Friday, October 8, 2010

Inflation

UNDERSTANDING INFLATION
SO, WHAT'S TO WORRY ABOUT, ANYWAY?
FUTURECASTS online magazine
www.futurecasts.com
Vol. 6, No. 2, 2/1/04.
Economic inflation:


Policies that hold prices down can be inflationary. When we think of inflation - when we define inflation - we think of rising prices instead of the actual causes of inflation. This is reasonable, since the ultimate outcome of inflation is always a general and sustained increase in price levels. It is thus easy to define inflation in terms of its ultimate results - the price increases that it causes - and ignore the underlying causes of inflation - the underlying forces that caused those results.
This is no minor matter. It leads to the common policy mistakes that arise from the belief that anything that holds prices down is "anti-inflationary" - when the opposite is often actually true.
Price controls and the expenditure of financial reserves subsidize inflationary levels of demand and deter increases in supply, and are thus inflationary. It is the price rises themselves that are "anti-inflationary." The measures often employed to hold down price increases are actually additional forces of inflation that will cause even further price increases in the future.

The Collapse of Agriculture

DESCENT INTO THE DEPTHS (1930):
The Collapse of Agriculture
FUTURECASTS online magazine
www.futurecasts.com
Vol. 3, No. 4, 4/1/01.

(The vast majority of the following was taken from articles published in contemporary issues of the N.Y. Times.)


The aborted spring business revival: By the beginning of April, 1930, the rise in stock prices had once again left dividend yields, by themselves, well below attractive investment levels. The limited revival of railroad car loadings indicated the limits of the spring economic revival and caused a 33% reduction in railroad earnings.

Disappointing levels of railroad car loadings indicated the limited nature of the spring business revival. Accelerated maintenance work and purchases by the railroads and other major industrial corporations - undertaken pursuant to a plea from Pres. Hoover - had pushed steel production momentarily as high as 82% in February, but by April the railroads were forced to make substantial reductions in these plans. However, the successful liquidation of excess auto inventories and the continuation of good sales through April, 1930, resulted in a pickup in auto production that pushed steel production back up to 80% of capacity. There were now no observable merchandise inventory problems.

Articles on Global Warming

ARTICLES BY GARY NOVAK
All articles are Copyright by Gary Novak.
All Rights Reserved.
Reprinted with permission.

Climate and Ice Ages
Global Warming
Intelligent Design of the Globe
Heat in the Earth's Core

Climate and Ice Ages

The past ten ice ages have been cycling at 100 thousand year intervals. Environmental influences would not be so cyclic. Hot spots rotating in the earth's core seem to be the best explanation.
Warm ocean currents are melting ice at the poles and damaging coral reefs. It's primarily ocean temperatures that are increasing, and secondarily air temperatures.
Rainfall is greatly increasing in the upper plains (of USA). That moisture originates with evaporation of the Pacific Ocean, which must be heating up.
Atmospheric temperature is over-played in the hype on global warming.
Change in air temperature is not of much significance at even moderate levels, let alone the minute levels being questioned. The reason is because air has very low heat capacity.

Increases in temperatures below the ground surface have recently been detected. This includes unusual melting of ice on lakes in Minnesota.
Increases in CO2 in the atmosphere have been occurring for about a century. But only about 3% of the CO2 has human origins. A likely source of the increase is heating of oceans, which causes CO2 to be released.
Heating of oceans appears to be the cause of ice ages. Increased evaporation would create more cloud cover and reduce radiant heating.

The tale of a giant

100 Tests for Inzamam (2005)


A star is born in the 1992 World Cup © Getty Images
January 1989 First big innings
Inzamam's back-to-the-wall 201 not out for United Bank Limited in the Quaid-e-Azam Trophy on a greentop pushed him into the limelight. Haroon Rashid, the former Pakistan batsman and coach, considers it the best innings he has ever seen.
November 1991 One-day debut

Inzamam had to contend with a fiery line-up of Curtly Ambrose, Ian Bishop, Malcolm Marshall and Patrick Patterson on his international debut at Lahore. He managed 20 before being bowled by Marshall. The game turned out to be a thriller and ended in a tie.


Another cracker on cards, clouds permitting

India v Australia, 2nd Test, Bangalore


The Big Picture
 
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Can India and Australia produce an encore? Is it even possible to match the high of that first Test? Both teams will miss key men involved in the drama at high noon in Mohali: Ishant Sharma has already been ruled out, Doug Bollinger is extremely unlikely to play and VVS Laxman is in a race for fitness. India have other worries too: Gautam Gambhir was injured in the first Test and isn't available for selection. But both teams have always found a way to stretch themselves and produce exciting contests - and Bangalore, weather permitting, should be no different.
There are a few concerns, though, and a few questions. Without Bollinger, do Australia have the resources to take 20 wickets? Without him, can they hustle the Indians? Will a replacement bowler release the pressure and will that affect how the others operate? There is also a question mark over Marcus North, who seems to be given endless chances, and enjoys the confidence of his captain and selectors, while the rest of the world wonders why. Thankfully, for North, the rest of the world's opinion doesn't matter - though it might soon if he continues producing inconsistent performances.
India, too, have tough questions to ponder. Harbhajan Singh wasn't completely fit for the previous two series and that affected his bowling. Have his ailments healed and will we see a fully-fit Harbhajan bowl? The spinners on the bench don't seem to have convinced the management that they can be better than a half-fit Harbhajan. The rise of Pragyan Ojha has been because of Amit Mishra's slide. And is Sreesanth match-fit to replace Ishant? Can Suresh Raina manage to develop a way to tackle the bouncers, or will he slip away like Vinod Kambli?

Misbah-ul-Haq appointed Test captain

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Misbah-ul-Haq has been appointed Pakistan's captain for the two-Test series against South Africa in Abu Dhabi in November. He becomes the fourth man, after Mohammad Yousuf, Shahid Afridi and Salman Butt, to lead Pakistan in Tests in 2010 alone, and the decision completes a remarkable and typically Pakistani comeback; earlier this year, after the Australia tour, he had been dropped from all formats of the game. In July, he was contemplating retirement.
Instead, he will now lead a 15-man squad which includes Mohammad Sami, opener Taufeeq Umar, Danish Kaneria - each of them recalled - and a first time Test call-up for Asad Shafiq, who impressed in his debut ODI series against England recently.
There are signs that the decision hasn't pleased everyone involved with selection of the squad. When asked about the reasons behind the appointment, Mohsin Khan, chief selector, told ESPNcricinfo only that "the selection committee has nothing to do with the appointment of the captain." He refused to comment about the squad.

