Study (G-Year)
  • Master's Degrees
  • Grade and Examination Requirements
  • Conduct and Safety
  • Financial Aid
  • Non-Resident Students
  • Registration

On this page:

Language of the Dissertation

Page and text requirements, body of text, tables, figures, and captions, dissertation acceptance certificate, copyright statement.

  • Table of Contents

Front and Back Matter

Supplemental material, dissertations comprising previously published works, top ten formatting errors, further questions.

  • Related Contacts and Forms

When preparing the dissertation for submission, students must follow strict formatting requirements. Any deviation from these requirements may lead to rejection of the dissertation and delay in the conferral of the degree.

The language of the dissertation is ordinarily English, although some departments whose subject matter involves foreign languages may accept a dissertation written in a language other than English.

Most dissertations are 100 to 300 pages in length. All dissertations should be divided into appropriate sections, and long dissertations may need chapters, main divisions, and subdivisions.

  • 8½ x 11 inches, unless a musical score is included
  • At least 1 inch for all margins
  • Body of text: double spacing
  • Block quotations, footnotes, and bibliographies: single spacing within each entry but double spacing between each entry
  • Table of contents, list of tables, list of figures or illustrations, and lengthy tables: single spacing may be used

Fonts and Point Size

Use 10-12 point size. Fonts must be embedded in the PDF file to ensure all characters display correctly. 

Recommended Fonts

If you are unsure whether your chosen font will display correctly, use one of the following fonts: 

If fonts are not embedded, non-English characters may not appear as intended. Fonts embedded improperly will be published to DASH as-is. It is the student’s responsibility to make sure that fonts are embedded properly prior to submission. 

Instructions for Embedding Fonts

To embed your fonts in recent versions of Word, follow these instructions from Microsoft:

  • Click the File tab and then click Options .
  • In the left column, select the Save tab.
  • Clear the Do not embed common system fonts check box.

For reference, below are some instructions from ProQuest UMI for embedding fonts in older file formats:

To embed your fonts in Microsoft Word 2010:

  • In the File pull-down menu click on Options .
  • Choose Save on the left sidebar.
  • Check the box next to Embed fonts in the file.
  • Click the OK button.
  • Save the document.

Note that when saving as a PDF, make sure to go to “more options” and save as “PDF/A compliant”

To embed your fonts in Microsoft Word 2007:

  • Click the circular Office button in the upper left corner of Microsoft Word.
  • A new window will display. In the bottom right corner select Word Options . 
  • Choose Save from the left sidebar.

Using Microsoft Word on a Mac:

Microsoft Word 2008 on a Mac OS X computer will automatically embed your fonts while converting your document to a PDF file.

If you are converting to PDF using Acrobat Professional (instructions courtesy of the Graduate Thesis Office at Iowa State University):  

  • Open your document in Microsoft Word. 
  • Click on the Adobe PDF tab at the top. Select "Change Conversion Settings." 
  • Click on Advanced Settings. 
  • Click on the Fonts folder on the left side of the new window. In the lower box on the right, delete any fonts that appear in the "Never Embed" box. Then click "OK." 
  • If prompted to save these new settings, save them as "Embed all fonts." 
  • Now the Change Conversion Settings window should show "embed all fonts" in the Conversion Settings drop-down list and it should be selected. Click "OK" again. 
  • Click on the Adobe PDF link at the top again. This time select Convert to Adobe PDF. Depending on the size of your document and the speed of your computer, this process can take 1-15 minutes. 
  • After your document is converted, select the "File" tab at the top of the page. Then select "Document Properties." 
  • Click on the "Fonts" tab. Carefully check all of your fonts. They should all show "(Embedded Subset)" after the font name. 
  •  If you see "(Embedded Subset)" after all fonts, you have succeeded.

The font used in the body of the text must also be used in headers, page numbers, and footnotes. Exceptions are made only for tables and figures created with different software and inserted into the document.

Tables and figures must be placed as close as possible to their first mention in the text. They may be placed on a page with no text above or below, or they may be placed directly into the text. If a table or a figure is alone on a page (with no narrative), it should be centered within the margins on the page. Tables may take up more than one page as long as they obey all rules about margins. Tables and figures referred to in the text may not be placed at the end of the chapter or at the end of the dissertation.

  • Given the standards of the discipline, dissertations in the Department of History of Art and Architecture and the Department of Architecture, Landscape Architecture, and Urban Planning often place illustrations at the end of the dissertation.

Figure and table numbering must be continuous throughout the dissertation or by chapter (e.g., 1.1, 1.2, 2.1, 2.2, etc.). Two figures or tables cannot be designated with the same number. If you have repeating images that you need to cite more than once, label them with their number and A, B, etc. 

Headings should be placed at the top of tables. While no specific rules for the format of table headings and figure captions are required, a consistent format must be used throughout the dissertation (contact your department for style manuals appropriate to the field).

Captions should appear at the bottom of any figures. If the figure takes up the entire page, the caption should be placed alone on the preceding page, centered vertically and horizontally within the margins.

Each page receives a separate page number. When a figure or table title is on a preceding page, the second and subsequent pages of the figure or table should say, for example, “Figure 5 (Continued).” In such an instance, the list of figures or tables will list the page number containing the title. The word “figure” should be written in full (not abbreviated), and the “F” should be capitalized (e.g., Figure 5). In instances where the caption continues on a second page, the “(Continued)” notation should appear on the second and any subsequent page. The figure/table and the caption are viewed as one entity and the numbering should show correlation between all pages. Each page must include a header.

Landscape orientation figures and tables must be positioned correctly and bound at the top so that the top of the figure or table will be at the left margin. Figure and table headings/captions are placed with the same orientation as the figure or table when on the same page. When on a separate page, headings/captions are always placed in portrait orientation, regardless of the orientation of the figure or table. Page numbers are always placed as if the figure were vertical on the page.

If a graphic artist does the figures, Harvard Griffin GSAS will accept lettering done by the artist only within the figure. Figures done with software are acceptable if the figures are clear and legible. Legends and titles done by the same process as the figures will be accepted if they too are clear, legible, and run at least 10 or 12 characters per inch. Otherwise, legends and captions should be printed with the same font used in the text.

Original illustrations, photographs, and fine arts prints may be scanned and included, centered between the margins on a page with no text above or below.

Use of Third-Party Content

In addition to the student's own writing, dissertations often contain third-party content or in-copyright content owned by parties other than you, the student who authored the dissertation. The Office for Scholarly Communication recommends consulting the information below about fair use, which allows individuals to use in-copyright content, on a limited basis and for specific purposes, without seeking permission from copyright holders.

Because your dissertation will be made available for online distribution through DASH , Harvard's open-access repository, it is important that any third-party content in it may be made available in this way.

Fair Use and Copyright 

What is fair use?

Fair use is a provision in copyright law that allows the use of a certain amount of copyrighted material without seeking permission. Fair use is format- and media-agnostic. This means fair use may apply to images (including photographs, illustrations, and paintings), quoting at length from literature, videos, and music regardless of the format. 

How do I determine whether my use of an image or other third-party content in my dissertation is fair use?  

There are four factors you will need to consider when making a fair use claim.

1) For what purpose is your work going to be used?

  • Nonprofit, educational, scholarly, or research use favors fair use. Commercial, non-educational uses, often do not favor fair use.
  • A transformative use (repurposing or recontextualizing the in-copyright material) favors fair use. Examining, analyzing, and explicating the material in a meaningful way, so as to enhance a reader's understanding, strengthens your fair use argument. In other words, can you make the point in the thesis without using, for instance, an in-copyright image? Is that image necessary to your dissertation? If not, perhaps, for copyright reasons, you should not include the image.  

2) What is the nature of the work to be used?

  • Published, fact-based content favors fair use and includes scholarly analysis in published academic venues. 
  • Creative works, including artistic images, are afforded more protection under copyright, and depending on your use in light of the other factors, may be less likely to favor fair use; however, this does not preclude considerations of fair use for creative content altogether.

3) How much of the work is going to be used?  

  • Small, or less significant, amounts favor fair use. A good rule of thumb is to use only as much of the in-copyright content as necessary to serve your purpose. Can you use a thumbnail rather than a full-resolution image? Can you use a black-and-white photo instead of color? Can you quote select passages instead of including several pages of the content? These simple changes bolster your fair use of the material.

4) What potential effect on the market for that work may your use have?

  • If there is a market for licensing this exact use or type of educational material, then this weighs against fair use. If however, there would likely be no effect on the potential commercial market, or if it is not possible to obtain permission to use the work, then this favors fair use. 

For further assistance with fair use, consult the Office for Scholarly Communication's guide, Fair Use: Made for the Harvard Community and the Office of the General Counsel's Copyright and Fair Use: A Guide for the Harvard Community .

What are my options if I don’t have a strong fair use claim? 

Consider the following options if you find you cannot reasonably make a fair use claim for the content you wish to incorporate:

  • Seek permission from the copyright holder. 
  • Use openly licensed content as an alternative to the original third-party content you intended to use. Openly-licensed content grants permission up-front for reuse of in-copyright content, provided your use meets the terms of the open license.
  • Use content in the public domain, as this content is not in-copyright and is therefore free of all copyright restrictions. Whereas third-party content is owned by parties other than you, no one owns content in the public domain; everyone, therefore, has the right to use it.

For use of images in your dissertation, please consult this guide to Finding Public Domain & Creative Commons Media , which is a great resource for finding images without copyright restrictions. 

Who can help me with questions about copyright and fair use?

Contact your Copyright First Responder . Please note, Copyright First Responders assist with questions concerning copyright and fair use, but do not assist with the process of obtaining permission from copyright holders.

Pages should be assigned a number except for the Dissertation Acceptance Certificate . Preliminary pages (abstract, table of contents, list of tables, graphs, illustrations, and preface) should use small Roman numerals (i, ii, iii, iv, v, etc.). All pages must contain text or images.  

Count the title page as page i and the copyright page as page ii, but do not print page numbers on either page .

For the body of text, use Arabic numbers (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, etc.) starting with page 1 on the first page of text. Page numbers must be centered throughout the manuscript at the top or bottom. Every numbered page must be consecutively ordered, including tables, graphs, illustrations, and bibliography/index (if included); letter suffixes (such as 10a, 10b, etc.) are not allowed. It is customary not to have a page number on the page containing a chapter heading.

  • Check pagination carefully. Account for all pages.

A copy of the Dissertation Acceptance Certificate (DAC) should appear as the first page. This page should not be counted or numbered. The DAC will appear in the online version of the published dissertation. The author name and date on the DAC and title page should be the same. 

The dissertation begins with the title page; the title should be as concise as possible and should provide an accurate description of the dissertation. The author name and date on the DAC and title page should be the same. 

  • Do not print a page number on the title page. It is understood to be page  i  for counting purposes only.

A copyright notice should appear on a separate page immediately following the title page and include the copyright symbol ©, the year of first publication of the work, and the name of the author:

© [ year ] [ Author’s Name ] All rights reserved.

Alternatively, students may choose to license their work openly under a  Creative Commons  license. The author remains the copyright holder while at the same time granting up-front permission to others to read, share, and (depending on the license) adapt the work, so long as proper attribution is given. (By default, under copyright law, the author reserves all rights; under a Creative Commons license, the author reserves some rights.)

  • Do  not  print a page number on the copyright page. It is understood to be page  ii  for counting purposes only.

An abstract, numbered as page  iii , should immediately follow the copyright page and should state the problem, describe the methods and procedures used, and give the main results or conclusions of the research. The abstract will appear in the online and bound versions of the dissertation and will be published by ProQuest. There is no maximum word count for the abstract. 

  • double-spaced
  • left-justified
  • indented on the first line of each paragraph
  • The author’s name, right justified
  • The words “Dissertation Advisor:” followed by the advisor’s name, left-justified (a maximum of two advisors is allowed)
  • Title of the dissertation, centered, several lines below author and advisor

Dissertations divided into sections must contain a table of contents that lists, at minimum, the major headings in the following order:

  • Front Matter
  • Body of Text
  • Back Matter

Front matter includes (if applicable):

  • acknowledgements of help or encouragement from individuals or institutions
  • a dedication
  • a list of illustrations or tables
  • a glossary of terms
  • one or more epigraphs.

Back matter includes (if applicable):

  • bibliography
  • supplemental materials, including figures and tables
  • an index (in rare instances).

Supplemental figures and tables must be placed at the end of the dissertation in an appendix, not within or at the end of a chapter. If additional digital information (including audio, video, image, or datasets) will accompany the main body of the dissertation, it should be uploaded as a supplemental file through ProQuest ETD . Supplemental material will be available in DASH and ProQuest and preserved digitally in the Harvard University Archives.

As a matter of copyright, dissertations comprising the student's previously published works must be authorized for distribution from DASH. The guidelines in this section pertain to any previously published material that requires permission from publishers or other rightsholders before it may be distributed from DASH. Please note:

  • Authors whose publishing agreements grant the publisher exclusive rights to display, distribute, and create derivative works will need to seek the publisher's permission for nonexclusive use of the underlying works before the dissertation may be distributed from DASH.
  • Authors whose publishing agreements indicate the authors have retained the relevant nonexclusive rights to the original materials for display, distribution, and the creation of derivative works may distribute the dissertation as a whole from DASH without need for further permissions.

It is recommended that authors consult their publishing agreements directly to determine whether and to what extent they may have transferred exclusive rights under copyright. The Office for Scholarly Communication (OSC) is available to help the author determine whether she has retained the necessary rights or requires permission. Please note, however, the Office of Scholarly Communication is not able to assist with the permissions process itself.

  • Missing Dissertation Acceptance Certificate.  The first page of the PDF dissertation file should be a scanned copy of the Dissertation Acceptance Certificate (DAC). This page should not be counted or numbered as a part of the dissertation pagination.
  • Conflicts Between the DAC and the Title Page.  The DAC and the dissertation title page must match exactly, meaning that the author name and the title on the title page must match that on the DAC. If you use your full middle name or just an initial on one document, it must be the same on the other document.  
  • Abstract Formatting Errors. The advisor name should be left-justified, and the author's name should be right-justified. Up to two advisor names are allowed. The Abstract should be double spaced and include the page title “Abstract,” as well as the page number “iii.” There is no maximum word count for the abstract. 
  •  The front matter should be numbered using Roman numerals (iii, iv, v, …). The title page and the copyright page should be counted but not numbered. The first printed page number should appear on the Abstract page (iii). 
  • The body of the dissertation should be numbered using Arabic numbers (1, 2, 3, …). The first page of the body of the text should begin with page 1. Pagination may not continue from the front matter. 
  • All page numbers should be centered either at the top or the bottom of the page.
  • Figures and tables Figures and tables must be placed within the text, as close to their first mention as possible. Figures and tables that span more than one page must be labeled on each page. Any second and subsequent page of the figure/table must include the “(Continued)” notation. This applies to figure captions as well as images. Each page of a figure/table must be accounted for and appropriately labeled. All figures/tables must have a unique number. They may not repeat within the dissertation.
  • Any figures/tables placed in a horizontal orientation must be placed with the top of the figure/ table on the left-hand side. The top of the figure/table should be aligned with the spine of the dissertation when it is bound. 
  • Page numbers must be placed in the same location on all pages of the dissertation, centered, at the bottom or top of the page. Page numbers may not appear under the table/ figure.
  • Supplemental Figures and Tables. Supplemental figures and tables must be placed at the back of the dissertation in an appendix. They should not be placed at the back of the chapter. 
  • Permission Letters Copyright. permission letters must be uploaded as a supplemental file, titled ‘do_not_publish_permission_letters,” within the dissertation submission tool.
  •  DAC Attachment. The signed Dissertation Acceptance Certificate must additionally be uploaded as a document in the "Administrative Documents" section when submitting in Proquest ETD . Dissertation submission is not complete until all documents have been received and accepted.
  • Overall Formatting. The entire document should be checked after all revisions, and before submitting online, to spot any inconsistencies or PDF conversion glitches.
  • You can view dissertations successfully published from your department in DASH . This is a great place to check for specific formatting and area-specific conventions.
  • Contact the  Office of Student Affairs  with further questions.