Thursday, October 7, 2010

Difference Between Love & Marriage (Plato)

One day, Plato asked his teacher, "What is love? How can I find it?" .His
teacher answered, "There is a vast wheat field in front.. Walk forward
without turning back, and pick only one stalk. If you find the most
magnificent stalk, then you have found love." Plato walked forward, and
before long, he returned with empty hands, having picked nothing.

His teacher asked, "Why did you not pick any stalk?" Plato answered,
"Because I could only pick once, and yet I could not turn back. I did find
the most magnificent stalk, but did not know if there were any better ones
ahead, so I did not pick it. As I walked further, the stalks that I saw were
not as good as the earlier one, so! I did not pick any in the end. His
teacher then said, "And that is LOVE."

On another day, Plato asked his teacher, "What is marriage? How can I find
it?" His teacher answered, "There is a thriving forest in front. Walk
forward without turning back, and chop down only one tree. If you find the
tallest tree, then you have found marriage". Plato walked forward, and
before long, He returned with a tree. The tree was not bad, and it was not
tall either. It was only an ordinary tree, not the best but just a good
tree. His teacher asked, "Why did you chop down such an ordinary tree?"
Plato answered, "Because of my previous experience. I had walked through the
field, but returned with empty hands. This time, I saw this tree, and I felt
that it was the first good tree that I saw, so I chopped it down and brought
it back. I did not want to miss the opportunity."

His teacher then said, "And that is MARRIAGE. You see son...Love is the most
beautiful thing to happen to a person, its an opportunity but you don't
realize its worth when you have it but only when its gone like the field of
stalks. Marriage like the tree you chopped, it's a compromise; you pick the
first best thing you see and learn to live a happy life with it."

Women are victims of environmental degradations

ISLAMABAD, May 10: Gender justice which provides both men and women a level playing field for sustainable development is the need of the hour. This was the viewpoint shared by the participants at a workshop on “gender concepts in relation to environment and sustainable development”. The event was organized by the National Conservation Strategy Resource Centre (NCS-RC), federal environment ministry, here on Tuesday.

The objective of the workshop was to create awareness about degradation of natural resources and environment with regards to current economic development and its role in gender perspective.

COMPUTER VISION SYNDROME

M any computer users have Computer Vision Syndrome (CVS). Studies show that 50% - 90% of computer users experience the symptoms of CVS. The good news is that the eye and vision symptoms and problems of CVS can usually be alleviated by good eye care and/or by changes in the work environment. It does not disable their sufferers for life. Most of the eye symptoms clear up after a few hours away from the keyboard.
People getting older is the biggest issue when it comes to computer vision problems as it collides with normal deterioration of vision at age of 40. However young persons whose monitor is placed too high may also be affected. There is no evidence that using of computer will cause permanent eye problem but it can make people so uncomfortable that they are troubled in concentrating on their work.
Symptoms
Headache.
Tired and achy eyes.
Dry, Gritty or usually watery eyes.
Blurred or double vision.
Difficulty in focusing after working for long on computers.
Neck, Back and Shoulder pain.
Cause

E-commerce and its future in Pakistan

E-commerce is a very hot issue these days. After the revolution of Internet, more and more countries are getting involved in it.

However, in general, if we use any type of electronic devices in getting orders and sending catalogues, like telephone, fax or any other such instruments, we are supposed to be applying electronic business techniques. However, the real sense of e-commerce is the business on the internet of which there are different modes, like opening a retail store on internet, where all transactions are done on line, from selection of product to payment of bills.

The over-all volume of e-commerce is more than $4 billion annually. Doing business on internet is not a very costly investment. It is estimated that in near future, almost 25 per cent of the traditional business will be converted into internet business.

Creating a risk-intelligent organization

In the aftermath of last year's debacles and governance meltdowns, stakeholders are demanding greater transparency about the risks an enterprise faces and a commensurate level of assurance about the robustness of the organization's risk-management processes and the achievability of its business, reporting, and compliance objectives. Regulators, markets, boards of directors, analysts, and insurers are realizing the importance of managing risk proactively and have introduced many new and far-reaching measures to assist in the effort. n Continuous changes in marketplace dynamics are also bringing about changes in how risk is viewed. In addition, the definition of corporate risk has expanded to include not only financial risks but all business and compliance risks. As a result, many organizations are recognizing the need to use enterprise risk management (ERM), a systematic and disciplined approach to managing risk throughout the organization.

The Necessary Conditions for a Learning Culture

Joseph H. Boyett & Jimmie T. Boyett

Since Peter Senge burst on the guru scene in 1990 with his highly popular book The Fifth Discipline: The Art and Science of the Learning Organization, there has been much debate about what it really means to be a learning organization. How do you know if the culture of your organization enhances or inhibits learning? Here is a chart based upon the work of Edgar Schein, one of the top learning organization gurus, that compares the culture of a learning organization to that of the traditional organization. 

THE DEATH OF THE INDUS DELTA

Arif Hasan

This is not a technical paper. It consists primarily of observations regarding the changes that have occurred in the physical and social environment of the delta region in my lifetime. As a child and a young man I visited the delta regularly as my father had a fascination for the archaeological remains of the old delta port cities that managed the trade between Sindh on the one hand and the Gulf, African and the Indian peninsular ports on the other. History tells us that this trade was extensive and the Indus delta region was a major exporter of timber, camels, rice and textiles.

In 1960, I left Pakistan to study abroad and did not visit the Indus delta again till 1989 when the UNESCAP asked me to prepare an environmental profile of coastal communities for the government of Pakistan’s Coastal Environmental Management Plan. In the nineteen years that I had not visited the delta, the delta had changed. What I saw was devastation horrific both in its nature and scale. The report that I prepared and my subsequent writings have documented this change both in socio-economic and physical terms. What I have observed and gathered from surveys forms part of my more recent book “The Unplanned Revolution”.

Eleven Reasons Why I Still Believe In Pakistan

In the past two months two of our top doctors at SKMCH & RC resigned to seek employment abroad, because both felt that Pakistan has no future. The numbers of professionals and businessmen who are being "brain – drained" is increasing at an alarming rate. Most people are losing hope in Pakistan, where a fascist Govt. has gripped all levers of power, and yet is completely ill-equipped to deal with the multi-crises facing the country. The despondency is compounded by the fact that there seems to be no light at the end of the tunnel.

However despite this atmosphere of gloom and doom there are eleven reasons why I still believe that Pakistan has a bright future.

VOICE TO SKULL TECHNOLOGY

HELP STOP WEAPONS THAT MIMIC THOUGHTS AND MANIPULATE EMOTIONS.

VOICE TO SKULL TECHNOLOGY.

PERPS, short for Perpetrators, which means people who are using VOICE TO SKULL Technology.

Voice To Skull is the American name given to this technology. This does not mean that people using this or similar technology are Americans. Remember only an investigation will reveal their actual identity.

According to an estimate, PERPERTRATORS have been around since, between mid seventies to early eighties. (Between 1975 to 1985). This time frame have been estimated through the advancements that occurred in this technology. Therefore some people will have to reference before that time frame. For those who are targeted, will see a significant difference in there lives after becoming a target. Also others will be provided with proofs to convenience them of PERPETRATOR’s existence. Remember, if you are not targeted yet, then they will at a later time, or will affect the lives of your children. However, the soul purpose of this document is not to convince others, but to induce awareness, so once they are targeted then they will know what’s going on, also, this will lead to PERPERTRATORS not using some of the tactics to manipulate a person’s life, and hence, will loose some of the very crucial tactics in there manipulation scheme. Put it simple one major purpose of this document is to put limits on how PERPERTRATORS will manipulate others. If they don’t achieve there goals, then they may put an end to there own rampage.

The truth is finally revealed...

The truth is finally revealed...
How Does The Richest Man In The World Use The Greatest Business Secret Of All Time To Make Over 32.4 Million Dollars A Day?!!

No matter who you are, where you live or what your sex, age or race is, by the time you finish reading this special article, you will know:
• How to start a proven money-making business, that requires no inventory, no shipping and no employees within 7 days, guaranteed! (Actually, I'll show you how to do it within 24 hours.)
• How to increase your sales by more than 137% in 30 days, regardless of your business!
• How to get paid for a 1000-hour workweek, without going to work!
• How to turn .50 cents into $50, with a simple click of a button!
• How to get 4 professionally created software programs for FREE! (Plus how to receive FREE reprint and royalty free marketing rights!)
• ... and how to get your hands on one of the highest rated marketing eBooks on the Internet... FREE of charge (and get this, it comes with royalty free marketing and distribution rights!)
If you ever wanted a business where you could hit the ground running . . . a business where you could just open a box and start making immediate profits . . . a business that's completely set up and ready to pull in maximum sales . . . with a product that practically sells itself . . . then I've got some great news for you!
Hi! My name is Sam Robbins. I've been in the direct marketing business for almost ten years and I'm always on the look-out for the "ultimate" product.
You know, that once-in-a-lifetime product . . . The kind of product that sells itself, has tremendous profits, makes customers happy, and can be offered on full auto-pilot roll-out.
Extremely Rare, Except For...
While these types of products do exist, they are extremely rare, and most people in this business never get to feel the thrill that comes from the tidal wave of responses this type of product generates.
Whenever I speak at seminars, people approach me often wanting to know what is the quickest and easiest way to get into the direct marketing business and earn lots of cash.
In fact, these past couple years, the same question has been asked, but with a twist... "how can all of this be done on the Internet?"
Until recently, I had a hard time coming up with an answer except to say, "Have the right product at the right time." And even that answer wasn't really enough.
See, these days, the definition of the right product is a lot different than it was just a few years ago. The market has changed, consumers have changed, and even the methods of advertising products and taking orders has changed.
And this is good news! . . .
You see, getting into the direct marketing, home-based business is now easier than ever. With all the exciting new methods of reaching customers (Internet, e-mail, fax-on-demand, voice mails, classified ads, etc.), making real money with a direct marketing/Internet project can be accomplished without ever leaving your home!
Of course, even with all the great new methods of reaching customers, you still need the right product at the right time. And that's the glitch. It's hard to find the right product.
Ask anyone in the business and they will tell you the same thing. (Yes, there are a lot of products out there. But most are, at best, a waste of time. Just take a quick look at the hundreds and thousands of Web sites that are losing money each and every day!)

Time Management By Cyndi Seidler

Create your own time plan. Establish a daily routine to organize your time and streamline your operations. Have a workable schedule for actions and activities that enables you to accomplish certain tasks, such as:

                  1. Meetings
                  2. Phone calls
                  3. Job duties/functions
                  4. Mail

Here are some tips to manage your time:

1. Organize your same day appointments geographically. Arrange any errands to coincide with any outings.

2. Organize materials for a meeting the day before to gain more time on the day of the appointment. Make a note on your calendar for this (i.e., "preparations for staff meeting").

3. Set priorities. Determine what is most important - prioritizing is the key to mastering the use of time.

4. Break down a major project into smaller component tasks that can be done in a short time. Target a date to complete each of these.

5. Resolve to do today what you wanted to do tomorrow. Make a catch-up list of tasks you have avoided or put on the "back-burner" and rank them from the most important to the least important. Resolve to do at least one task from this list each day.

6. Avoid interruptions. Set aside a period of the day as "off-limits" during which time you will not be interrupted. Use this time to work on your "A" or top priorities, or even as a designated time to handle your mail or return calls.

7. Time your calls strategically. Make your contacts with colleagues, staff and clients productive, but crisp.

8. When you need a swift response, send an Email or make a phone call whenever possible to avoid time delays in receiving an answer.

9. Schedule free time. Find at least one day each week during which you do no work or business at all. You will get a better perspective on your work after you have time away from it.

10. Delegate. Assign tasks to another or others to give you more time to handle the tasks which only you can do. Effectively multiplying your time is the ultimate time management technique.
In beginning and planning your day, you should review your daily list to map out your day's activities and goals.
At the end of each day, prepare a new daily list by reviewing:

   • Master action list (including projects list)
   • Appointment calendar (for scheduled appointments)
   • Deadline or compliances due (from a log or tickler file).
   • Calls and/or follow-ups
   • Daily list of items not done that day.

Establish the day's goal(s) and include that on your daily list.
Overall, the more efficient you are with your time, the more productive you will become. This is one of the keys to success!