CONTACT INFO

Katie riggs, explore events.

Have a language expert improve your writing

Run a free plagiarism check in 10 minutes, generate accurate citations for free.

  • Knowledge Base
  • Dissertation

What Is a Dissertation? | Guide, Examples, & Template

Structure of a Dissertation

A dissertation is a long-form piece of academic writing based on original research conducted by you. It is usually submitted as the final step in order to finish a PhD program.

Your dissertation is probably the longest piece of writing you’ve ever completed. It requires solid research, writing, and analysis skills, and it can be intimidating to know where to begin.

Your department likely has guidelines related to how your dissertation should be structured. When in doubt, consult with your supervisor.

You can also download our full dissertation template in the format of your choice below. The template includes a ready-made table of contents with notes on what to include in each chapter, easily adaptable to your department’s requirements.

Download Word template Download Google Docs template

  • In the US, a dissertation generally refers to the collection of research you conducted to obtain a PhD.
  • In other countries (such as the UK), a dissertation often refers to the research you conduct to obtain your bachelor’s or master’s degree.

Instantly correct all language mistakes in your text

Upload your document to correct all your mistakes in minutes

upload-your-document-ai-proofreader

Table of contents

Dissertation committee and prospectus process, how to write and structure a dissertation, acknowledgements or preface, list of figures and tables, list of abbreviations, introduction, literature review, methodology, reference list, proofreading and editing, defending your dissertation, free checklist and lecture slides.

When you’ve finished your coursework, as well as any comprehensive exams or other requirements, you advance to “ABD” (All But Dissertation) status. This means you’ve completed everything except your dissertation.

Prior to starting to write, you must form your committee and write your prospectus or proposal . Your committee comprises your adviser and a few other faculty members. They can be from your own department, or, if your work is more interdisciplinary, from other departments. Your committee will guide you through the dissertation process, and ultimately decide whether you pass your dissertation defense and receive your PhD.

Your prospectus is a formal document presented to your committee, usually orally in a defense, outlining your research aims and objectives and showing why your topic is relevant . After passing your prospectus defense, you’re ready to start your research and writing.

Prevent plagiarism. Run a free check.

The structure of your dissertation depends on a variety of factors, such as your discipline, topic, and approach. Dissertations in the humanities are often structured more like a long essay , building an overall argument to support a central thesis , with chapters organized around different themes or case studies.

However, hard science and social science dissertations typically include a review of existing works, a methodology section, an analysis of your original research, and a presentation of your results , presented in different chapters.

Dissertation examples

We’ve compiled a list of dissertation examples to help you get started.

  • Example dissertation #1: Heat, Wildfire and Energy Demand: An Examination of Residential Buildings and Community Equity (a dissertation by C. A. Antonopoulos about the impact of extreme heat and wildfire on residential buildings and occupant exposure risks).
  • Example dissertation #2: Exploring Income Volatility and Financial Health Among Middle-Income Households (a dissertation by M. Addo about income volatility and declining economic security among middle-income households).
  • Example dissertation #3: The Use of Mindfulness Meditation to Increase the Efficacy of Mirror Visual Feedback for Reducing Phantom Limb Pain in Amputees (a dissertation by N. S. Mills about the effect of mindfulness-based interventions on the relationship between mirror visual feedback and the pain level in amputees with phantom limb pain).

The very first page of your document contains your dissertation title, your name, department, institution, degree program, and submission date. Sometimes it also includes your student number, your supervisor’s name, and the university’s logo.

Read more about title pages

The acknowledgements section is usually optional and gives space for you to thank everyone who helped you in writing your dissertation. This might include your supervisors, participants in your research, and friends or family who supported you. In some cases, your acknowledgements are part of a preface.

Read more about acknowledgements Read more about prefaces

The only proofreading tool specialized in correcting academic writing - try for free!

The academic proofreading tool has been trained on 1000s of academic texts and by native English editors. Making it the most accurate and reliable proofreading tool for students.

dissertation number of pages

Try for free

The abstract is a short summary of your dissertation, usually about 150 to 300 words long. Though this may seem very short, it’s one of the most important parts of your dissertation, because it introduces your work to your audience.

Your abstract should:

  • State your main topic and the aims of your research
  • Describe your methods
  • Summarize your main results
  • State your conclusions

Read more about abstracts

The table of contents lists all of your chapters, along with corresponding subheadings and page numbers. This gives your reader an overview of your structure and helps them easily navigate your document.

Remember to include all main parts of your dissertation in your table of contents, even the appendices. It’s easy to generate a table automatically in Word if you used heading styles. Generally speaking, you only include level 2 and level 3 headings, not every subheading you included in your finished work.

Read more about tables of contents

While not usually mandatory, it’s nice to include a list of figures and tables to help guide your reader if you have used a lot of these in your dissertation. It’s easy to generate one of these in Word using the Insert Caption feature.

Read more about lists of figures and tables

Similarly, if you have used a lot of abbreviations (especially industry-specific ones) in your dissertation, you can include them in an alphabetized list of abbreviations so that the reader can easily look up their meanings.

Read more about lists of abbreviations

In addition to the list of abbreviations, if you find yourself using a lot of highly specialized terms that you worry will not be familiar to your reader, consider including a glossary. Here, alphabetize the terms and include a brief description or definition.

Read more about glossaries

The introduction serves to set up your dissertation’s topic, purpose, and relevance. It tells the reader what to expect in the rest of your dissertation. The introduction should:

  • Establish your research topic , giving the background information needed to contextualize your work
  • Narrow down the focus and define the scope of your research
  • Discuss the state of existing research on the topic, showing your work’s relevance to a broader problem or debate
  • Clearly state your research questions and objectives
  • Outline the flow of the rest of your work

Everything in the introduction should be clear, engaging, and relevant. By the end, the reader should understand the what, why, and how of your research.

Read more about introductions

A formative part of your research is your literature review . This helps you gain a thorough understanding of the academic work that already exists on your topic.

Literature reviews encompass:

  • Finding relevant sources (e.g., books and journal articles)
  • Assessing the credibility of your sources
  • Critically analyzing and evaluating each source
  • Drawing connections between them (e.g., themes, patterns, conflicts, or gaps) to strengthen your overall point

A literature review is not merely a summary of existing sources. Your literature review should have a coherent structure and argument that leads to a clear justification for your own research. It may aim to:

  • Address a gap in the literature or build on existing knowledge
  • Take a new theoretical or methodological approach to your topic
  • Propose a solution to an unresolved problem or advance one side of a theoretical debate

Read more about literature reviews

Theoretical framework

Your literature review can often form the basis for your theoretical framework. Here, you define and analyze the key theories, concepts, and models that frame your research.

Read more about theoretical frameworks

Your methodology chapter describes how you conducted your research, allowing your reader to critically assess its credibility. Your methodology section should accurately report what you did, as well as convince your reader that this was the best way to answer your research question.

A methodology section should generally include:

  • The overall research approach ( quantitative vs. qualitative ) and research methods (e.g., a longitudinal study )
  • Your data collection methods (e.g., interviews or a controlled experiment )
  • Details of where, when, and with whom the research took place
  • Any tools and materials you used (e.g., computer programs, lab equipment)
  • Your data analysis methods (e.g., statistical analysis , discourse analysis )
  • An evaluation or justification of your methods

Read more about methodology sections

Your results section should highlight what your methodology discovered. You can structure this section around sub-questions, hypotheses , or themes, but avoid including any subjective or speculative interpretation here.

Your results section should:

  • Concisely state each relevant result together with relevant descriptive statistics (e.g., mean , standard deviation ) and inferential statistics (e.g., test statistics , p values )
  • Briefly state how the result relates to the question or whether the hypothesis was supported
  • Report all results that are relevant to your research questions , including any that did not meet your expectations.

Additional data (including raw numbers, full questionnaires, or interview transcripts) can be included as an appendix. You can include tables and figures, but only if they help the reader better understand your results. Read more about results sections

Your discussion section is your opportunity to explore the meaning and implications of your results in relation to your research question. Here, interpret your results in detail, discussing whether they met your expectations and how well they fit with the framework that you built in earlier chapters. Refer back to relevant source material to show how your results fit within existing research in your field.

Some guiding questions include:

  • What do your results mean?
  • Why do your results matter?
  • What limitations do the results have?

If any of the results were unexpected, offer explanations for why this might be. It’s a good idea to consider alternative interpretations of your data.

Read more about discussion sections

Your dissertation’s conclusion should concisely answer your main research question, leaving your reader with a clear understanding of your central argument and emphasizing what your research has contributed to the field.

In some disciplines, the conclusion is just a short section preceding the discussion section, but in other contexts, it is the final chapter of your work. Here, you wrap up your dissertation with a final reflection on what you found, with recommendations for future research and concluding remarks.

It’s important to leave the reader with a clear impression of why your research matters. What have you added to what was already known? Why is your research necessary for the future of your field?

Read more about conclusions

It is crucial to include a reference list or list of works cited with the full details of all the sources that you used, in order to avoid plagiarism. Be sure to choose one citation style and follow it consistently throughout your dissertation. Each style has strict and specific formatting requirements.

Common styles include MLA , Chicago , and APA , but which style you use is often set by your department or your field.

Create APA citations Create MLA citations

Your dissertation should contain only essential information that directly contributes to answering your research question. Documents such as interview transcripts or survey questions can be added as appendices, rather than adding them to the main body.

Read more about appendices

Making sure that all of your sections are in the right place is only the first step to a well-written dissertation. Don’t forget to leave plenty of time for editing and proofreading, as grammar mistakes and sloppy spelling errors can really negatively impact your work.

Dissertations can take up to five years to write, so you will definitely want to make sure that everything is perfect before submitting. You may want to consider using a professional dissertation editing service , AI proofreader or grammar checker to make sure your final project is perfect prior to submitting.

After your written dissertation is approved, your committee will schedule a defense. Similarly to defending your prospectus, dissertation defenses are oral presentations of your work. You’ll present your dissertation, and your committee will ask you questions. Many departments allow family members, friends, and other people who are interested to join as well.

After your defense, your committee will meet, and then inform you whether you have passed. Keep in mind that defenses are usually just a formality; most committees will have resolved any serious issues with your work with you far prior to your defense, giving you ample time to fix any problems.

As you write your dissertation, you can use this simple checklist to make sure you’ve included all the essentials.

Checklist: Dissertation

My title page includes all information required by my university.

I have included acknowledgements thanking those who helped me.

My abstract provides a concise summary of the dissertation, giving the reader a clear idea of my key results or arguments.

I have created a table of contents to help the reader navigate my dissertation. It includes all chapter titles, but excludes the title page, acknowledgements, and abstract.

My introduction leads into my topic in an engaging way and shows the relevance of my research.

My introduction clearly defines the focus of my research, stating my research questions and research objectives .

My introduction includes an overview of the dissertation’s structure (reading guide).

I have conducted a literature review in which I (1) critically engage with sources, evaluating the strengths and weaknesses of existing research, (2) discuss patterns, themes, and debates in the literature, and (3) address a gap or show how my research contributes to existing research.

I have clearly outlined the theoretical framework of my research, explaining the theories and models that support my approach.

I have thoroughly described my methodology , explaining how I collected data and analyzed data.

I have concisely and objectively reported all relevant results .

I have (1) evaluated and interpreted the meaning of the results and (2) acknowledged any important limitations of the results in my discussion .

I have clearly stated the answer to my main research question in the conclusion .

I have clearly explained the implications of my conclusion, emphasizing what new insight my research has contributed.

I have provided relevant recommendations for further research or practice.

If relevant, I have included appendices with supplemental information.

I have included an in-text citation every time I use words, ideas, or information from a source.

I have listed every source in a reference list at the end of my dissertation.

I have consistently followed the rules of my chosen citation style .

I have followed all formatting guidelines provided by my university.

Congratulations!

The end is in sight—your dissertation is nearly ready to submit! Make sure it's perfectly polished with the help of a Scribbr editor.

If you’re an educator, feel free to download and adapt these slides to teach your students about structuring a dissertation.

Open Google Slides Download PowerPoint

Is this article helpful?

Other students also liked.

  • How to Write a Literature Review | Guide, Examples, & Templates
  • Dissertation Table of Contents in Word | Instructions & Examples
  • How to Choose a Dissertation Topic | 8 Steps to Follow

More interesting articles

  • Checklist: Writing a dissertation
  • Dissertation & Thesis Outline | Example & Free Templates
  • Dissertation Binding and Printing | Options, Tips, & Comparison
  • Example of a dissertation abstract
  • Figure and Table Lists | Word Instructions, Template & Examples
  • How to Write a Discussion Section | Tips & Examples
  • How to Write a Dissertation or Thesis Proposal
  • How to Write a Results Section | Tips & Examples
  • How to Write a Thesis or Dissertation Conclusion
  • How to Write a Thesis or Dissertation Introduction
  • How to Write an Abstract | Steps & Examples
  • How to Write Recommendations in Research | Examples & Tips
  • List of Abbreviations | Example, Template & Best Practices
  • Operationalization | A Guide with Examples, Pros & Cons
  • Prize-Winning Thesis and Dissertation Examples
  • Purpose and structure of an advisory report
  • Relevance of Your Dissertation Topic | Criteria & Tips
  • Research Paper Appendix | Example & Templates
  • Shorten your abstract or summary
  • Theoretical Framework Example for a Thesis or Dissertation
  • Thesis & Dissertation Acknowledgements | Tips & Examples
  • Thesis & Dissertation Database Examples
  • Thesis & Dissertation Title Page | Free Templates & Examples
  • What is a Dissertation Preface? | Definition & Examples
  • What is a Glossary? | Definition, Templates, & Examples
  • What Is a Research Methodology? | Steps & Tips
  • What Is a Theoretical Framework? | Guide to Organizing
  • What Is a Thesis? | Ultimate Guide & Examples

"I thought AI Proofreading was useless but.."

I've been using Scribbr for years now and I know it's a service that won't disappoint. It does a good job spotting mistakes”

  • KU Libraries
  • Subject & Course Guides
  • KU Thesis and Dissertation Formatting
  • Page Numbering

KU Thesis and Dissertation Formatting: Page Numbering

  • Formatting Specifics
  • Title and Acceptance Pages
  • Fonts and Spacing
  • Table of Contents
  • List of Figures
  • Rotating Charts or Tables
  • Working with Footnotes
  • Converting to PDF
  • Embedding Fonts
  • Completed KU Dissertations & Theses
  • About: Survey of Earned Doctorates
  • Copyright and ETD Release Form
  • Resources for KUMC Students
  • Thesis/Dissertation Filenames
  • LaTeX/BibTeX Support

Office of Graduate Studies Thesis and Dissertation Formatting Guidelines

These rules are taken from the KU Office of Graduate Studies Thesis or Dissertation Formatting Guidelines. To see the full thesis or dissertation formatting requirements, visit https://graduate.ku.edu/submitting

Adding Page Numbers

Thesis and dissertation formatting requires different page numbering styles within the same document—for example, lower-case Roman numerals (i, ii, iii) for the front matter, and Arabic numerals (1, 2, 3) for the body of the document. To create the different page numbering styles as required, you will first set up the lowercase Roman numerals, then insert a section break, then set up the Arabic numerals. Step-by-step how-to instructions are included below for adding page numbers in Word 2010, Word 2013 or Word 2011 for Mac.