Amazing Pakistan : A picture hidden from the World

In the recent times due to rendezvous between political forces and media, an ugliest picture about my country has been portrayed in front of the world, a picture that holds no color or I am not wrong to say “It’s all black just black”. I’m the struggling to unveil the true picture that hold millions of colors, so bright and so shiny that can dazzle one’s eyes. If you are son of a soil, and you love your country as much as I do then you will help me fight against those who are painting your land as a black corner of this world. “Spread the truth as much as you can, fight for the right”

Pakistan meaning the “The land of pure” where each day the sun rises with a new hope, with an enduring majesty as the rays of light flushing down towards the snowcapped peaks of Himalaya’s and Nanga Parbat. A land where love finds a meaning in the heart warming hospitability of people, a land where history and ancient civilization mystifies one’s heart, a land where spiritualism unveils its mystery at the shrines of Sufi Saints. This is the land I belong to, this is the land I’ll die for and this is the land that defines my identity.

The Invincible 167 Million : 6th largest Nation of the World

The invincible 167 million Pakistani’s progressing forward with high hopes and a mission holding an unquenchable thirst to be the world leader’s soon. Despit the chaos, despite the ill spilled by the westeren media to demoralize the nation and to uproot the patriotism from the hearts and minds of people of this country, despite the foreign funded terrorists bombing hundreds of Pakistani’s each day painting the roads red with the blood of young children, women and men. Every drop of it shouts back loud ” You can never take us down, We’ll fight back till our last breath“. Reminding you this is the nation which has a 7th largest pool of scientists and Engineers in the World[1]. and the country that is ranked 9th in the world where English language is spoken and used as an official language.

Crisis of Nationhood (Pakistan)

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Prof. Dr. Mansoor Akbar Kundi

Dean, Faculty of Languages, University of Balochistan Quetta.

In 1947 a nation was looking for a country, today the country is looking for a nation. The concept of nationhood which serves as an important pillar in the development of countries has unfortunately been withered with time. Pakistan is one of the countries having been faced with the crisis of identity. Having been emerged as a large nation-state on the world map with an important geo-strategic status and ideological foundations it unfortunately has not come out of the grip of the crisis with the fact that the ratio of the crisis which grown over the past years.

The crisis of integration/identity can simply be defined under the context of how far residents of a nation-state identify themselves with the bases of identification of a state and societal structure. The major bases of identification can be historical, linguistic, ethnic, religious, symbolic, socio-cultural, economic and political. For example, in case of many Arab countries suffering from the crises of legitimacy, representation, and participation are out of the crisis of identity due to strong bonds of historical/linguistic (Arab nationalism). They predominantly identify with Arab nationalism. It is true in case of Iran and Turkey where the roots of nationalism are stronger. Turkey and Iran are the two countries which despite having even faced with militancy/insurgency are overall without the crisis of disintegration due to the fact that ratio of identification with bases of state-societal structure as a unified nation is stronger. A similar example can be of Afghanistan the people of which having been in the grip of brutal war/civil war with a series of repressive regimes still predominantly and proudly identify themselves as Afghans without any option for state division. The developed countries such as USA, Canada, and EU countries etc. enjoy the established bases of economic, political and social support as melting pots. The countries with high level of homogeneity such as Japan, Korea and Malaysia have strong linguistic and sauce-cultural bases of support for identification with established structure of governance.

Pakistan soon after its independence was faced with the crisis of identity. The Two-Nation Theory which served the ideological foundations and platform for the Muslim League under the capable leadership of Quaid-e-Azam was soon found incompatible with the demands of the new state for the political and economic development. The major factor accountable was the sad demise of the founder of Pakistan and the beginning of the volatile game of power struggle which ultimately led to a series of undemocratic and praetorian rule. The growing differences amongst the leading participants of Muslim League, the political party credited for mobilizing Muslim support for the creation of Pakistan, over issues of power of mine-and-thine undermined the constitutional and political development in process.

The role of a leader and system of governance play a role in the promotion of identity bases in diverse societies. Unfortunately the leadership gap developed after the death of Quaid-e-Azam and assassination of Liaquat Ali Khan was not filled. A combined class of leadership could have easily emerged from the East and West wings in case a representative system had been allowed but it did not happen. After 1970 crisis Z. A. Bhutto emerged as a national leader. He and his party held popularity among masses. He had a fair chance of winning the bases of popular support in case he shown tolerance to opposition and not overwhelmed by power ambitions. Bhutto could win the support of opposition by showing tolerance and reconciliation, supports electoral institutions, and keep army out of politics, but he failed to do so. Nonetheless, it was unfortunate for the country that a man of his caliber was removed from the scene through a military coup and a along the system which could promise hopes of a democratic order in the country.

Pakistan was achieved on the basis of the theory that necessitated the partition of India on the ground that two major segments of its population lacked any resemblance between their culture, religion and historical heritage. The essence of the theory and later on the driving force behind the All India Muslim League for mobilization of the Indian Muslims, majority of those from common class of society needed a separate homeland where they could exercise political, religious, social and economic independence away from Hindus’ dominance. It was a dream which could have been achieved through the establishment of a political system based on representation of all segments of the society. The differences between the East and West Pakistan were the result of an unrepresentative system which fanned the separatist movement and ultimately resulted into the disintegration of Pakistan. The separation of East Pakistan into Bangladesh was the end of the Two-Nation Theory the die about which had long been cast.

Pakistan is a heterogeneous country divided into different ethnic and tribal groups. There are differences of social, cultural and societal norms in four of its provinces and constituent parts i.e. the federally administered tribally and Northern areas. Pakistan has lacked a common language which is an important component in uniting people in a society bifurcated by social and cultural differences. It was necessary for a bifurcating society like Pakistan was to have a common language. Urdu as our national language failed to mobilize masses for national unity due to two major reasons. First, it was a language that was not spoken in large. Its use was limited to a narrow section of population and thus could not become a lingua franka. Second, Urdu was not adapted as a medium of instruction for all academic curricula and civil and military examinations. The adoption of national language as a source of important academic and administrative purposes in a society can mobilize masses into a nationhood. It is true in case of many nation-states with stronger sense of nationalism. If Urdu had been given the status of an important medium of instruction and used for official and non-official purposes there would have been mobilization of masses into a unified nation, but it did not happen. The rich and privilege class send their children to expensive English medium schools where they are groomed as a special class for competitive state examinations for their future role as elite against those who unable to afford sending their generation to those schools and are left at the mercy of poor rate Urdu medium schools. The division bifurcates the society into have and have-nots with have as the considerably larger group.

The lack of a unified system of education with Urdu as a recognized medium of instruction has failed to mobilize our generations in familiarity with our history and culture. The sense of masses’ identification with the national bases is comparatively much smaller than with the regional and provincial bases. Majority of us are proud to be Sindhi, Punjabi, Pathan or Balochi than Pakistani. The roots of nationalism have not been strengthened on national, but are rather on parochial and tribal bases. Countries with universal education in a unified national language enjoy higher sense of nationalism.

The role of symbolic modernization, economic development and the setup of infra-structure strengthens the identification bases of masses into a unified nation. Many states with cultural and social diversity have reduced the crisis of identity by faster communication network; they include roads, telecommunication, electricity and media. Pakistan being an agrarian society with majority of people living into far-flung rural areas of the four provinces have not been linked by faster means of communication. The conditions of roads are not satisfactory and distances of hours is made into days. It is particular in case of Balochistan where the availability of metalled roads compared to its area and size are nominal.

Pakistan has been suffering from the crisis of identity. The lack of the continuity of an electoral rule and a viable representative system, good governance, and the national leadership are the major factors for the crisis against the integration of masses into one nation.

How to Write a PhD Thesis

I Joe Wolfe I

I School of Physics I

I The University of New South Wales, Sydney I

This guide to thesis writing gives simple and practical advice on the problems of getting started, getting organised, dividing the huge task into less formidable pieces and working on those pieces. It also explains the practicalities of surviving the ordeal. It includes a suggested structure and a guide to what should go in each section. It was originally written for graduate students in physics, and most of the specific examples given are taken from that discipline. Nevertheless, the feedback from users indicates that it has been widely used and appreciated by graduate students in diverse fields in the sciences and humanities.

Getting Started

When you are about to begin, writing a thesis seems a long, difficult task. That is because it is a long, difficult task. Fortunately, it will seem less daunting once you have a couple of chapters done. Towards the end, you will even find yourself enjoying it---an enjoyment based on satisfaction in the achievement, pleasure in the improvement in your technical writing, and of course the approaching end. Like many tasks, thesis writing usually seems worst before you begin, so let us look at how you should make a start.

An outline

First make up a thesis outline: several pages containing chapter headings, sub-headings, some figure titles (to indicate which results go where) and perhaps some other notes and comments. There is a section on chapter order and thesis structure at the end of this text. Once you have a list of chapters and, under each chapter heading, a reasonably complete list of things to be reported or explained, you have struck a great blow against writer's block. When you sit down to type, your aim is no longer a thesis---a daunting goal---but something simpler. Your new aim is just to write a paragraph or section about one of your subheadings. It helps to start with an easy one: this gets you into the habit of writing and gives you self-confidence. Often the Materials and Methods chapter is the easiest to write---just write down what you did; carefully, formally and in a logical order.

How do you make an outline of a chapter? For most of them, you might try the method that I use for writing papers, and which I learned from my thesis adviser: assemble all the figures that you will use in it and put them in the order that you would use if you were going to explain to someone what they all meant. You might as well rehearse explaining it to someone else---after all you will probably give several talks based on your thesis work. Once you have found the most logical order, note down the key words of your explanation. These key words provide a skeleton for much of your chapter outline.

Once you have an outline, discuss it with your adviser. This step is important: s/he will have useful suggestions, but it also serves notice that s/he can expect a steady flow of chapter drafts that will make high priority demands on his/her time. Once you and your adviser have agreed on a logical structure, s/he will need a copy of this outline for reference when reading the chapters which you will probably present out of order. If you have a co-adviser, discuss the outline with him/her as well, and present all chapters to both advisers for comments.

Organisation

It is encouraging and helpful to start a filing system. Open a word-processor file for each chapter and one for the references. You can put notes in these files, as well as text. While doing something for Chapter n, you will think "Oh I must refer back to/discuss this in Chapter m" and so you put a note to do so in the file for Chapter m. Or you may think of something interesting or relevant for that chapter. When you come to work on Chapter m, the more such notes you have accumulated, the easier it will be to write.

Make a back-up of these files and do so every day at least (depending on the reliability of your computer and the age of your disk drive). Do not keep back-up disks close to the computer in case the hypothetical thief who fancies your computer decides that s/he could use some disks as well.

A simple way of making a remote back-up is to send it as an email attachment to a consenting email correspondent, preferably one in a different location. You could even send it to yourself if your server saves your mail (in some email packages like Eudora this is an optional setting). In either case, be careful to dispose of superseded versions so that you don't waste disk space, especially if you have bitmap images or other large files.

You should also have a physical filing system: a collection of folders with chapter numbers on them. This will make you feel good about getting started and also help clean up your desk. Your files will contain not just the plots of results and pages of calculations, but all sorts of old notes, references, calibration curves, suppliers' addresses, specifications, speculations, letters from colleagues etc., which will suddenly strike you as relevant to one chapter or other. Stick them in that folder. Then put all the folders in a box or a filing cabinet. As you write bits and pieces of text, place the hard copy, the figures etc in these folders as well. Touch them and feel their thickness from time to time---ah, the thesis is taking shape.

If any of your data exist only on paper, copy them and keep the copy in a different location. Consider making a copy of your lab book. This has another purpose beyond security: usually the lab book stays in the lab, but you may want a copy for your own future use. Further, scientific ethics require you to keep lab books and original data for at least ten years, and a copy is more likely to be found if two copies exist.

While you are getting organised, you should deal with any university paperwork. Examiners have to be nominated and they have to agree to serve. Various forms are required by your department and by the university administration. Make sure that the rate limiting step is your production of the thesis, and not some minor bureaucratic problem.