  • Printed Instructions (Page Numbers Word 2010)
  • Printed Instructions (Page Numbering Word 2013)
  • Printed Instructions (Page Numbers Word 2011 for Mac)
  • Printed Instructions (Page Numbers Word 2016 PC)
  • Printed Instructions (Page Numbers Word 2016 Mac)

Subject Guide

Profile Photo

  • << Previous: Fonts and Spacing
  • Next: Table of Contents >>
  • Last Updated: Aug 25, 2023 10:49 AM
  • URL: https://guides.lib.ku.edu/etd

Mardigian Library Text Logo

  • Mardigian Library
  • Subject Guides

Formatting Your Thesis or Dissertation with Microsoft Word

  • Page Numbers
  • Introduction
  • Copyright Page
  • Dedication, Acknowledgements, & Preface
  • Headings and Subheadings
  • Citations and Bibliography
  • Tables and Figures
  • Rotated (Landscape) Pages
  • Table of Contents
  • Lists of Tables and Figures
  • List of Abbreviations
  • Some Things to Watch For
  • PDF with Embedded Fonts

Page numbers

Microsoft Word will keep track of page numbers for you, so you can add and delete pages, move tables and figures from one page to another, etc. Then, you can create a Table of Contents, a List of Tables, a List of Figures, etc. and Word will automatically create those lists (or, you can update the lists by clicking an update button). This will save you much time compared to manually adding page numbers to your pages and manually creating your Table of Contents, List of Tables, etc. However, in order for Word to do all this automatically, page numbering needs to be set up appropriately. The video tutorial below demonstrates how to set up the page numbering.

  • << Previous: Citations and Bibliography
  • Next: Tables and Figures >>
  • Last Updated: Mar 21, 2024 2:35 PM
  • URL: https://guides.umd.umich.edu/Word_for_Theses

Call us at 313-593-5559

Chat with us

Text us: 313-486-5399

Email us your question

University of Michigan - Dearborn Logo

  • 4901 Evergreen Road Dearborn, MI 48128, USA
  • Phone: 313-593-5000
  • Maps & Directions
  • M+Google Mail
  • Emergency Information
  • UM-Dearborn Connect
  • Wolverine Access
  • University of Michigan Library
  • Research Guides

Microsoft Word for Dissertations

  • Page Numbers
  • Introduction, Template, & Resources
  • Formatting for All Readers
  • Applying a Style
  • Modifying a Style
  • Setting up a Heading 1 Example
  • Images, Charts, Other Objects
  • Footnotes, Endnotes, & Citations
  • Cross-References
  • Appendix Figures & Tables
  • Table of Contents
  • List of Figures/Tables
  • Chapter and Section Numbering
  • Landscape Pages
  • Combining Chapter Files
  • Commenting and Reviewing
  • The Two-inch Top Margin
  • Troubleshooting
  • Finalizing Without Styles
  • Preparing Your Final Document

Page Contents

If you're having problems with page numbers restarting at 1 for some chapters, see our Troubleshooting section .

This page will inform you about page numbers, including:

  • Adding page numbers general information
  • Using sections to control page numbering
  • Breaking the connection between sections
  • Adding the page numbers

Adding Page Numbers

Again, please remember that our template (available on the Main Page of this Guide ) has all of this already built in.

Page Numbers are placed in the footer of your document, which is a shared space among all your pages. Anything you put in the footer will appear on all pages of your document, though you can also control the style or number scheme with the use of Sections. This is how we get small Roman numerals in the front matter, and Arabic numerals in the rest of the document, for example.

You edit the headers and footers by double clicking in the space in which they appear on the document. When you are finished editing, you can get back to the rest of your document by clicking the  Close Header and Footer button in the  Header Design  Ribbon.

Microsoft Word provides you with the option of selecting a numbering style (e.g. “Roman Numeral”, “Arabic”) and gives you the option of selecting the “starting at” number.  You can set the page numbers for your entire document, or if you need more control, you can do it section-by-section as well.

If you want continuous pagination that is all in the same format, go to the Insert Ribbon, and in the Header & Footer Group , click on the Page Number icon. Choose the appropriate placement of the number and a style.

If you are writing a Rackham dissertation, you have somewhat more complicated pagination. For example, Rackham’s guidelines require that the page numbers begin on the third or fourth page of your document (depending on if you include a graphical frontispiece) and the page number on that page should be Roman numeral “ii”. Page numbering should continue on in Roman numerals until the first page of Chapter 1 is reached.  At that point, the numbering should restart in Arabic (“1, 2, 3…”). Rackham requires that all of your page numbers be placed at the bottom center of your pages.

View this video  (despite the Word 2010 references, it's still accurate), or read below on how to achieve this.

Step 1: Using Sections to Control Page Numbering

Using Sections to Control Page Numbering

The following instructions demonstrate numbering a dissertation document according to Rackham’s guidelines.  These steps assume you are including a title page, a copyright page, dedication and acknowledgements and other front matter, and then the body of your dissertation.

  • Put your cursor before the first letter of “Dedication” or whatever is the first thing that comes after your copyright page.
  • On the Page Layout Ribbon, in the Page Setup Group , click on the arrow next to the Breaks icon () and select Next Page under the Section Breaks section.
  • If you turn on the paragraph markers, you should now see a section break on the previous page.
  • Put your cursor before the first letter of your first chapter and repeat steps 2 and 3.

You have just separated your dissertation into sections. If you want to see what section you are working in, on the left end of Status Bar (at the bottom of your Word document), Word tells you what page you are on, how many words are in your document, which section you are in, and so on.

If you don’t see the section information, right-click on the Status Bar, and select Section in the menu that appears.

Step 2: Breaking the Connection Between Sections

Breaking the Connection Between Sections

By default, the headers and footers of each section are connected to those of the sections before and after it.  Therefore, if you want different page number styles to vary from one section to the next (such as Roman or Arabic), you’ll need to break the connection between the sections. Particularly with landscaped pages, it is often helpful to break the connection in the header as well as in the footer.

  • Put your cursor on the first page that needs the Roman numeral.
  • On the Insert Ribbon, in the Header & Footer Group , click on the arrow under the Footer icon and select Edit Footer .
  • You should now be in the footer of that page; in the Header & Footer Tools Design Ribbon , in the Navigation Group , unlink this section’s footer from previous sections’ footer by clicking the highlighted Link to Previous icon.
  • Put your cursor in the header area, and again click the highlighted Link to Previous icon.
  • Scroll down to the first page of the body of your dissertation (the chapters), make sure your cursor is in the footer, and click the highlighted Link to Previous icon again.

You have now successfully unlinked footers of these sections. Any page numbers you put in the body of your document will not affect the page numbering of your front matter, and vice versa.

Step 3: Adding the Page Numbers

Adding the Page Numbers

  • Scroll up to the section that contains your front matter and click in the footer of any page (don’t do anything for your title page and other pages that don’t require a page number).
  • On the Insert Ribbon, in the Header & Footer Group , click on the arrow next to the Page Number icon and select the positioning you’d like.  Generally, Bottom of the Page is the choice, and either Plain Number 2 (centered) or Plain Number 3 (right aligned).
  • To change to Roman Numerals, on the Insert Ribbon, in the Header & Footer Group , click on the arrow next to the Page Number icon and select Format Page Numbers… to set the “start at” number and the style of numbering.
  • Scroll down to the first page of the next section (where your chapters start) and click in the footer.

Thesis and Dissertation Guide

  • « Thesis & Dissertation Resources
  • The Graduate School Home

pdf icon

  • 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

Thesis and Dissertation Guide

I. Order and Components

Please see the sample thesis or dissertation pages throughout and at the end of this document for illustrations. The following order is required for components of your thesis or dissertation:

  • Dedication, Acknowledgements, and Preface (each optional)
  • Table of Contents, with page numbers
  • List of Tables, List of Figures, or List of Illustrations, with titles and page numbers (if applicable)
  • List of Abbreviations (if applicable)
  • List of Symbols (if applicable)
  • Introduction, if any
  • Main body, with consistent subheadings as appropriate
  • Appendices (if applicable)
  • Endnotes (if applicable)
  • References (see section on References for options)

Many of the components following the title and copyright pages have required headings and formatting guidelines, which are described in the following sections.

Please consult the Sample Pages to compare your document to the requirements. A Checklist is provided to assist you in ensuring your thesis or dissertation meets all formatting guidelines.

The title page of a thesis or dissertation must include the following information:

Title Page with mesaurements described in surrounding text

  • The title of the thesis or dissertation in all capital letters and centered 2″ below the top of the page.
  • Your name, centered 1″ below the title. Do not include titles, degrees, or identifiers. The name you use here does not need to exactly match the name on your university records, but we recommend considering how you will want your name to appear in professional publications in the future.

Notes on this statement:

  • When indicating your degree in the second bracketed space, use the full degree name (i.e., Doctor of Philosophy, not Ph.D. or PHD; Master of Public Health, not M.P.H. or MPH; Master of Social Work, not M.S.W. or MSW).
  • List your department, school, or curriculum rather than your subject area or specialty discipline in the third bracketed space. You may include your subject area or specialty discipline in parentheses (i.e., Department of Romance Languages (French); School of Pharmacy (Molecular Pharmaceutics); School of Education (School Psychology); or similar official area).
  • If you wish to include both your department and school names, list the school at the end of the statement (i.e., Department of Pharmacology in the School of Medicine).
  • A dissertation submitted to the faculty at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Department of Public Policy.
  • A thesis submitted to the faculty at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Science in the School of Dentistry (Endodontics).
  • A thesis submitted to the faculty at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Science in the Department of Nutrition in the Gillings School of Global Public Health.
  • A dissertation submitted to the faculty at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the School of Education (Cultural Studies and Literacies).
  • The words “Chapel Hill” must be centered 1″ below the statement.
  • One single-spaced line below that, center the year in which your committee approves the completed thesis or dissertation. This need not be the year you graduate.
  • Approximately 2/3 of the way across the page on the right-hand side of the page, 1″ below the year, include the phrase “Approved by:” (with colon) followed by each faculty member's name on subsequent double-spaced lines. Do not include titles such as Professor, Doctor, Dr., PhD, or any identifiers such as “chair” or “advisor” before or after any names. Line up the first letter of each name on the left under the “A” in the “Approved by:” line. If a name is too long to fit on one line, move this entire section of text slightly to the left so that formatting can be maintained.
  • No signatures, signature lines, or page numbers should be included on the title page.

Include a copyright page with the following information single-spaced and centered 2″ above the bottom of the page:

Copyright Page with mesaurements described in surrounding text

© Year Author's Full Name (as it appears on the title page) ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

This page immediately follows the title page. It should be numbered with the lower case Roman numeral ii centered with a 1/2″ margin from the bottom edge.

Inclusion of this page offers you, as the author, additional protection against copyright infringement as it eliminates any question of authorship and copyright ownership. You do not need to file for copyright in order to include this statement in your thesis or dissertation. However, filing for copyright can offer other protections.

See Section IV for more information on copyrighting your thesis or dissertation.

Include an abstract page following these guidelines:

Abstract page with mesaurements described in surrounding text

  • Include the heading “ABSTRACT” in all capital letters, and center it 2″ below the top of the page.
  • One double-spaced line below “ABSTRACT”, center your name, followed by a colon and the title of the thesis or dissertation. Use as many lines as necessary. Be sure that your name and the title exactly match the name and title used on the Title page.
  • One single-spaced line below the title, center the phrase “(Under the direction of [advisor's name])”. Include the phrase in parentheses. Include the first and last name(s) of your advisor or formal co-advisors. Do not include the name of other committee members. Use the advisor's name only; do not include any professional titles such as PhD, Professor, or Dr. or any identifiers such as “chair” or “advisor”.
  • Skip one double-spaced line and begin the abstract. The text of your abstract must be double-spaced and aligned with the document's left margin with the exception of indenting new paragraphs. Do not center or right-justify the abstract.
  • Abstracts cannot exceed 150 words for a thesis or 350 words for a dissertation.
  • Number the abstract page with the lower case Roman numeral iii (and iv, if more than one page) centered with a 1/2″ margin from the bottom edge.

Please write and proofread your abstract carefully. When possible, avoid including symbols or foreign words in your abstract, as they cannot be indexed or searched. Avoid mathematical formulas, diagrams, and other illustrative materials in the abstract. Offer a brief description of your thesis or dissertation and a concise summary of its conclusions. Be sure to describe the subject and focus of your work with clear details and avoid including lengthy explanations or opinions.

Your title and abstract will be used by search engines to help potential audiences locate your work, so clarity will help to draw the attention of your targeted readers.

You have an option to include a dedication, acknowledgements, or preface. If you choose to include any or all of these elements, give each its own page(s).

Dedication page with mesaurements described in surrounding text

A dedication is a message from the author prefixed to a work in tribute to a person, group, or cause. Most dedications are short statements of tribute beginning with “To…” such as “To my family”.

Acknowledgements are the author's statement of gratitude to and recognition of the people and institutions that helped the author's research and writing.

A preface is a statement of the author's reasons for undertaking the work and other personal comments that are not directly germane to the materials presented in other sections of the thesis or dissertation. These reasons tend to be of a personal nature.

Any of the pages must be prepared following these guidelines:

  • Do not place a heading on the dedication page.
  • The text of short dedications must be centered and begin 2″ from the top of the page.
  • Headings are required for the “ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS” and “PREFACE” pages. Headings must be in all capital letters and centered 2″ below the top of the page.
  • The text of the acknowledgements and preface pages must begin one double-spaced line below the heading, be double-spaced, and be aligned with the document's left margin with the exception of indenting new paragraphs.
  • Subsequent pages of text return to the 1″ top margin.
  • The page(s) must be numbered with consecutive lower case Roman numerals (starting with the page number after the abstract) centered with a 1/2″ margin from the bottom edge.

Include a table of contents following these guidelines:

Table of Contents page with mesaurements described in surrounding text

  • Include the heading “TABLE OF CONTENTS” in all capital letters, and center it 2″ below the top of the page.
  • Include one double-spaced line between the heading and the first entry.
  • The table of contents should not contain listings for the pages that precede it, but it must list all parts of the thesis or dissertation that follow it.
  • If relevant, be sure to list all appendices and a references section in your table of contents. Include page numbers for these items but do not assign separate chapter numbers.
  • Entries must align with the document's left margin or be indented to the right of the left page margin using consistent tabs.
  • Major subheadings within chapters must be included in the table of contents. The subheading(s) should be indented to the right of the left page margin using consistent tabs.
  • If an entry takes up more than one line, break up the entry about three-fourths of the way across the page and place the rest of the text on a second line, single-spacing the two lines.
  • Include one double-spaced line between each entry.
  • Page numbers listed in the table of contents must be located just inside the right page margin with leaders (lines of periods) filling out the space between the end of the entry and the page number. The last digit of each number must line up on the right margin.
  • Information included in the table of contents must match the headings, major subheadings, and numbering used in the body of the thesis or dissertation.
  • The Table of Contents page(s) must be numbered with consecutive lower case Roman numerals centered with a 1/2″ margin from the bottom edge.

Lists of Tables, Figures, and Illustrations

If applicable, include a list of tables, list of figures, and/or list of illustrations following these guidelines:

Lists of Figures page with mesaurements described in surrounding text

  • Include the heading(s) in all capital letters, centered 1″ below the top of the page.
  • Each entry must include a number, title, and page number.
  • Assign each table, figure, or illustration in your thesis or dissertation an Arabic numeral. You may number consecutively throughout the entire work (e.g., Figure 1, Figure 2, etc.), or you may assign a two-part Arabic numeral with the first number designating the chapter in which it appears, separated by a period, followed by a second number to indicate its consecutive placement in the chapter (e.g., Table 3.2 is the second table in Chapter Three).
  • Numerals and titles must align with the document's left margin or be indented to the right of the left page margin using consistent tabs.
  • Page numbers must be located just inside the right page margin with leaders (lines of periods) filling out the space between the end of the entry and the page number. The last digit of each number must line up on the right margin.
  • Numbers, titles, and page numbers must each match the corresponding numbers, titles, and page numbers appearing in the thesis or dissertation.
  • All Lists of Tables, Figures, and Illustrations page(s) must be numbered with consecutive lower case Roman numerals centered with a 1/2″ margin from the bottom edge.