A note about word processors

One of the big FAQs for scientists: is there a word processor, ideally one compatible with MS Word, but which allows you to type mathematical symbols and equations conveniently? One solution is LaTeX, which is powerful, elegant, reliable, fast and free from http://www.latex-project.org/ or http://www.miktex.org/. As far as I know, the only equation editor for MS Word is slow and awkward. (If anyone knows a way of writing equations in this software without using the mouse, many people including this author would like to hear from you!) Another solution is to use old versions of commercial software. Word 5.1 allows equations to be typed without touching the mouse and is as fast in this respect as LaTeX, with the added advantage of 'what you see is what you get' (WYSIWYG). A search will find sites that provide discontinued software, but, not knowing whether this is legal or not, I shan't link to them. (I am told that LyX, available free at http://www.lyx.org/, is a convenient front-end to LaTeX that has WYSIWYG. )

Commercial word processors have gradually become bigger, slower, less reliable and more awkward to use as they acquire more features. This is a general feature of commercial software and an important input to the computing industry. If software and operating system performance did not deteriorate, people would not need to buy new computers and profits would fall for makers of both hard- and soft-ware. Software vendors want it to look fancy and obvious in the demo, and they don't really care about its ease, speed and reliability to an expert user because the expert user has already bought it. In our example, it is much faster to type equations and to do formatting with embedded commands because you use your fingers independently rather than your hand and because your fingers don't leave the keyboard. However, click-on menus, although they are slow and cumbersome when typing, look easy to use in the shop.

A timetable

I strongly recommend sitting down with the adviser and making up a timetable for writing it: a list of dates for when you will give the first and second drafts of each chapter to your adviser(s). This structures your time and provides intermediate targets. If you merely aim "to have the whole thing done by [some distant date]", you can deceive yourself and procrastinate more easily. If you have told your adviser that you will deliver a first draft of chapter 3 on Wednesday, it focuses your attention.

You may want to make your timetable into a chart with items that you can check off as you have finished them. This is particularly useful towards the end of the thesis when you find there will be quite a few loose ends here and there.

Iterative solution

Whenever you sit down to write, it is very important to write something. So write something, even if it is just a set of notes or a few paragraphs of text that you would never show to anyone else. It would be nice if clear, precise prose leapt easily from the keyboard, but it usually does not. Most of us find it easier, however, to improve something that is already written than to produce text from nothing. So put down a draft (as rough as you like) for your own purposes, then clean it up for your adviser to read. Word-processors are wonderful in this regard: in the first draft you do not have to start at the beginning, you can leave gaps, you can put in little notes to yourself, and then you can clean it all up later.

Your adviser will expect to read each chapter in draft form. S/he will then return it to you with suggestions and comments. Do not be upset if a chapter---especially the first one you write--- returns covered in red ink. Your adviser will want your thesis to be as good as possible, because his/her reputation as well as yours is affected. Scientific writing is a difficult art, and it takes a while to learn. As a consequence, there will be many ways in which your first draft can be improved. So take a positive attitude to all the scribbles with which your adviser decorates your text: each comment tells you a way in which you can make your thesis better.

As you write your thesis, your scientific writing is almost certain to improve. Even for native speakers of English who write very well in other styles, one notices an enormous improvement in the first drafts from the first to the last chapter written. The process of writing the thesis is like a course in scientific writing, and in that sense each chapter is like an assignment in which you are taught, but not assessed. Remember, only the final draft is assessed: the more comments your adviser adds to first or second draft, the better.

Before you submit a draft to your adviser, run a spell check so that s/he does not waste time on those. If you have any characteristic grammatical failings, check for them.

What is a thesis? For whom is it written? How should it be written?

Your thesis is a research report. The report concerns a problem or series of problems in your area of research and it should describe what was known about it previously, what you did towards solving it, what you think your results mean, and where or how further progress in the field can be made. Do not carry over your ideas from undergraduate assessment: a thesis is not an answer to an assignment question. One important difference is this: the reader of an assignment is usually the one who has set it. S/he already knows the answer (or one of the answers), not to mention the background, the literature, the assumptions and theories and the strengths and weaknesses of them. The readers of a thesis do not know what the "answer" is. If the thesis is for a PhD, the university requires that it make an original contribution to human knowledge: your research must discover something hitherto unknown.

Obviously your examiners will read the thesis. They will be experts in the general field of your thesis but, on the exact topic of your thesis, you are the world expert. Keep this in mind: you should write to make the topic clear to a reader who has not spent most of the last three years thinking about it.

Your thesis will also be used as a scientific report and consulted by future workers in your laboratory who will want to know, in detail, what you did. Theses are occasionally consulted by people from other institutions, and the library sends microfilm versions if requested (yes, still). More commonly theses are now stored in an entirely digital form. These may be stored as .pdf files on a server at your university. The advantage is that your thesis can be consulted much more easily by researchers around the world. (See e.g. Australian digital thesis project for the digital availability of research theses.) Write with these possibilities in mind.

It is often helpful to have someone other than your adviser(s) read some sections of the thesis, particularly the introduction and conclusion chapters. It may also be appropriate to ask other members of staff to read some sections of the thesis which they may find relevant or of interest, as they may be able to make valuable contributions. In either case, only give them revised versions, so that they do not waste time correcting your grammar, spelling, poor construction or presentation.

How much detail?

The short answer is: rather more than for a scientific paper. Once your thesis has been assessed and your friends have read the first three pages, the only further readers are likely to be people who are seriously doing research in just that area. For example, a future research student might be pursuing the same research and be interested to find out exactly what you did. ("Why doesn't the widget that Bloggs built for her project work any more? Where's the circuit diagram? I'll look up her thesis." "Blow's subroutine doesn't converge in my parameter space! I'll have to look up his thesis." "How did that group in Sydney manage to get that technique to work? I'll order a microfilm of that thesis they cited in their paper.") For important parts of apparatus, you should include workshop drawings, circuit diagrams and computer programs, usually as appendices. (By the way, the intelligible annotation of programs is about as frequent as porcine aviation, but it is far more desirable. You wrote that line of code for a reason: at the end of the line explain what the reason is.) You have probably read the theses of previous students in the lab where you are now working, so you probably know the advantages of a clearly explained, explicit thesis and/or the disadvantages of a vague one.

Make it clear what is yours

If you use a result, observation or generalisation that is not your own, you must usually state where in the scientific literature that result is reported. The only exceptions are cases where every researcher in the field already knows it: dynamics equations need not be followed by a citation of Newton, circuit analysis does not need a reference to Kirchoff. The importance of this practice in science is that it allows the reader to verify your starting position. Physics in particular is said to be a vertical science: results are built upon results which in turn are built upon results etc. Good referencing allows us to check the foundations of your additions to the structure of knowledge in the discipline, or at least to trace them back to a level which we judge to be reliable. Good referencing also tells the reader which parts of the thesis are descriptions of previous knowledge and which parts are your additions to that knowledge. In a thesis, written for the general reader who has little familiarity with the literature of the field, this should be especially clear. It may seem tempting to leave out a reference in the hope that a reader will think that a nice idea or an nice bit of analysis is yours. I advise against this gamble. The reader will probably think: "What a nice idea---I wonder if it's original?". The reader can probably find out via the library, the net or even just from a phone call.

If you are writing in the passive voice, you must be more careful about attribution than if you are writing in the active voice. "The sample was prepared by heating yttrium..." does not make it clear whether you did this or whether Acme Yttrium did it. "I prepared the sample..." is clear.

Style

The text must be clear. Good grammar and thoughtful writing will make the thesis easier to read. Scientific writing has to be a little formal---more formal than this text. Native English speakers should remember that scientific English is an international language. Slang and informal writing will be harder for a non-native speaker to understand.

Short, simple phrases and words are often better than long ones. Some politicians use "at this point in time" instead of "now" precisely because it takes longer to convey the same meaning. They do not care about elegance or efficient communication. You should. On the other hand, there will be times when you need a complicated sentence because the idea is complicated. If your primary statement requires several qualifications, each of these may need a subordinate clause: "When [qualification], and where [proviso], and if [condition] then [statement]". Some lengthy technical words will also be necessary in many theses, particularly in fields like biochemistry. Do not sacrifice accuracy for the sake of brevity. "Black is white" is simple and catchy. An advertising copy writer would love it. "Objects of very different albedo may be illuminated differently so as to produce similar reflected spectra" is longer and uses less common words, but, compared to the former example, it has the advantage of being true. The longer example would be fine in a physics thesis because English speaking physicists will not have trouble with the words. (A physicist who did not know all of those words would probably be glad to remedy the lacuna either from the context or by consulting a dictionary.)

Sometimes it is easier to present information and arguments as a series of numbered points, rather than as one or more long and awkward paragraphs. A list of points is usually easier to write. You should be careful not to use this presentation too much: your thesis must be a connected, convincing argument, not just a list of facts and observations.

One important stylistic choice is between the active voice and passive voice. The active voice ("I measured the frequency...") is simpler, and it makes clear what you did and what was done by others. The passive voice ("The frequency was measured...") makes it easier to write ungrammatical or awkward sentences. If you use the passive voice, be especially wary of dangling participles. For example, the sentence "After considering all of these possible materials, plutonium was selected" implicitly attributes consciousness to plutonium. This choice is a question of taste: I prefer the active because it is clearer, more logical and makes attribution simple. The only arguments I have ever heard for avoiding the active voice in a thesis are (i) many theses are written in the passive voice, and (ii) some very polite people find the use of "I" immodest. Use the first person singular, not plural, when reporting work that you did yourself: the editorial 'we' may suggest that you had help beyond that listed in your acknowledgments, or it may suggest that you are trying to share any blame. On the other hand, retain plural verbs for "data": "data" is the plural of "datum", and lots of scientists like to preserve the distinction. Just say to yourself "one datum is ..", "these data are.." several times. An excellent and widely used reference for English grammar and style is A Dictionary of Modern English Usage by H.W. Fowler.

Presentation

There is no need for a thesis to be a masterpiece of desk-top publishing. Your time can be more productively spent improving the content than the appearance.

In many cases, a reasonably neat diagram can be drawn by hand faster than with a graphics package, and you can scan it if you want an electronic version. Either is usually satisfactory. A one bit (i.e. black and white), moderate resolution scan of a hand-drawn sketch will be bigger than a line drawing generated on a graphics package, but not huge. While talking about the size of files, we should mention that photographs look pretty but take up a lot of memory. There's another important difference, too. The photographer thought about the camera angle and the focus etc. The person who drew the schematic diagram thought about what components ought to be depicted and the way in which the components of the system interacted with each other. So the numerically small information content of the line drawing may be much more useful information than that in a photograph.A

nother note about figures and photographs. In the digital version of your thesis, do not save ordinary photographs or other illustrations as bitmaps, because these take up a lot of memory and are therefore very slow to transfer. Nearly all graphics packages allow you to save in compressed format as .jpg or .gif files. Further, you can save space/speed things up by reducing the number of colours. In vector graphics (as used for drawings), shades or grey are often produced by black and white pixels, so one-bit colour is adequate.

In general, students spend too much time on diagrams---time that could have been spent on examining the arguments, making the explanations clearer, thinking more about the significance and checking for errors in the algebra. The reason, of course, is that drawing is easier than thinking.

I do not think that there is a strong correlation (either way) between length and quality. There is no need to leave big gaps to make the thesis thicker. Readers will not appreciate large amounts of vague or unnecessary text.

Approaching the end

A deadline is very useful in some ways. You must hand in the thesis, even if you think that you need one more draft of that chapter, or someone else's comments on this section, or some other refinement. If you do not have a deadline, or if you are thinking about postponing it, please take note of this: A thesis is a very large work. It cannot be made perfect in a finite time. There will inevitably be things in it that you could have done better. There will be inevitably be some typos. Indeed, by some law related to Murphy's, you will discover one when you first flip open the bound copy. No matter how much you reflect and how many times you proof read it, there will be some things that could be improved. There is no point hoping that the examiners will not notice: many examiners feel obliged to find some examples of improvements (if not outright errors) just to show how thoroughly they have read it. So set yourself a deadline and stick to it. Make it as good as you can in that time, and then hand it in! (In retrospect, there was an advantage in writing a thesis in the days before word processors, spelling checkers and typing programs. Students often paid a typist to produce the final draft and could only afford to do that once.)

How many copies?

1. Talk to your adviser about this. As well as those for the examiners, the university libraries and yourself, you should make some distribution copies. These copies should be sent to other researchers who are working in your field so that

2. they can discover what marvellous work you have been doing before it appears in journals

3. they can look up the fine details of methods and results that will or have been published more briefly elsewhere

4. they can realise what an excellent researcher you are. This realisation could be useful if a post- doctoral position were available in their labs. soon after your submission, or if they were reviewers of your research/post-doctoral proposal. Even having your name in their bookcases might be an advantage.

Whatever the University's policy on single or double-sided copies, the distribution copies could be double-sided paper, or digital, so that forests and postage accounts are not excessively depleted by the exercise. Your adviser could help you to make up a list of interested and/or potentially useful people for such a mailing list. Your adviser might also help by funding the copies and postage if they are not covered by your scholarship. A CD with your thesis will be cheaper than a paper copy. You don't have to burn them all yourself: companies make multiple copies for several dollars a copy.