If you use abbreviations extensively in your thesis or dissertation, you must include a list of abbreviations and their corresponding definitions following these guidelines:

List of Abbreviations with mesaurements described in surrounding text

  • Include the heading “LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS” in all capital letters, and center it 1″ below the top of the page.
  • Arrange your abbreviations alphabetically.
  • Abbreviations must align with the document's left margin or be indented to the right of the left page margin using consistent tabs.
  • If an entry takes up more than one line, single-space between the two lines.
  • The List of Abbreviations page(s) must be numbered with consecutive lower case Roman numerals centered with a 1/2″ margin from the bottom edge.

If you use symbols in your thesis or dissertation, you may combine them with your abbreviations, titling the section “LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS AND SYMBOLS”, or you may set up a separate list of symbols and their definitions by following the formatting instructions above for abbreviations. The heading you choose must be in all capital letters and centered 1″ below the top of the page.

Previous: Introduction

Next: Format

Florida Tech Evans Library Logo

Formatting your Thesis and Dissertation:Tools,Tips and Troubleshooting

  • I am a new Graduate Student at Florida Tech!
  • Thesis and Dissertation Templates
  • Learn About Zotero
  • Formatting Landscape Pages
  • Line Spacing
  • Page Numbers
  • Page Break and Section Breaks
  • Table of Contents or Figures
  • Figures Turning Black
  • Margin issues with Tables
  • Page numbers not appearing
  • PDF to PDF/A
  • Section Breaks
  • Landscape Page Numbers
  • Troubleshoot LaTeX formatting issues
  • Copyright and Creative Commons Licenses Primer
  • Do I need to embargo my thesis or dissertation?
  • I'm ready to submit my electronic copy - now what do I do?
  • What is the process for obtaining print copies of my thesis or dissertation?

Formatting Page Numbers

Page Numbers (also Header & Footer)

1. On the Insert tab, in the Header & Footer group, click Header, Footer or Page Number.

2. Click the design that you want from the options.

3. The header or footer is inserted on every page of the document. You will also see the body text is now lighter.

4. You can now add/modify the text, format the text or change the position.

5. You will also notice the Ribbon bar has popped up header and footer, tools Design tab

Click on the header and footer tools Design tab to activate working in headers and footers. You also have options that can be applied to the Header & Footer bars.

dissertation number of pages

Inserting page number in footers

In the header and footer design tab, select page number.

dissertation number of pages

A. click on Bottom of page and select Plain number 2 (centered page number). As mentioned before, depending on the instructions.

B. This will take you back into the Design menu

C. You will notice in this menu whether Link to Previous is highlighted. Click on this to turn it off. This controls text and page numbers following through from section to section.

dissertation number of pages

D. Click on Page number again and this time select Format page number.

dissertation number of pages

E. Select the type of numbers you need. Select small Roman numerals (I, ii, iii etc.) for all pages from Contents to Chapter 1. Start the Arabic numerals (1, 2, 3 etc) from the first page of chapter 1. The title page has no page number. (In double-sided printing, you will need to turn off same as previous on the first odd and the first even page of each new section).

F. If you want page numbers to continue from the previous section/chapter, check ‘ continue from previous section’

dissertation number of pages

G. If you want to start fresh numbering in the section or chapter, select ‘ start at’ and enter the starting number (usually 1).

dissertation number of pages

Sections in the ‘Preliminaries’ file will have small Roman numerals for page numbering, while the rest of the document will have Arabic numerals. This is one of the reasons why it is important to keep the ‘same as previous’ option turned off. If it is on, all numbers or text in the header or footer will be the same throughout the entire document.

When working in headers and footers, you must have the cursor blinking in the header or footer space on the page, otherwise nothing will happen. When you click into the header or footer space, the Design menu will appear, which includes the header and footer sub-menu.

The page numbers also have to fit within the 1 - 1.2-inch margins of the page. In the Header and Footer design tab you will see options to adjust the margins of the header and footer. Adjust Footer from Bottom to your required spacing.

dissertation number of pages

  • << Previous: Line Spacing
  • Next: Page Break and Section Breaks >>
  • Last Updated: Feb 27, 2024 5:16 PM
  • URL: https://libguides.lib.fit.edu/formattingyourthesisanddissertationtoolstipstroubleshooting

Link to CSU Home

The Michael Schwartz Library

  • Michael Schwartz Library
  • Ask A Librarian

Q. How do I number pages differently in the various sections of my thesis or dissertation?

  • 18 General (hours, borrowing, employment, etc)
  • 10 Remote Access to Library Resources & Services
  • 12 Research
  • 16 Technical Support

Answered By: Jeff Beuck Last Updated: Apr 03, 2020     Views: 1332882

See Also:  How do I add page numbers in Microsoft Word?

To use different page numbering schemes in different sections of your Word document, there are two tricks: 1) you must include a "Section Break - Next page" between each section of your document where the numbering will change, and 2) you must "unlink" each section's footer from the one before it.

To start, temporarily turn on the viewing of hidden formatting symbols by clicking the "Show/Hide" symbol on the "Home" tab in the "Paragraph" box -- this will enable you to see the Section Breaks between sections of your document.

dissertation number of pages

One of the required page numbering changes for your thesis or dissertation is that you need to use Roman numerals (e.g., "i, ii, iii") for your introductory sections (Abstract, Table of Contents), and then switch to Arabic numerals (e.g., "1, 2, 3") and begin the page numbering at "1" at the start of Chapter I of your main text.

If you do not already have a "Section Break" between these two sections of your document, you will need to add one.  Place your cursor at the very end of the text in the first section (after your Table of Contents and any Lists of Tables and Figures), being careful NOT to place it in the footer where the page number is (if the text above becomes grayed out, you are in the footer – try clicking higher).

dissertation number of pages

Add a "Section Break – Next Page" by selecting the "Page Layout" tab on the menu, clicking the arrow next to "Breaks", and selecting "Next Page" under Section Breaks.

dissertation number of pages

After doing this, you should see a "Section Break (Next Page)" code inserted into your document.  This tells Word that the next page begins a new section which may have a different header or footer.

dissertation number of pages

Go down to the next page below the section break (in this example, the first page of Chapter I), and click on the page number in the Footer.  If your cursor is in the Footer, you should see "Footer -Section [#]-" to the left, and "Same as Previous" on the right.

dissertation number of pages

You should also see a new tab appear on the menu, labeled "Header & Footer Tools: Design".  Select this.  (Be careful not to confuse this with another tab labeled "Design" between the "Insert" and "Page Layout" tabs.)  In the "Navigation" section of this tab, you will see a highlighted button labeled "Link to Previous" which tells Word to link the footer in this section to the previous section and to continue its page numbering scheme.  Click the "Link to Previous" button to UNSELECT it.

dissertation number of pages

After clicking this, the "Link to Previous" button should no longer be highlighted.  The "Same as Previous" box to the right of your footer should also disappear.

dissertation number of pages

Confirm your cursor is still next to the page number in the Footer, then go back to the Header & Footer Tools – Design tab on the menu, and in the "Header & Footer" section, select Page Number > Format Page Numbers.

dissertation number of pages

The "Page Number Format" window will appear.  Select the appropriate "Number format" for this section ("1, 2, 3," or "i, ii, iii", etc.), and tell Word whether to continue the page numbering from the previous section or to start at "1" or another number.  In this example, we want Section 2 (which begins at Chapter I and contains the main text of our thesis or dissertation) to use Arabic numerals and to start numbering this section from page 1.  Click "OK" to finish.

dissertation number of pages

You will notice that the page numbering for the current section has now been corrected, and if you unlinked it properly from the previous sections, the numbering in those sections should remain as it was before.

dissertation number of pages

Next, you will need to change the page number format to lower-case Roman numerals (i.e., "i, ii, iii, ...") for the section with your Abstract and Table of Contents.  Click your cursor on the footer of your Abstract or Table of Contents page.

dissertation number of pages

Open the "Format Page Numbers" window by going to the Header & Footer Tools – Design tab on the menu, and in the "Header & Footer" section, select Page Number > Format Page Numbers.

Next to "Number format", select the "i, ii, iii, ..." option for lower-case Roman numerals, then click "OK".

dissertation number of pages

The page numbering for the section with your Abstract and Table of Contents should change to lower-case Roman numerals.  As long as you correctly unlinked the following section from this one, the page numbering in the following section, the main body of your text, should remain Arabic numerals starting with 1.

dissertation number of pages

You will also need to remove page numbers completely from the title page and other preliminary pages of your thesis or dissertation.  To do this, you will use the same method as above, but delete the page numbers from the first section of your document.

Place your cursor at the very end of the last page which will not be numbered (probably your approval page, dedication, or acknowledgment), being careful NOT to place it in the footer where the page number is (if the text above becomes grayed out, you are in the footer – try clicking higher).

dissertation number of pages

After doing this, you should see a "Section Break (Next Page)" code inserted into your document on the page before your Abstract.

dissertation number of pages

Go down to the next page below the section break (in this example, the Abstract), and click on the page number in the Footer.  If your cursor is in the Footer, you should see "Footer -Section [#]-" to the left, and "Same as Previous" on the right. Be sure you are not in Section 1 of your document.

dissertation number of pages

On the main menu, select the "Header & Footer Tools: Design" tab, then in the "Navigation" section of this tab, click the "Link to Previous" button if it is highlighted to UNSELECT it and unlink this section from the section above.  This will allow you to modify the page number in the first section without affecting this or subsequent sections.

Return to your Title Page (or any page in Section 1 which will not be numbered) and click on the page number in the footer.  Click-and-drag your cursor over the page number to select it.

dissertation number of pages

Click the "Delete" key on your keyboard to delete the page number from this section.  As long as you removed the "Link to Previous" connection from the next section, you should the page number disappear from the first section, but remain in the following sections.

dissertation number of pages

If your paper includes additional sections (for example, if your Approval Page was added as a separate section from your Title page), you may have to experiment with linking and unlinking sections from each other -- unlink a section if its page numbering will be different from the one before it, but link together any sections where the page numbering will continue from the one before it.  It is generally a good idea to start with the last section of your document and work your way backwards.

When you are finished, don't forget that you can hide the formatting symbols to make it easier to view your text by turning off the "Show/Hide" symbol on the "Home" tab in the "Paragraph" box.

dissertation number of pages

Footer Sections and page numbering can be very complex, especially if your document has multiple sections.  If you need additional assistance getting your page numbering correct, contact Jeff Beuck at 216-523-7486 to set up an appointment.

  • Share on Facebook

Was this helpful? Yes 0 No 0

Comments (378)

  • Very helpful by Tashy on Nov 16, 2017
  • Thank you so much!!! by Wraith on Feb 26, 2018
  • Excellent and easy to follow instructions. Exactly what I needed. by Mira on Mar 12, 2018
  • Thanks Sir So much. You are very kind to people. by Nur Alam on Apr 04, 2018
  • Thank you so much! This was extremely helpful and a total time saver! by Brittany on Apr 10, 2018
  • Thank you, it really is helpful by Sadia on Apr 29, 2018
  • Wow impressive it was very helpful to me. Am glad with the informative words and direction. Shalom. by Josphine Gwehona on May 17, 2018
  • EXTREMELY Helpful - Thank you so much. I learnt something too by TIM on May 25, 2018
  • Interesting by Dawit Yosef on Jul 02, 2018
  • Thank you, your article is very helpful http://glodoksafety.com by Andre Kurniawan on Aug 14, 2018
  • it worked well for me..thank you sir.. by Kalya on Aug 18, 2018
  • Useful for me. Thanks very much. by Kwesi on Aug 19, 2018
  • This was of great help, thanks by Euny on Sep 12, 2018
  • Very helpful, concise and comprehensive. Keeps it up Jeff! by Nawas on Sep 15, 2018
  • Wow very informative and helpful. Thanks! by Uchy Masika on Sep 19, 2018
  • You are so good, thank you by olanrewaju balogun on Oct 25, 2018
  • super very helpful. I finally understood it. by Michael on Nov 22, 2018
  • This has been very helpful. Thank you. by J on Nov 30, 2018
  • Thank you so much for this, it is so helpful! by thankfulalmostmaster on Dec 04, 2018
  • This post was a life saver. It was crunch time and I underestimated the pagination of my APA action research. "Hidden formatting symbol", "Section Break"? I NEVER would have thought to do those things. Thanks to you I submitted at 11:51 pm, lol, in the nick of time, lol. by KMo on Dec 13, 2018
  • This really was the most useful ''how to'' on the topic - I really battled with the other sites. by Francois on Dec 28, 2018
  • Very detail with clearly explained, simple and helpful by Dave T on Jan 06, 2019
  • Very helpful.... by Reginescorner on Jan 08, 2019
  • Thank you so much by Augustine on Jan 10, 2019
  • EXCELLENT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! by Natasha on Jan 11, 2019
  • Great tip. Thanks for adding. I had the same question for my thesis. by Manuel Duarte on Feb 08, 2019
  • This was so helpful and clearly presented; I would have never figured it our otherwise - thank you!!! by Janice on Feb 26, 2019
  • Great help 👍🏽👍🏽👍🏽 by Nge on Mar 01, 2019
  • Spot on! Thanks! by Jonathan E on Mar 15, 2019
  • awesome procedure. by Derick Musi on Mar 31, 2019
  • Thank you! Saved me. by KK on Apr 01, 2019
  • very helpful, thank you by silas on Apr 04, 2019
  • Thank you for this elaborate explanation. Very helpful. by Prucy on Apr 18, 2019
  • Brilliant! Got me a first ! by Bob on Apr 25, 2019
  • noice by ye_boi on Apr 25, 2019
  • very very helpful, thank you. by Lucy Jackson on Apr 28, 2019
  • This was really helpful and straightforward. by Deeya on Apr 30, 2019
  • Jeff Beuck is the Hero we deserve by anonymous on May 05, 2019
  • Thank you from the University of Kansas! by Owen on May 14, 2019
  • THANK YOU! your info help me a lot (",). by AURORA on May 15, 2019
  • Exceptionally helpful - thank you! by Karin W on May 28, 2019
  • Thanks! I watched a couple of youtube videos before seeing this and had been struggling with pages refusing to take any number at all. It's all useful, but the most satisfying statement here was "begin at the bottom". by Tracie Hall on Jun 04, 2019
  • Life is saved! by Uki on Jun 05, 2019
  • Useful by Naveed on Jun 08, 2019
  • Very helpful indeed by Mwanakasale Muche on Jul 09, 2019
  • So helpful! Thank you very much for the detailed tutorial. by Jes on Jul 17, 2019
  • Very helpful by Shauri Mbugua on Jul 21, 2019
  • Thank you very much. This is the best material I have ever read on this subject. The writer wrote in detail. by Abraham on Jul 26, 2019
  • Thanks so much, very useful by Henlee on Jul 29, 2019
  • Thank you Very helpful by Zayn on Aug 02, 2019
  • Very very useful, i didnt have any idea to number different sections. by Rashid Mwatebela on Aug 07, 2019
  • It resolve my querry.... really very helpful Great work👍 by Shikha on Aug 11, 2019
  • very helpful and thank u😍 by madhushi on Aug 17, 2019
  • Thanks,just got it. by Emmanuel on Aug 21, 2019
  • Very helpful by Monseur on Aug 26, 2019
  • I am so grateful for this important information. i have used it successfully insert preliminary pages in my report. I am so grateful. by Caroline N. Ateenyi on Aug 28, 2019
  • Incredibly helpful. I looked at several different sites for an answer to this, and none of them mentioned the section break (I thought page break did this for me). Thank you for explicitly detailing every step. by Jeremy on Sep 07, 2019
  • This was amazingly helpful and straight to the point. Other people have made fifteen minute long videos to explain what this post does in a quick five minute read. Thank you kindly for putting this online! by Kate F. on Sep 07, 2019
  • Very helpful indeed by JOJO on Nov 04, 2019
  • Very very helpful by Mbogora Malima on Nov 07, 2019
  • A detailed step by step explanation. Thank you. by Kavitha Gopalakrishnan on Nov 11, 2019
  • Very helpful find it hard to change page number by section but after i've seen this info its way more easier by now by Omni.shade on Nov 26, 2019
  • it was very useful. by Esther on Dec 06, 2019
  • Thank you ...really clear instructions saved me a lot of time. by Rich on Dec 14, 2019
  • Thank you very much. Very helpful! by Dusan on Dec 16, 2019
  • Super helpful, thanks. by PhD Student on Jan 24, 2020
  • Very helpful, sorted out such a frustrating problem I couldn't work out. by Labeeb on Feb 10, 2020
  • Thank you so much. This material was much more helpful than YouTube videos. Very detailed. God bless the writer. Totally time saving. by Judith on Mar 09, 2020
  • Very helpful article indeed. This has solved a very important for my articles. Many thanks! by Jamil Ahmed on Mar 21, 2020
  • This is very helpful. Thank you so much!! by Glen Parry on Mar 27, 2020
  • Was very helpful. Thank you. by Hunja Amos on Apr 16, 2020
  • Excellent description, it worked for me. Thank you !!! by Akshay on Apr 20, 2020
  • Your information saved me some embarrassment. It works like a " where there is no doctor" strategy. I gratefully appreciate you. by DAMIAN BAKYENGA on Apr 26, 2020
  • Very helpful, thank you! by Tugce on Apr 30, 2020
  • Thank you SO MUCH for this easy-to-follow tutorial. You made my day! by Don, Graduate Student, CSUN on May 02, 2020
  • This is very helpful and thank you a million. by Tafirenyika Gwenzi on May 12, 2020
  • Thank You!! This was Helpful!!! by Kehinde Miracle Alabi on May 18, 2020
  • So clear and helpful🧡 by Wel on May 25, 2020
  • Very helpful indeed! by Havelinus Shemuketa on Jun 06, 2020
  • These instructions were excellent - very clear and detailed - user friendly. I had viewed some videos here on Google and they were not as clear as these instructions. Thank you!! by Sharon W. on Jun 06, 2020
  • Wow, unbelievable by Tito Titus on Jun 07, 2020
  • very helpful. thank you very much by verah Tena on Jun 12, 2020
  • This really helped me by Berto on Jun 12, 2020
  • THANK YOU!! Very clear and helpful directions!! Thank you! by PhD Student on Jun 15, 2020
  • Very Helpful. Thank you so much by Amanuel Zinare on Jun 17, 2020
  • Does anyone know how to do this with page numbers in the main body of the document rather than the header/footer? by John on Jun 19, 2020
  • Many thanks by Melosum on Jun 21, 2020
  • Extremely helpful!!! by Esther on Jun 23, 2020
  • Thank you so much for this. Very helpful for my dissertation. by Amelia on Jun 25, 2020
  • Thank you so much by hadi on Jun 28, 2020
  • Thanks a lot for evrything this saved me by Sasikafsal on Jul 03, 2020
  • This was really helpful. Exactly what I needed. Thank you. 👍 by PAP on Jul 03, 2020
  • This was very helpful. Thank you so much for providing such a detailed description. by Zainab on Jul 07, 2020
  • Very useful. Thank you. by Issah on Jul 16, 2020
  • Thank you so much....i have really been battling with numbering pages....your guide made it very smooth.. by Eben on Jul 16, 2020
  • Great work. This is the best guide for inserting page numbers on thesis. Great relief for me. Thanks a lot. by abdul quddus on Jul 19, 2020
  • Thanks alot by Yasser on Jul 24, 2020
  • Easier to follow and so helpful. Thank you by Hawa on Jul 29, 2020
  • Very clear and concise. It works exactly as explained. Many thanks indeed. by Adhiambo on Aug 06, 2020
  • Very helpful! by Erin on Aug 07, 2020
  • Wow, that was lovely. Thanks so much for the help by Emmanuel Macnelly on Aug 10, 2020
  • Great resource and simple to understand by Valentine on Aug 20, 2020
  • Thank you so much. very helpful by Ay on Aug 20, 2020
  • What a wonderful piece, very easy to follow tutorial. Thanks alot. It is something I had failed to learn but now, I am good to go🙂 by Shalom. on Aug 21, 2020
  • Wow!! This was super helpful.. I owe you a lot!! Wow!! Super easy to follow!! I never knew this before today.. Many many many thanks.. You're a life saver!! by Bileme Miller on Aug 25, 2020
  • Thanks so much for dis, its really helpful 😍 Ave gone through a lot of troubles only to find dis here by Abby on Aug 28, 2020
  • Thank you very much, this is so helpful by MoyinOlúwa on Aug 31, 2020
  • wow, thanks so much. you can also tell us how to remove the empty pages that show up after the page break. Thanks by DCT on Aug 31, 2020
  • Thanks for the remarkable advice and the step by step made it easy for me. by Lynette Wyatt on Sep 01, 2020
  • Thank you so much! by Dene on Sep 04, 2020
  • This was very very helpful by Ratakane Baptista Maime on Sep 07, 2020
  • Wonderful step-by-step detailed explanation!! Wonderful and very helpful indeed!! by Rajsekhar Choudhury on Sep 07, 2020
  • This my guy just saved me. Thank you by Andy on Sep 09, 2020
  • This is so helpful... Many thanks! by Dieudonne on Sep 10, 2020
  • Extremely helpful, many thanks! by Enesi on Sep 22, 2020
  • Very easy to follow. Excellent work, thank you very much. by Vimbie on Sep 23, 2020
  • This is absolutely educational, thank you so much by Ahadyson on Sep 25, 2020
  • thank you so much.it has been very helpful by joan on Oct 02, 2020
  • Bery helpful thanks by Kanjau on Oct 05, 2020
  • Excellent Explanation by Jayanarasimha on Oct 07, 2020
  • Very useful and clear explanation. It was very helpful. Thanks a lot by NJoshi on Oct 08, 2020
  • thanks by blabla on Oct 09, 2020
  • very helpful, thank you by Celestina Chinenye on Oct 09, 2020
  • Thanks for the help, I'm very grateful. by Josephine on Oct 15, 2020
  • Thank you so much! You are good in teaching! by Fanta on Oct 15, 2020
  • Thankyou. Very nice. by Abd.k on Oct 17, 2020
  • This was actually the MOST useful explanation I found on google. Thank you so much, you really deserve an award. by B on Oct 19, 2020
  • Aww..it was really helpful. Thank you so much! by Nishinki on Oct 27, 2020
  • You are blessed in simplifying things. Great! keep at it by Dtk on Nov 01, 2020
  • Thank you so much for your help. I have been thinking of how to do this. by Dr Shamsuddeen Yusuf on Nov 04, 2020
  • This is amazing. It worked perfectly. Thanks alot. by Majale_Jr on Nov 04, 2020
  • Thanks a lot, really helped a lot. by AbdulWaahid on Nov 09, 2020
  • Very very helpful...Thank you so much!!!! by Lucy.K on Nov 13, 2020
  • Absolute legend, I spent hours onto microsoft helpdesk at the end of my dissertation to get this fixed. Completely forgot how to do it again for my next dissertation and this page had me sorted in 5 minutes. You are an total lifesaver, thank you!!! by James on Nov 14, 2020
  • This was very helpful. Thank you very much. by Tony on Nov 16, 2020
  • Wow.... This was really helpful......... Thanks a lot by Boo on Nov 16, 2020
  • AMAZIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIING!! Very helpful, many thanks. by Wambui on Nov 18, 2020
  • Oh my gosh - it worked! by SJCD on Nov 18, 2020
  • It is best info thank you I have aquestion how to insert page number without the first three document page by nigus on Nov 18, 2020
  • this was very helpful. thank you so much by Zakaa Zuamo Zechariah on Nov 19, 2020
  • Exactly what I wanted. Thank you. by Sokiri Richard on Nov 22, 2020
  • Thanks so much! This was extremely helpful! by Yembu on Nov 24, 2020
  • This is the best explanation for inserting page numbers. Thanks for a lot for this. by Furqan on Nov 30, 2020
  • Thank you very much. this has really helped me. by Mary Chioma on Dec 06, 2020
  • Very helpful! Thank you so much! by Dhea on Dec 08, 2020
  • Thank you, this was really helpful and easy to understand! by Christina on Dec 08, 2020
  • This is on point and super helpful, and exactly what I needed. Thank you. by NB on Dec 23, 2020
  • Thank you that was helpful by KellyMuchenje on Dec 30, 2020
  • Very helpful. Thx by Aidah on Jan 02, 2021
  • This information is fantastic and helpful✔ by https://delightedgloryservices.com.ng on Jan 05, 2021
  • MANY MANY THANKS. THIS IS 100% ACCURATE AND VERY USEFUL. THANK YOU SO SO MUCH by God's grace on Jan 07, 2021
  • This is very helpful...thanks a ton by Kenpaul on Jan 08, 2021
  • been searching for a way to do this, and yours explanation was the one that really help me, thank you! by bel on Jan 11, 2021
  • Many thanks. This is a very good guide! by Joe on Jan 11, 2021
  • Very helpfull, thanks a lot. by cyrus on Jan 12, 2021
  • Very helpful. At a glance I got scared when I saw its length, but this was resolved by including illustrations. They were quite useful. Thanks so much. by Emmanuel 12/01/2021 on Jan 12, 2021
  • thank you, super helpful!! by aiyana on Jan 17, 2021
  • Thank you very much! This helped a lot by Ibrahim on Jan 17, 2021
  • Am greatful by Muhammad on Jan 18, 2021
  • Thank you so much for this simple and clear explanation. by Jihene on Jan 19, 2021
  • This was really helpful. It was by far the most useful bit of information I've found online. Thank you by Corey on Jan 23, 2021
  • Very helpful. Thank you. by TRams on Jan 25, 2021
  • I felt the need to write this message and thank you for your perfect explanation! I was struggling with numbering every section differently until I found this article of yours! thank you and God bless you! by Andrea on Jan 31, 2021
  • thank you so much it was boring for me before i get this guidance keep it up for other difficulty also by betelhem on Jan 31, 2021
  • Wonderful.Easy to follow.Thank you. by Esperanza Lizz on Feb 03, 2021
  • This is so well explained. Thank you by Janet on Feb 07, 2021
  • Thank you! ^_^ by Pranjal on Feb 07, 2021
  • Thank you, than you, thank you!! I finally did it! Why did MS make this so convoluted? by GM on Feb 09, 2021
  • Thanks for this explicit presentation of knowledge . It was apt and accurate. I deeply appreciate your time by Nsikak CICERO on Feb 15, 2021
  • Thanks a lot for the guidance. It helped me a lot. by Sudeepa on Feb 17, 2021
  • Extremely helpful, thank you so much! by Rasha on Feb 21, 2021
  • This is really helpful by Abiodun on Feb 25, 2021
  • At 1:00am, these instructions were a relief. Thank you! by Brandy on Feb 28, 2021
  • Excellent service, am thankful by James Gachau on Mar 01, 2021
  • Thanks, much better than microsoft help! by Bioprocess engineer on Mar 05, 2021
  • Thanks a million! This was very helpful! by Esther on Mar 08, 2021
  • Very systematic, informative and to the point steps. Thank you by Doris on Mar 09, 2021
  • Very helpful thank you by Edgar on Mar 22, 2021
  • The Guide is very beneficial. Thank you so much by Gideon Biwott on Mar 22, 2021
  • Thanks. Very helpful indeed by Felix Wanjala on Mar 23, 2021
  • Excellent ! This article helped me paginate my dissertation as expected. Thank you very much by Latha on Mar 24, 2021
  • really helpful, totally a good guide by jann on Mar 25, 2021
  • Excellent explanation, thank you! by Dionne on Mar 25, 2021
  • Thanks a lot sir, this is cool, it helped me a lot by Sir Richard on Mar 30, 2021
  • very helpful and easy to understand, thank you sir! by FASYA on Apr 02, 2021
  • Just want to thank the person, who explained this so well! This is how it must be done, highly appreciated, thanks again! by Ilja on Apr 06, 2021
  • Very helpful. Thank you! by Tobi on Apr 07, 2021
  • You're a godsend, dont know why this isnt easier to do on word but I'm very happy that you uploaded this guide. My thesis is saved! by Josh Herrera on Apr 07, 2021
  • Thank you so much ,it is very helpful by Suji on Apr 10, 2021
  • Thank you very much. Was very stuck and I got it now by Yola on Apr 13, 2021
  • Very useful information indeed. Thank you so much! by Anthony on Apr 15, 2021
  • Thank you very much. Quite helpful, had been looking through YouTube videos, and something was still not showing on my word document, but your steps solved the problem. :) by Taflex on Apr 15, 2021
  • Very useful. Thank you so much. by BangTanS on Apr 17, 2021
  • wow, have been struggling with this for now, finally got help on my own pace, this is very helpful, thank you so much by ken on Apr 26, 2021
  • This is really helpful. Thank you so much. by Swapnika on Apr 27, 2021
  • Thank you so so much the data is so so helping by Mugizi Gilverse and Mugizi Ronnet on May 01, 2021
  • well explained thank you! by RASH on May 05, 2021
  • Thank you so much! by Just J on May 08, 2021
  • Excellent by Balendran Nanthini on May 09, 2021
  • On point. Well explained and easy to follow.Am impressed.🤗🤗🤗 by Proc on May 09, 2021
  • This was very simple and easily understandable.I was amazed and respect your profession. by Aregawi on May 10, 2021
  • Very simple and easy to follow! Thank you. by Yash on May 10, 2021
  • Thank you so much! This was so easy to follow! by J Lee on May 13, 2021
  • This is very helpful because of the detailed explanation. Thank you so much by Thank you so much on May 20, 2021
  • Thank you so much. It has helped me by Naume on May 21, 2021
  • Very helpful and very well done, congratulations and thank you for your help. by Cesare on May 29, 2021
  • Thank you, that was vey helpful. by Rose P on Jun 02, 2021
  • Very Very Helpful Cudos by Dipesh Bista on Jun 09, 2021
  • Amazing by Sagar on Jun 09, 2021
  • Bro.. om’gosh dude, this is amazing... I would legit pay someone 500$ to figure this out for me, but your website was free...yo how can I show my support, no cap, this is amazing.. by Bk on Jun 10, 2021
  • Thank you so much for this! Very helpful and easy to follow - appreciate it! by MMason on Jun 15, 2021
  • Thank you very much for these helpful tips and easily understandable. by Mathias Mahenge on Jun 26, 2021
  • Woooow brilliante xplanation, you really helped by Fafie on Jun 27, 2021
  • Whooohoo thank you so much for clear cut explanation saved almost a 6 hours by Ashok on Jul 01, 2021
  • It has always been helpful to use this! by Alim on Jul 01, 2021
  • This was completely Helpful by Kingsley on Jul 02, 2021
  • Thank you!! super concise instructions!! :)) big thanks by d on Jul 04, 2021
  • Wow! It was very helpful, God bless you for the wonderful explanations and easy guidance of yours by Lembao on Jul 05, 2021
  • Perfect explanation by June on Jul 07, 2021
  • Very helpful. Thanks by Smartoskylalasky on Jul 11, 2021
  • Excellent and easy to follow instructions. Exactly what I needed. by Ahmad Hussain on Jul 13, 2021
  • Wow!! Brilliant guide. This is really helpful by Racheal on Jul 19, 2021
  • helpful thank you by Justin on Jul 20, 2021
  • Thank you so much Mr Beuck for your excellent explanation / illustration, it’s so clear and helpful. It’s also heart-warming to see the many comments of gratitude (and relief!) above; you’ve helped so many people! Thank you! :) by Sinead on Jul 31, 2021
  • very helpful.thank you by julia muteyo on Aug 08, 2021
  • It was very helpful thank you by Ivy on Aug 23, 2021
  • Thank you very much! Very detailed and helpful with screenshots. by Sasha on Aug 23, 2021
  • Awesome👍👍 Your instructions are clear and precise, showing unparallel clarity! Thank you so much! by Manouri on Aug 25, 2021
  • Very useful and easy to follow the steps! by Mo on Aug 25, 2021
  • Thanks a million. This was highly helpful. by Mashazi Mahoto on Aug 30, 2021
  • This is a MUST SAVE page!! I come back here every time I need to format my document. You are a life saver! Thank you! by Zoe on Sep 10, 2021
  • Thanks by Caleb Onyango on Sep 12, 2021
  • Thank you, this is very helpful and simple to follow. by Abdislam Rhebi on Sep 18, 2021
  • Thank you so much so helpful by Beauty on Sep 18, 2021
  • Thanks a lot! Helped a lot. Quick, easy and to the point explanation. :-) by Pragya on Sep 20, 2021
  • Thank very much. Easy to understand by Nana Kwame on Sep 23, 2021
  • The best guidance ever!!!!! by Godfridah on Sep 30, 2021
  • Practical step-by-step guidance. This is easy to follow and simply can't forget by NICHOLAS GWENGI on Oct 04, 2021
  • This was so explicit and clear. Thank you so much! by Manisha on Oct 08, 2021
  • You have absolutely made my work easy by RICHK on Oct 10, 2021
  • So helpful. Thank you. by Jade on Oct 11, 2021
  • Thank you so much for the clear instructions! It was really helpful. by Nirmal HETTIARACHCHI on Oct 13, 2021
  • Very easy and straightforward Thank you by Luke on Oct 13, 2021
  • Very helpful thank you so much by Sabelo on Oct 16, 2021
  • whao! thanks greatly.... it was straight and easy to grasp by geoeffy on Oct 21, 2021
  • Used this for my undergrad thesis, still used it for my postgrad paper. So helpful, thank you. by Wambui on Oct 23, 2021
  • Thank you very much. That was awesome. Really helpful by Phd Candidate on Nov 10, 2021
  • Am grateful you are my mentor thank you so much may God Bless you for me by Calvince Juma on Nov 19, 2021
  • Excellent, thank you so much! by Cristiana on Nov 21, 2021
  • very helpful. thank you so much by Faith Ashley on Nov 26, 2021
  • That was perfect. I have been writing reports for school for a couple years and this is by far the best explanation and demonstrations I have come across! Thank you!!! by Benjamin on Nov 27, 2021
  • Simple and straight forward quick steps, totally helpful by Esther on Nov 29, 2021
  • FANTASTIC, thorough, clear, and detailed instructions!! I am so grateful for this super helpful guidance during the horrendous last stages of dissertation defense! I hope the human that wrote this knows how much they are appreciated by stressed graduate students! by Brielle on Dec 03, 2021
  • Very much helpful. Many thanks!! by Abebe on Dec 06, 2021
  • Thank you so much. This was so helpful. by Faves on Dec 08, 2021
  • thank you. it is very helpful. by Abdul Rehman on Dec 09, 2021
  • Thank you so much. This was very helpful and easy to follow! by Chinedu Anyaji on Dec 21, 2021
  • Very insightful. I've appreciated it. by Makuei Ghai Makuei on Dec 23, 2021
  • The guide is perfect. I was almost resorting to go and ask at some business centre and low and behold I found this!! Thank you very much by Casserdy Magaya on Dec 31, 2021
  • I liked the way it is "explained" in detail. I was able to understand. Thank you very much! by Vida Nunez on Jan 03, 2022
  • Like everyone else in the comments, I would just like to say thank you for this saving grace of a post. So helpful and the visuals really made it so easy to use. by hanseoulo on Jan 03, 2022
  • Very excellent,; precise and concise by Aliyu idris KANKARA on Jan 04, 2022
  • Very helpful, thank you! by gshoffma on Jan 06, 2022
  • The help topics on Microsoft website are useless. After struggling there I fortunately found this page. Thank you very much. by Firas on Jan 17, 2022
  • Its so easy to use and very helpful. i doing it will easy after reading the comment..keep it up... by Mukoya Edward Rumeta on Jan 27, 2022
  • Thank you very much Sir ,much appreciated this has been very very useful to me by Gimses on Feb 09, 2022
  • Very wonderful how-to and appreciate the screenshots throughout. Helpful, succinct, excellent work by the librarians at CSU Ohio. I think I'll consider sending my son to this university as I can see they really care about solving problems and adding value to society. by Hugh Janus on Feb 09, 2022
  • Correct and direct explanation. Thanks so much by Alexander Talam on Feb 15, 2022
  • Amazing!! Thank you so much! by Angie on Feb 17, 2022
  • Are you kidding. This was AWESOME!! I was doing all the right things for 4 days; but here, we completed this in literally less than 20 minutes. So cool, keep this website going, Thanks Ben!! by Pam on Feb 17, 2022
  • Great Minds!!! Thank you very very helpful by Esther on Mar 10, 2022
  • This is great help, exactly what I was looking for. Thanks a lot. Really appreciated. by Umar on Mar 12, 2022
  • Thank you!! Wonderfully helpful!! by Andi on Mar 15, 2022
  • Internet is undefeated because of people like you. Thanks a lot! by Arun on Mar 20, 2022
  • Easy to follow, explained in a lucid manner. Was very helpful. by Ivin Tomy on Mar 23, 2022
  • This was SOOOO darn helpful! Whew! by Kels on Mar 24, 2022
  • Thank you! by Paul on Mar 27, 2022
  • I hate numbering word pages but this is THE BEST and MOST HELPFUL guide ever!! by Melissa on Mar 27, 2022
  • Thank you for the guide, super easy to follow and very helpful. by Minky Masombuka on Apr 10, 2022
  • Very helpful, thanks indeed by Joel Oraku on Apr 13, 2022
  • very very helpful and interesting . thank you very much by zubieda on Apr 23, 2022
  • thanks ,very helpful. by Modester on Apr 26, 2022
  • Thanks,this was helpful by Metuge on Apr 26, 2022
  • Very helpful!! by Gladness on May 07, 2022
  • OMG THE MOST HELPFUL POST. Thank you SO MUCH!! I have never seen a better tutorial.🤩🤩🤩 by Katerina on May 10, 2022
  • Excellent really clear and so helpful.. Thanks by Queen Bee on May 13, 2022
  • Thank you.. this was very helpful by F Abujalala on May 13, 2022
  • Very helpful! Thanks! by MS on May 15, 2022
  • Very explicit. Good by Divine on May 17, 2022
  • You are the best. You just saved us from days of a headache around this pagination. Well explained with images. I salute you and your team. Thumbs up. by Ola on May 26, 2022
  • Very helpful. Thanks a lot! by Beatrice on May 30, 2022
  • Thank you soo much! Very useful. Clear and easy guidance by Chaminie on Jun 08, 2022
  • Very helpful indeed. Easy to follow and understand by Wilson Maiyo on Jun 11, 2022
  • You're the man Jeff by LeBron on Jun 23, 2022
  • I love the simplification of this, very easy to understand. by Azenda Cephas Dajo on Jun 27, 2022
  • I highly appreciate your sincere help by Bildad on Jun 29, 2022
  • Exactly what i wanted and to the point without wasting much of the readers time. I salute you sir. by Steve on Jun 29, 2022
  • This was incredibly helpful! I was so confused until I came across this, thank you so much!! by McKenna O'Shea on Jul 06, 2022
  • Fantastic and detailed procedure this is. Keep it up! by Xquort on Jul 07, 2022
  • Perfect explanation. Thanks very much for this. by Sylvain Mbuta on Jul 11, 2022
  • This was helpful and easy to follow,thank you by Bree Hildah on Jul 12, 2022
  • Can we also change the total number of pages? I tried using this and it does restart the page number but the total number of pages do not change. by Mayur on Jul 13, 2022
  • You have been super helpful, thank you. by Chichi on Jul 13, 2022
  • Thank you! It is really helpful by Andinet on Jul 17, 2022
  • Very useful. Thanks by OLAOSEBIKAN on Jul 21, 2022
  • Extremely useful, easy to follow. by KANDASWAMY CHENNIMALAI on Jul 22, 2022
  • Thank you. Very helpful by Ife on Jul 24, 2022
  • much appreciation. the step by step procedure was very helpful. by IAN ARABU on Aug 30, 2022
  • thank you.easy to follow by chamunoorwa matanhike on Aug 30, 2022
  • Thanks a lot it was very helpful by Amabel on Sep 05, 2022
  • I am extremely grateful by Kwabena Agyare on Sep 07, 2022
  • Thank you so much. it is conducive. by fatima tayyab on Sep 15, 2022
  • Thank you so much, this is the most helpful explanation, i have received on this subject. Excellent job. by Law on Sep 15, 2022
  • OMG amazing, thank you thank you!!! by Mariana on Sep 19, 2022
  • It was really helpful. Thank you very much indeed. by Adeteju Adeniran on Oct 03, 2022
  • This was very helpful. Thanks. by Stephen on Oct 10, 2022
  • A very detailed response to the problem. Thank you so much for giving a procedure that is easy to follow by Gummadivalli Shiva Kumar on Oct 12, 2022
  • it was very helpful and its very easy to follow because you have used very easy words to explain. Thank u sooo much (JazakAllah u Khaiira) by Osama Shabir on Oct 14, 2022
  • very helpful!! Thank you. by Monsurat Raimi on Oct 20, 2022
  • If I were to meet I'll give you a kiss, this really helped alot by Ahmad Nalado on Nov 06, 2022
  • Thank you very much. Pretty easy steps to follow. by Nandila on Nov 06, 2022
  • Thanks, it's very helpful by Adebayo R.O on Nov 12, 2022
  • very helpful, thanks by Simiyu Omuriti on Nov 15, 2022
  • Was very helpful, thank you very much by Eddy_Yang on Nov 19, 2022
  • This was very very helpful. It was indeed very easy to follow. thank you so much for uploading this by Taiwo on Nov 22, 2022
  • Easy steps to follow toward the target. A lot of thanks to you. Now nimeelewa ahsante kwa maelezo mazuri😇👏🤝🏼 by Fadhili on Nov 30, 2022
  • I followed the instructions exactly as they are laid down, and voila, I got the page numbering right! by Cherry on Nov 30, 2022
  • People like you make it possible to do everything in word and avoid latex. Cant thank you enough by Pranav on Dec 01, 2022
  • Such a life safer!! by Flashy on Dec 07, 2022
  • Thankyou. Jah Bless ! by Kalidou on Dec 16, 2022
  • Very useful document ! by Cyprien on Dec 17, 2022
  • One word, THANKS 😊 by Masher on Dec 18, 2022
  • Thank you very much. Pretty easy steps to follow. google games by Smith on Dec 24, 2022
  • Thank you so much for your help by Mshelia on Jan 05, 2023
  • This is the most elaborate and clear help in page formatting I have ever received. Thank you. by Yunia on Jan 07, 2023
  • Thanks, got to understand section break for different page number by Rashil Maharjan on Jan 08, 2023
  • Very useful. Thank you! by Sara on Jan 10, 2023
  • It is very interesting and helpful by Mohammed A on Jan 14, 2023
  • Thank you very much.... Problem solved by Ian Yohane on Jan 18, 2023
  • Very helpful. Thank you for the effort by Success on Jan 24, 2023
  • thank you by kiya fikadu on Jan 26, 2023
  • wao your illutrations makes the work so easy to follow. by ziizozi on Jan 30, 2023
  • Very clearly expressed and helpful. Thank you! by Roland on Feb 09, 2023
  • This was of great help to me today, thank you soo much. by Sevu Mueni on Mar 05, 2023
  • I give it a 5 star, perfectly explained and elaborated!! thank you.... by cornelius Kiprotich on Mar 07, 2023
  • This was well illustrated and clearly elaborated. Thank you, you have really saved my time. by RBI on Mar 17, 2023
  • This was such a helpful and concise mind refresher thank you very. I am even more grateful that I could send my gratitude. So much better than listening to a whole 5 min YouTube video. Though also helpful. by Nomonde Foli on Mar 19, 2023
  • Thank you so much. I struggled with this numbering on my previous degree, now I know. I am already applying the knowledge gained on my current thesis. Many thanks indeed! by Edmore on Mar 30, 2023
  • it is very supportive and interesting ! by Andualem on Apr 01, 2023
  • thank you by onyango on Apr 03, 2023
  • Wow, this is exactly what I needed to number the pages of my dissertation. Amazingly clear instructions, thank you so much! by Jac on Apr 12, 2023
  • Thank You Very Much😊 by Hardik on Apr 19, 2023
  • Wow, I followed step by step and made it👍👍 Thanks for this information by Sseguya on Apr 21, 2023
  • To the person who created this how-to guide, THANK YOU. This was perfect in every way. Thank you so much for making this available to us all. by supermegstar on Apr 23, 2023
  • This is great for section numbering, for which I've added to the bottom of the page. Now, is it possible to add an overall document page number to the top of the page? Essentially, have two different page numbering systems in the same document. by Abbi on Apr 26, 2023
  • Super helpful and saved so much time troubleshooting! I went through every step exactly and was able to finally get it! by Haley Cari on May 12, 2023
  • Amazingly well explained...You have saved me a great amount of time dealing with page numbers writting my thesis... Thank you! by MS on May 14, 2023
  • it is indeed helpful to me. I was about to pay for it to be done for me. I was reluctant to give out my work to an external person to avoid data misplacement. Thank you a million. by Adeduntan on May 20, 2023
  • Thanks a lot. Best concise guide! by Stan on May 27, 2023
  • Finally, with these instructions, I did it. Thanks by Bernice-kay on May 28, 2023
  • Very helpful info! I'm grateful by Praise on May 31, 2023
  • Thanks so much. I spent my time watching a YouTube but it did not work. Just two clicks and it's done. Thanks again by VANEN on Jun 06, 2023
  • Amazing!! Thanks Jeff Beuck, this is very helpful. by Sine on Jun 07, 2023
  • thank you so much by Lillian on Jun 11, 2023
  • Starting a new format of paging after the preface was daunting. I tried for a long time to have it done until after got How to do pages differently in the previous section on Ask library. by Loding Joseph on Jun 12, 2023
  • Thank you so much for this! It was easy to follow and exactly what I needed 😍 by Kate on Jun 13, 2023
  • This is very good article. I followed the steps and succeeded 100% Thank you very much by Nakudo on Jun 18, 2023
  • Just awesome writing. Its essential for all researches. by Khanom Popy on Jun 19, 2023
  • Thank you very much! This was of such tremendous help while formatting my dissertation. by ts on Jun 26, 2023
  • Thank you so much, you saved my life with this write-up... by Nosa on Jun 28, 2023
  • very helpful thankyou so much by Mrs G on Jun 29, 2023
  • Thank you so much for your online lessen. It is very easy to understand the way you presented. I used it at the time when I badly needed it. Nice and supportive material. by Eyob Getachew on Jul 02, 2023
  • its working thank you very much. by aizak on Jul 04, 2023
  • You, my man, are a lifesaver. Thank you so much for this. I needed this like yesterday and all other tutorials are just not working for me for some reason. Thank you and I hope you have a nice day or night wherever you are in the world. by Cw on Jul 11, 2023
  • Thank you 😊, was a relief indeed. Perfect and comprehensive instructions. by Nana Akomea on Jul 29, 2023
  • This was really helpful. Thank you so much by Divine Yancho on Aug 02, 2023
  • This saves me from materials I've searched for decates. I really appreciate. by Mohammed Amin on Aug 12, 2023
  • Thank you so much for the valuable tutorial! by Basil on Aug 16, 2023

Related Topics

Google Search

The Graduate School

University information technology (uit), main navigation, formatting requirements: preliminary pages.

  • Submission Procedure
  • Policies for Theses and Dissertations
  • Coauthored Theses and Dissertations
  • Approval Requirements
  • Publication Requirements

Copyright Page

Statement of thesis/dissertation approval, dedication, frontispiece, and epigraph, table of contents and list of figures/tables, acknowledgements.

  • General Formatting Requirements
  • Parts Composed of Related Chapters
  • Headings and Subheadings
  • Tables and Figures
  • Footnote and Reference Citations
  • Appendix or Appendices
  • References or Selected Bibliography
  • Documentation Styles
  • Writing Styles
  • Print Quality
  • Accessibility in the PDF
  • Electronic Version Submitted for Thesis Release
  • Distribution of Theses and Dissertations
  • Alternate Text
  • Color Contrast
  • Accessibility Issues in Table Construction
  • Heading Space
  • Double Space
  • Single Space
  • Previously Published, Accepted, and Submitted Articles as Chapters of a Dissertation
  • Alternate Figure/Table Placement

Preliminary pages are, in order, the title page; copyright page; statement of thesis/dissertation approval; abstract; dedication (optional); frontispiece (optional); epigraph (optional); table of contents; lists of tables, figures, symbols, and abbreviations (necessary only in certain situations); and acknowledgments (optional). Table 2.1 lists all the possible preliminary sections in order and if they are required or not. 

The preliminary pages are counted in sequence (except the copyright page, which is neither counted nor numbered). Any page with a main heading on it (title page, abstract, table of contents, etc.) is counted, but no page number is typed on the page. Second pages to the abstract, table of contents, lists, and acknowledgments are numbered with lower case Roman numerals centered within the thesis margins and .5” from the bottom of the page. See the preliminary pages in this handbook for an example. 

Order of preliminary pages, indicating which are mandatory and where page numbers should be included.

Note : Page numbers in the preliminary pages appear centered on the bottom of the page in lower case Roman numerals. This differs from page numbers in the text, which appear on the top right of the page and use Arabic numerals.

SEE Sample Preliminary Pages

The title page is page i (Roman numeral) of the manuscript (page number not shown). 

The title of the thesis or dissertation is typed in all capital letters. The title should be placed in the same size and style of font as that used for major headings throughout the manuscript. If longer than 4 1/2 inches, the title should be double spaced and arranged so that it appears balanced on the page. The title should be a concise yet comprehensive description of the contents for cataloging and data retrieval purposes. Initials, abbreviations, acronyms, numerals, formulas, super/subscripts, and symbols should be used in the title with careful consideration of clarity and maximizing search results for future readers. Consult the manuscript editors if in doubt. 

The word “by” follows the title. The full legal name of the author as it appears in CIS follows after a double space. The name is not typed in all capital letters. These two lines of text are centered between the title and the statement described in the following paragraph. 

The statement “A thesis submitted to the faculty of The University of Utah in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of” appears single spaced in the middle of the title page (see Figure 2.1). For doctoral candidates, the phrasing reads “A dissertation submitted. . . ” 

The appropriate degree follows the statement. The space between the statement and the degree should be the same size that is between the author’s name and the statement. In the event the name of the degree differs from the name of the department, e.g., Master of Science in Environmental Humanities, the words “Master of Science” are placed below the statement, followed by “in” and then the degree program; the lines of the degree name and program are double spaced (see Figure 2.2). Thus, a student receiving a doctorate in history need use only the words “Doctor of Philosophy.” A student receiving a doctorate in Geophysics must put “Doctor of Philosophy in Geophysics.” 

Below the degree field, the full name of the department is listed on the title page. “The University of Utah,” is listed a double space below the department name.

The date appears on the title page a double space below “The University of Utah.” Only the month and year appear, with no punctuation separating them. The month indicates the last month in the semester the degree is granted: fall semester, December; spring semester, May; summer semester, August. 

Again, the spaces below the title, the full legal name, the statement, and the degree should be of equal size. 

The second page is the copyright page, which is uncounted and unnumbered. A copyright notice appears in every copy of the thesis or dissertation. The notice, as illustrated in Figure 2.3, is centered within the side margins and the top and bottom margins of the page. 

Copyright © Student’s Full Legal Name 2022

All Rights Reserved 

There is a double space between the two lines. 

The statement of thesis/dissertation approval is page ii (Roman numeral) of the manuscript (page number not shown). This statement is prepared as shown in Figures 2.4 (for master’s students) and 2.5 (for doctoral students). 

The statement of thesis/dissertation approval signifies that the thesis or dissertation has been approved by the committee chair and a majority of the members of the committee and by the department chair and the dean of The Graduate School. The names of any committee members who did not approve or digitally sign the forms for the thesis or dissertation are not dated. The dates entered should match the date when you received notification that the committee member electronically signed the form. 

The full name of the student, as it appears on the title page and copyright page, must be used. 

As with the digital signature forms, full legal names of committee members must be listed. The full legal names of committee members and department chair or dean can be found on your CIS page under the Committee tab. Neither degrees nor titles should be listed with the names of faculty members. No signatures are required. 

Abstract Page

The abstract is page iii, unnumbered; if there is a second page, it is page iv, and a number appears on the page. The abstract is a concise, carefully composed summary of the contents of the thesis or dissertation. In the abstract, the author defines the problem, describes the research method or design, and reports the results and conclusions. No diagrams, illustrations, subheadings, or citations appear in the abstract. The abstract is limited to 350 words (approximately 1.5 double-spaced pages). A copy of the abstract of all doctoral candidates is published in Dissertation Abstracts International. The word ABSTRACT is placed 2 inches from the top of the page in all capital letters. Following a heading space, the abstract text begins, with the first line indented the same size space as for the paragraphs in the remainder of the manuscript. The text of the abstract must be double spaced. 

If a manuscript is written in a foreign language, the abstract is in the same language, but an English version (or translation) of the abstract must precede the foreign language abstract. The two abstracts are listed as one in the table of contents. The first page of each version is unnumbered but counted. If there is a second page to each version of the abstract, the page number (lower-case Roman numeral) is centered between the left and right margins and between the bottom of the page and the top of the bottom margin. 

The dedication is an optional entry; enumeration continues in sequence, but no page number appears on the page. It follows the abstract and precedes the table of contents. Often only one or two lines, it is centered within the top and bottom margins of the page and within the thesis margins. It is not labeled “Dedication” and is not listed in the table of contents. 

Frontispiece and Epigraph

These are infrequently used entries. The frontispiece is an illustration that alerts the reader to the major theme of the thesis or dissertation. An epigraph is a quotation of unusual aptness and relevance. 

Contents or Table of Contents

The table of contents follows the abstract (or dedication if one is used). The word CONTENTS (or TABLE OF CONTENTS) is placed 2 inches from the top of the page in all capital letters. Following a heading space, the table of contents begins. The table of contents, essentially an outline of the manuscript, lists the preliminary pages beginning with the abstract (page iii). It does not list a frontispiece, dedication, or epigraph if these are used, nor is the table of contents listed in the table of contents; these pages are, however, counted. The list of figures and list of tables, if used, are included (see the Table of Contents in this handbook for a sample using numbered chapters; see Figures 2.6, 2.7, and 2.8 for additional options). 

All chapters or main sections and all first-level subheadings of the manuscript are listed in the table of contents. No lower subheadings levels are to appear in the table of contents. Beginning page numbers of each chapter or section listed are lined up with each listing by a row of evenly spaced, aligned period leaders. The numbers, titles, and subheadings of chapters or sections used in the table of contents must agree exactly in wording and capitalization with the way they appear on the actual page. 

The table of contents reflects the relationship of the chapters and subheadings. Chapter titles appear in all capital letters, as do titles of appendices. First-level subheadings can be headline style or sentence style in capitalization. Subheadings are neither underlined nor italicized in the table of contents. If the table of contents continues to a second page, it begins 1 inch from the top of the page, and it is not labeled “Table of Contents Continued.” Main headings are followed by a double space in the table of contents; all subheadings are single spaced. The words “Chapters” and “Appendices” are used as referents only, printed above the list of entries. The word “Chapter” or “Appendix” is not repeated with each entry. 

List of Figures / List of Tables

The enumeration continues in sequence; no number appears on pages with main headings (those in all caps). A list of tables, a list of figures, a list of symbols, a list of abbreviations, or a glossary may be used. All lists follow the table of contents. The title is placed 2 inches from the top edge of the page in all capital letters: LIST OF TABLES. Following a heading space, the list begins. A list of tables or a list of figures is required if there are 5 to 25 entries. Lists with fewer than 5 entries or more than 25 are not included. It is not permissible to combine a list of tables and figures. The word “Table” or “Figure” is not repeated with each entry. 

As noted for entries in the table of contents, the listing of tables and figures must agree exactly in wording, capitalization, and punctuation with the table title or figure caption. (An exception to this rule occurs if the table title appears in all capital letters on the table itself; table titles in the list of tables are not typed in all capital letters.) Capitalization styles may not be mixed. In the case of long titles or captions, the first sentence must convey the essential description of the item. The first sentence alone then is used in the list. Long captions may not be summarized. 

The table or figure number begins at the left margin and is followed by the title or caption. The page on which each table or figure appears is at the right margin. As in the table of contents, the page numbers are lined up with each entry by a row of evenly spaced, aligned periods (period leaders). If a table or figure occupies more than one page, only the initial page number is listed. If the title or caption of a table or figure appears on a part-title page preceding the table or figure, the page number in the list refers to the number of the part-title page. 

If a list continues to a second page, the second page of text begins 1 inch from the top of the page. The second page is not labeled “List of Tables Continued” or “List of Figures Continued.” Individual entries are single-spaced with a double space between each entry. 

A list of symbols and abbreviations or a glossary does not replace defining terms, symbols, or abbreviations upon their first occurrence in the text. When introducing terms, always introduce terms upon their first usage in the document. 

The enumeration continues in sequence; no number appears on the first page. Acknowledgments are optional. If a preface is used, the acknowledgments are added to the end of the preface without a separate heading. The word ACKNOWLEDGMENTS is placed 2 inches from the top of the page in all capital letters. Following a heading space, the acknowledgments begin. The text of the acknowledgments must be double spaced. In the acknowledgments, students may wish to recognize special assistance from committee members, friends, or family members who may have helped in the research, writing, or technical aspects of the thesis or dissertation. Research funding, grants, and/or permission to reprint copyrighted materials should be acknowledged. Individuals employed to prepare the manuscript are not acknowledged. 

The enumeration continues in sequence; no number appears on the first page. This is an optional entry. The word PREFACE is placed 2 inches from the top of the page in all capital letters. Following a heading space, the preface begins. The text of the preface must be double spaced. A preface includes the reasons for undertaking the study, the methods and design of the researcher, and acknowledgments. Background data and historical or other information essential to the reader’s understanding of the subject are placed in the text as an introduction, not in the preface. Theses and dissertations generally do not contain a foreword (i.e., a statement about the work by someone other than the author). 

University of South Florida

Office of Graduate Studies

Main navigation, page numbering.

The thesis/dissertation is comprised of several different sections which require a distinct numbering format.

All page numbers should be:

  • Located on the bottom of each page that requires them
  • Located between .5” and .75” inches from the bottom of the page
  • The same font and size as the main body of text

Pagination for Front Matter , Table of Contents & Lists, and the Main Body should be formatted as follows:

No Page Number

  • Acknowledgments

Lowercase Roman Numerals (i, ii, iii, iv, etc.)

  • Table of Contents
  • List of Tables
  • List of Figures
  • List of Abbreviations

Arabic Numerals (1, 2, 3, etc.)

  • About the Author (if used, list as "End Page" in the Table of Contents)

How do you format different pagination for different sections?

There are two options:

Section Breaks You can insert section breaks in the document where the change in style happens, and then format the page numbers of each section. Check to ensure the sections are not linked so that the changes in page numbers are limited to a given section.

Separate Documents Create 3-4 separate Word documents - one for each style of page numbering. You will then save each as a PDF and combine the PDFs using Adobe Acrobat. 

  • Learning Tips
  • Exam Guides
  • School Life

How Many Pages is a Thesis or Dissertation: Masters to PhD

  • by Judy Jeni
  • January 30, 2024

Length of your thesis

A thesis is a written document by a student in support of candidature for professional qualifications or academic degrees.

It presents the student’s research and findings. A thesis has its structure and presentation styles. But one may ask, how many pages is a thesis?

Furthermore, do the college, master’s, and Ph.D. projects have the same page numbers? A typical thesis paper has a title page, abstract, and table of contents. We have chapters like introduction, literature review, methodology, results, discussions, and a reference section.

How Many Pages is a General Thesis

From experience, a thesis, in general, is between 40-80 pages long, excluding the bibliography pages. This length however depends on the level of study, the type of research to be conducted, and the expectations of the institution you are presenting it to.

Also, the structure difference is attributed to the areas of study—for instance, arts, technology, social sciences, humanities, sciences, etc.

book pages

In addition, the method of analysis contributes to the increase or decrease of the page numbers. The format of your thesis is presented in three outlines:

  • The first outline consists of the abstract, table of content, and introduction.
  • The second outline has the methods of research you used, your findings, and your discussion of the same.
  • The last outline has your research conclusions, accompanying recommendations, and your list of references.

Even though there are no set standards on the number of pages, the quality of your work precedes your quantity.

How Many Pages is a Thesis for College

A college thesis is from 40 pages and above so that it can cover the contents of the topic and research being undertaken. However, this length depends on your area of study and the teacher’s guidelines dictate the structure of your writing. Although each thesis is different, they all have common elements.

The typical outline has an abstract, an introduction, research methods, and findings, and lastly, a conclusion and a bibliography section.

To be able to have your paper have all the necessary points and required length;

  • Start by arranging your paper as a logical argument before you start to write.
  • Have figures that illustrate your argument
  • The background of your argument is your introduction, describe the information used in your argument as the points in your observation, analyze your issues and come up with your conclusion.
  • Outline the main elements in sections and subsections
  • Start to write your college thesis.

How Many Pages is a Thesis for Masters or PhD

On average, a master’s thesis or a PhD dissertation is between 120 pages and 200 pages long without counting the bibliography and the appendices. However, the length of a thesis is determined by the depth of your research and the technical nature of the research being conducted.

Also, the literature review and discussion sections determine the length of the project. Always remember to write for brevity rather than length.

No matter the length of your dissertation, always remember that you need to follow the instructions and be brief. Your thesis aims to have all the necessary information discussing your work and supporting your interpretation.

A master’s thesis is close to a doctoral dissertation, but it is shorter and has a narrow focus on the topic of discussion. To understand the length of a thesis for both master’s and Ph.D., first, let’s look at the parts that carry the length.

Purpose and Significance of your Study

In chapter one, you start by outlining the purpose of your study and its significance. The significance is shown by explaining how the study adds to the theoretical knowledge and its practical significance.

Master's students graduating

For a Ph.D. thesis, students discuss how their research makes a unique contribution to the knowledge in their disciplines.

Additionally, they discuss the significance of their study to the general people.

Chapter one of your thesis should be well developed to give you a clear focus and direction for your entire thesis.

Literature Review

Chapter two discusses the literature review. Here you discuss the theoretical framework of your literature. Besides discussing what other researchers have found, you should analyze and discuss your body of knowledge.

The aim here should be to expound on what is known and what is not known on your topic of discussion. The above will assist you in writing your research question or the hypothesis.

Methodology

Chapter three expounds on your methodology. Discuss the methods you used to gather data for your thesis. In addition, you will write about how you analyzed your data.

Start by discussing the method you used to gather your raw data and why your preference was appropriate. Remember to cite the reference literature on the technique.

Although this chapter varies based on the method and analysis technique used, give a detailed procedure you used to gather and analyze your data.

The following are the subtopics of this section;

  • Description of research design
  • Description of population and justification for sampling method used
  • Describe the method or instrument of making observations and its administration
  • Description of data analysis, tests performed, and statistical analysis. Also, discuss the qualitative or historical research.

Research findings

In chapter four discuss the results from your data analysis only. Do not include other research findings or the implications of your findings.

Start by explaining any descriptive analysis. For example, factory analysis or reliability tests that were conducted.

Continue to talk about the findings of your hypothesis test. Extensively, use tables and figures to represent numerical data from your findings.

The qualitative and historical research is organized by the themes found in your research.

Lastly, chapter five shows what your findings mean concerning the theoretical knowledge of your topic. Although this chapter is somehow skimmed, it should be seen as important as it answers the question “so what…”

Start by explaining your findings concerning the theoretical passage presented in the literature review. With qualitative research, you may as well introduce new literature. Alongside,doctoral students should demonstrate the pedagogical implications of the findings to mass education.

The chapter also continues to discuss the limitations encountered in your research. Alongside, propose areas of future research. Have a solid final closure with a brief conclusion.

Factors Determining the Length of a Thesis

The following factors determine the length of your thesis

Your Area of Study

Your area of learning or the discipline dictates how long your thesis will be. The subject determines whether you will write longer literature reviews or collection of more data.

It should be noted that this will also affect the time it takes to complete your thesis because the demands of your subject will eat on your valuable time. Both lead to a longer or a shorter thesis or dissertation.

Nature of Your Project

The scope of your thesis will reflect on the length of your thesis. For example, the introduction length is dictated by the total word count of your thesis.

It should not exceed ten percent of your total word count. As an illustration, if your total words are eight thousand, your introduction should be up to 800 words.

Tips on How to Lengthen your Thesis

There are numerous ways you can use to reach the required word count or required pages.  You may increase the margin of your paper, but you might anger your professor. The following are better ways of lengthening your thesis.

1. Ensure you have included Everything

Check whether you have answered all the questions required by your research. In addition, include as much background material as possible. This will give you data that you will use to increase your word count.

Finding something that you have forgotten could be the reason why your thesis is shorter.

2. Intertwine Transitional Phrases in your Writing

Using transitional phrases is a natural way of lengthening your thesis. In addition, they help your reader follow through as they can connect your thoughts. Transition phrases assist you in moving from one idea to the next clearly and concisely.

Quotation marks

3. Use Quotations

When referring to other people’s work, you use quotation marks.

Besides spicing your thesis, you can increase the size of your thesis.

Incorporating other writers’ work strengthens your arguments.

4. Review Your Introduction and Conclusion

Ideas come to you as you reread your work. Go through your introduction again to check whether there is a point you have left behind.

Ensure you have expounded on your points, and you are sure your reader will thoroughly understand your points. Also, do the same to your conclusion.

5. Spell Out Numbers or Contractions

Instead of writing numbers in figures, write them in words. Substitute “8” by writing eight. Instead of “we’re,” write the whole word- we are. However, this is limited by the style you are required to submit your thesis on.

6. Use Break-Up Paragraphs

Your work could be comprised of long paragraphs; break them to ensure a paragraph has fewer sentences. Besides increasing your thesis pages, you will make your work more readable. People prefer reading broken-down content.

Judy Jeni

dissertation number of pages

  • How Long Is a PhD Thesis?
  • Doing a PhD

It’s no secret that one of the most challenging aspects of a PhD degree is the volume of work that goes into writing your thesis . So this raises the question, exactly how long is a thesis?

Unfortunately, there’s no one size fits all answer to this question. However, from the analysis of over 100 PhD theses, the average thesis length is between 80,000 and 100,000 words. A further analysis of 1000 PhD thesis shows the average number of pages to be 204 . In reality, the actual word count for each PhD thesis will depend on the specific subject and the university it is being hosted by. This is because universities set their own word length requirements, with most found to be opting for around 100,000.

To find out more about how these word limits differ between universities, how the average word count from STEM thesis differ from non-STEM thesis and a more detailed breakdown from the analysis of over 1000 PhDs, carry on reading the below.

Word Count Differences Between Universities

For any PhD student writing a thesis, they will find that their document will be subject to a word limit set by their university. In nearly all cases, the limit only concerns the maximum number of words and doesn’t place any restrictions on the minimum word limit. The reason for this is that the student will be expected to write their thesis with the aim of clearly explaining their research, and so it is up to the student to determine what he deems appropriate.

Saying this, it is well accepted amongst PhD students and supervisors that the absence of a lower limit doesn’t suggest that a thesis can be ‘light’. Your thesis will focus on several years worth of original research and explore new ideas, theories or concepts. Besides this, your thesis will need to cover a wide range of topics such as your literature review, research methodology, results and conclusion. Therefore, your examiners will expect the length of your thesis to be proportional to convey all this information to a sufficient level.

Selecting a handful of universities at random, they state the following thesis word limits on their website:

  • University of Edinburgh: 100,000
  • University of Exeter: 100,000
  • University of Leister: 80,000
  • University of Bath: 80,000
  • University of Warwick: 70,000

The above universities set upper word limits that apply across the board, however, some universities, such as the University of Birmingham and the University of Sheffield, set different word limits for different departments. For example, the University of Sheffield adopts these limits:

  • Arts & Humanities: 75,000
  • Medicine, Dentistry & Health: 75,000
  • Science: 80,000
  • Social Sciences: 75,000-100,000

Although there’s a range of limit, it’s safe to say that the majority fall within the 80,000 to 100,000 bracket.

Word Count Based on Data from past Theses

A poll of 149 postdocs.

In mid-2019, Dr Eva Lantsoght, a published author, academic blogger and Structural Engineering Professor, conducted a poll which asked postgraduate doctoral students to share the length of their final thesis. 149 PostDoc students responded to the survey, with the majority reporting a length falling within the ‘80,000 – 120,000 words’ bracket as seen below.

DiscoverPhDs_How-long-is-a-PhD-Thesis_Poll

Analysis of 1000 PhD Theses

Over a three-year time period, Dr Ian Brailsford, a then Postgraduate Learning Adviser at the University of Auckland, analysed 1000 doctoral thesis submitted to his university’s library. The PhD theses which formed the basis of his analysis were produced between 2008 to 2017 and showed:

  • Average number of pages = 204
  • Median number of pages = 198
  • Average number of chapters = 7.6

We should note that the above metrics only cover the content falling within the main body of the thesis. This includes the introduction, literature review, methods section, results chapter, discussions and conclusions. All other sections, such as the title page, abstract, table of contents, acknowledgements, bibliography and appendices were omitted from the count.

Although it’s impossible to draw the exact word count from the number of pages alone, by using the universities recommended format of 12pt Times New Roman and 1.5 lines spacing, and assuming 10% of the main body are figures and footnotes, this equates to an average main body of 52,000 words.

STEM vs Non-STEM

As part of Dr Ian Brailsford’s analysis, he also compared the length of STEM doctorate theses to non-STEM theses. He found that STEM theses tended to be shorter. In fact, he found STEM theses to have a medium page length of 159 whilst non-STEM theses had a medium of around 223 pages. This is a 40% increase in average length!

Can You Exceed the Word Count?

Whilst most universities will allow you to go over the word count if you need to, it comes with the caveat that you must have a very strong reason for needing to do so. Besides this, your supervisor will also need to support your request. This is to acknowledge that they have reviewed your situation and agree that exceeding the word limit will be absolutely necessary to avoid detriment unnecessary detriment to your work.

This means that whilst it is possible to submit a thesis over 100,000 words or more, it’s unlikely that your research project will need to.

How Does This Compare to a Masters Dissertation?

The average Masters dissertation length is approximately 20,000 words whilst a thesis is 4 to 5 times this length at approximately 80,000 – 100,000.

The key reason for this difference is because of the level of knowledge they convey. A Master’s dissertation focuses on concluding from existing knowledge whilst a PhD thesis focuses on drawing a conclusion from new knowledge. As a result, the thesis is significantly longer as the new knowledge needs to be well documented so it can be verified, disseminated and used to shape future research.

Finding a PhD has never been this easy – search for a PhD by keyword, location or academic area of interest.

Related Reading

Unfortunately, the completion of your thesis doesn’t mark the end of your degree just yet. Once you submit your thesis, it’s time to start preparing for your viva – the all-to-fun thesis defence interview! To help you prepare for this, we’ve produced a helpful guide which you can read here: The Complete Guide to PhD Vivas.

Browse PhDs Now

Join thousands of students.

Join thousands of other students and stay up to date with the latest PhD programmes, funding opportunities and advice.

IMAGES

  1. 20 Table of Contents Templates and Examples ᐅ TemplateLab

    dissertation number of pages

  2. Word for Dissertations: Adding Page Numbers

    dissertation number of pages

  3. 10 Easy Steps: How to Write a Table of Contents in 2023

    dissertation number of pages

  4. Thesis Numbering

    dissertation number of pages

  5. Thesis & Dissertation Title Page

    dissertation number of pages

  6. How do I number pages differently in the various sections of my thesis

    dissertation number of pages

VIDEO

  1. How to read literature for dissertation/thesis |Sumita Biswas #phd #dissertation

  2. 07 Inserting a Landscape Page

  3. Dissertation-Thesis Page Numbering

  4. Dissertation discussion chapter

  5. HOW YOU SHOULD WRITE THE RESEARCH COVER PAGE

  6. Reflection on Writing a PhD-Level Dissertation

COMMENTS

  1. PDF APA Style Dissertation Guidelines: Formatting Your Dissertation

    When the content of the dissertation starts, the page numbering should restart at page one using Arabic numbering (i.e., 1, 2, 3, etc.) and continue throughout the dissertation until the end. The Arabic page number should be aligned to the upper right margin of the page with a running head aligned to the upper left margin.

  2. PDF How to Format Page Numbers in a Dissertation & Thesis

    Page number formats are in three separate parts. 1. Title page - The first page is the title page; it is only one page. There is no page number displayed. It counts as page "i". a. Click on the page. Select Insert > Footer > Banded [inserts page number in center of the Footer]. b. Select the page number in the Footer. c.

  3. Dissertation layout and formatting

    Revised on February 20, 2019. The layout requirements for a dissertation are often determined by your supervisor or department. However, there are certain guidelines that are common to almost every program, such as including page numbers and a table of contents. If you are writing a paper in the MLA citation style, you can use our MLA format guide.

  4. Dissertation Structure & Layout 101 (+ Examples)

    Time to recap…. And there you have it - the traditional dissertation structure and layout, from A-Z. To recap, the core structure for a dissertation or thesis is (typically) as follows: Title page. Acknowledgments page. Abstract (or executive summary) Table of contents, list of figures and tables.

  5. Formatting Your Dissertation

    Most dissertations are 100 to 300 pages in length. All dissertations should be divided into appropriate sections, and long dissertations may need chapters, main divisions, and subdivisions. ... (if included); letter suffixes (such as 10a, 10b, etc.) are not allowed. It is customary not to have a page number on the page containing a chapter ...

  6. Organizing and Formatting Your Thesis and Dissertation

    A sample Thesis title page pdf is available here, and a sample of a Dissertation title page pdf is available here. Refer to the sample page as you read through the format requirements for the title page. ... Submit one abstract in English (page number is numbered consecutively from previous page - example: if the last page of the abstract in ...

  7. Formatting Guidelines

    Footnotes. Format footnotes for your thesis or dissertation following these guidelines: Footnotes must be placed at the bottom of the page separated from the text by a solid line one to two inches long. Begin at the left page margin, directly below the solid line. Single-space footnotes that are more than one line long.

  8. PDF Page Numbering for a Thesis or Dissertation

    Insert Page Numbers for Thesis Text . The body and references of the ETD use Arabic numerals starting with 1 on the first page of the text of ... If the page number in the Footer is not displaying correctly, the Start at option may need to be changed. For example, if "2" is displayed as the page number, change the start at option to "0

  9. What Is a Dissertation?

    The very first page of your document contains your dissertation title, your name, department, institution, degree program, and submission date. Sometimes it also includes your student number, your supervisor's name, and the university's logo. Read more about title pages. Acknowledgements or preface

  10. KU Thesis and Dissertation Formatting: Page Numbering

    Information for University of Kansas graduate students on required content order, page numbering, creating headings, formatting table of contents, adding captions, creating a table of figures and embedding fonts for theses and dissertations. How to number pages for your thesis or dissertation.

  11. Page Numbers

    Microsoft Word will keep track of page numbers for you, so you can add and delete pages, move tables and figures from one page to another, etc. Then, you can create a Table of Contents, a List of Tables, a List of Figures, etc. and Word will automatically create those lists (or, you can update the lists by clicking an update button).

  12. Page Numbers

    Adding the Page Numbers. Scroll up to the section that contains your front matter and click in the footer of any page (don't do anything for your title page and other pages that don't require a page number). On the Insert Ribbon, in the Header & Footer Group, click on the arrow next to the Page Number icon and select the positioning you'd ...

  13. PDF Guidelines for The PhD Dissertation

    Most dissertations are 100 to 300 pages in length. All dissertations should be divided into appropriate sections, and long dissertations may need chapters, main divisions, and even subdivisions. Students should keep in mind that GSAS and many departments deplore overlong and wordy dissertations.

  14. Order and Components

    Abstracts cannot exceed 150 words for a thesis or 350 words for a dissertation. Number the abstract page with the lower case Roman numeral iii (and iv, if more than one page) centered with a 1/2″ margin from the bottom edge. Please write and proofread your abstract carefully. When possible, avoid including symbols or foreign words in your ...

  15. PDF Thesis/Dissertation Page Numbering in Microsoft Word

    click Insert > Page Number > Bottom of Page > Plain Number 2. The page numbers will reappear. 11. Highlight the page number on the first page of chapter 1 and at the top on the Design tab, click on Page Number > Format Page Numbers… 12. In the Page Number Format popup, change the Number format to 1, 2, 3, … and under Page numbering select ...

  16. Page Numbers

    This controls text and page numbers following through from section to section. D. Click on Page number again and this time select Format page number. E. Select the type of numbers you need. Select small Roman numerals (I, ii, iii etc.) for all pages from Contents to Chapter 1. Start the Arabic numerals (1, 2, 3 etc) from the first page of ...

  17. Formatting Theses & Dissertations using Word 2010: Numbering

    (This will start page numbering page 2, but the second page will be labeled "2". This isn't what we wanted. There is an extra step to making this page say "1".) While the Design tab for Header & Footer is still up, select Page Number in the Header & Footer group. Then choose Format Page Number. The resulting window is shown to the right.

  18. How do I number pages differently in the various sections of my thesis

    One of the required page numbering changes for your thesis or dissertation is that you need to use Roman numerals (e.g., "i, ii, iii") for your introductory sections (Abstract, Table of Contents), and then switch to Arabic numerals (e.g., "1, 2, 3") and begin the page numbering at "1" at the start of Chapter I of your main text.

  19. Formatting Requirements: Preliminary Pages

    The statement of thesis/dissertation approval is page ii (Roman numeral) of the manuscript (page number not shown). This statement is prepared as shown in Figures 2.4 (for master's students) and 2.5 (for doctoral students). ... If there is a second page to each version of the abstract, the page number (lower-case Roman numeral) is centered ...

  20. Page Numbering

    Page Numbering. The thesis/dissertation is comprised of several different sections which require a distinct numbering format. All page numbers should be: Located on the bottom of each page that requires them; Located between .5" and .75" inches from the bottom of the page; The same font and size as the main body of text

  21. How Many Pages is a Thesis or Dissertation: Masters to PhD

    On average, a master's thesis or a PhD dissertation is between 120 pages and 200 pages long without counting the bibliography and the appendices. However, the length of a thesis is determined by the depth of your research and the technical nature of the research being conducted. Also, the literature review and discussion sections determine ...

  22. Page Numbers (Thesis/Dissertation Formatting)

    About Press Copyright Contact us Creators Advertise Developers Terms Privacy Policy & Safety How YouTube works Test new features NFL Sunday Ticket Press Copyright ...

  23. How Long Is a PhD Thesis?

    However, from the analysis of over 100 PhD theses, the average thesis length is between 80,000 and 100,000 words. A further analysis of 1000 PhD thesis shows the average number of pages to be 204. In reality, the actual word count for each PhD thesis will depend on the specific subject and the university it is being hosted by.