The following comment comes from Marilyn Ball of the Australian National University in Canberra: "When I finished writing my thesis, a postdoc wisely told me to give a copy to my parents. I would never have thought of doing that as I just couldn't imagine what they would do with it. I'm very glad to have taken that advice as my parents really appreciated receiving a copy and proudly displayed it for years. (My mother never finished high school and my father worked with trucks - he fixed 'em, built 'em, drove 'em, sold 'em and junked 'em. Nevertheless, they enjoyed having a copy of my thesis.)"

Personal

In the ideal situation, you will be able to spend a large part---perhaps a majority---of your time writing your thesis. This may be bad for your physical and mental health.

Typing

Set up your chair and computer properly. The Health Service, professional keyboard users or perhaps even the school safety officer will be able to supply charts showing recommended relative heights, healthy postures and also exercises that you should do if you spend a lot of time at the keyboard. These last are worthwhile insurance: you do not want the extra hassle of back or neck pain. Try to intersperse long sessions of typing with other tasks, such as reading, drawing, calculating, thinking or doing research. If you do not touch type, you should learn to do so for the sake of your neck as well as for productivity. There are several good software packages that teach touch typing interactively. If you use one for say 30 minutes a day for a couple of weeks, you will be able to touch type. By the time you finish the thesis, you will be able to touch type quickly and accurately and your six hour investment will have paid for itself. Be careful not to use the typing exercises as a displacement activity.

Exercise

Do not give up exercise for the interim. Lack of exercise makes you feel bad, and you do not need anything else making you feel bad while writing a thesis. 30-60 minutes of exercise per day is probably not time lost from your thesis: I find that if I do not get regular exercise, I sleep less soundly and longer. How about walking to work and home again? (Walk part of the way if your home is distant.) Many people opine that a walk helps them think, or clears the head. You may find that an occasional stroll improves your productivity.

Food

Do not forget to eat, and make an effort to eat healthy food. You should not lose fitness or risk illness at this critical time. Exercise is good for keeping you appetite at a healthy level. I know that you have little time for cooking, but keep a supply of fresh fruit, vegetables and bread. It takes less time to make a sandwich than to go to the local fast food outlet, and you will feel better afterwards.

Drugs

Thesis writers have a long tradition of using coffee as a stimulant and alcohol or marijuana as relaxants. (Use of alcohol and coffee is legal, use of marijuana is not.) Used in moderation, they do not seem to have ill effects on the quality of thesis produced. Excesses, however, are obviously counter-productive: several expressi and you will be buzzing too much to sit down and work; several drinks at night will slow you down next day.

Others

Other people will be sympathetic, but do not take them for granted. Spouses, lovers, family and friends should not be undervalued. Spend some time with them and, when you do, have a good time. Do not spend your time together complaining about your thesis: they already resent the thesis because it is keeping you away from them. If you can find another student writing a thesis, then you may find it therapeutic to complain to each other about advisers and difficulties. S/he need not be in the same discipline as you are.

Coda

Keep going---you're nearly there! Most PhDs will admit that there were times when we thought about reasons for not finishing. But it would be crazy to give up at the writing stage, after years of work on the research, and it would be something to regret for a long time. Writing a thesis is tough work. One anonymous post doctoral researcher told me: "You should tell everyone that it's going to be unpleasant, that it will mess up their lives, that they will have to give up their friends and their social lives for a while. It's a tough period for almost every student." She's right: it is certainly hard work, it will probably be stressful and you will have to adapt your rhythm to it. It is also an important rite of passage and the satisfaction you will feel afterwards is wonderful. On behalf of scholars everywhere, I wish you good luck!

A suggested thesis structure

The list of contents and chapter headings below is appropriate for some theses. In some cases, one or two of them may be irrelevant. Results and Discussion are usually combined in several chapters of a thesis. Think about the plan of chapters and decide what is best to report your work. Then make a list, in point form, of what will go in each chapter. Try to make this rather detailed, so that you end up with a list of points that corresponds to subsections or even to the paragraphs of your thesis. At this stage, think hard about the logic of the presentation: within chapters, it is often possible to present the ideas in different order, and not all arrangements will be equally easy to follow. If you make a plan of each chapter and section before you sit down to write, the result will probably be clearer and easier to read. It will also be easier to write.

Copyright waiver

Your institution may have a form for this (UNSW does). In any case, this standard page gives the university library the right to publish the work, possibly by microfilm or some other medium. (At UNSW, the Postgraduate Student Office will give you a thesis pack with various guide-lines and rules about thesis format. Make sure that you consult that for its formal requirements, as well as this rather informal guide.)

Declaration

Check the wording required by your institution, and whether there is a standard form. Many universities require something like: "I hereby declare that this submission is my own work and that, to the best of my knowledge and belief, it contains no material previously published or written by another person nor material which to a substantial extent has been accepted for the award of any other degree or diploma of the university or other institute of higher learning, except where due acknowledgment has been made in the text. (signature/name/date)"

Title page

This may vary among institutions, but as an example: Title/author/"A thesis submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Faculty of Science/The University of New South Wales"/date.

Abstract

Of all your thesis, this part will be the most widely published and most read because it will be published in Dissertation Abstracts International. It is best written towards the end, but not at the very last minute because you will probably need several drafts. It should be a distillation of the thesis: a concise description of the problem(s) addressed, your method of solving it/them, your results and conclusions. An abstract must be self-contained. Usually they do not contain references. When a reference is necessary, its details should be included in the text of the abstract. Check the word limit.

Acknowledgments

Most thesis authors put in a page of thanks to those who have helped them in matters scientific, and also indirectly by providing such essentials as food, education, genes, money, help, advice, friendship etc. If any of your work is collaborative, you should make it quite clear who did which sections.

Table of contents

The introduction starts on page 1, the earlier pages should have roman numerals. It helps to have the subheadings of each chapter, as well as the chapter titles. Remember that the thesis may be used as a reference in the lab, so it helps to be able to find things easily.

Introduction

What is the topic and why is it important? State the problem(s) as simply as you can. Remember that you have been working on this project for a few years, so you will be very close to it. Try to step back mentally and take a broader view of the problem. How does it fit into the broader world of your discipline? specially in the introduction, do not overestimate the reader's familiarity with your topic. You are writing for researchers in the general area, but not all of them need be specialists in your particular topic. It may help to imagine such a person---think of some researcher whom you might have met at a conference for your subject, but who was working in a different area. S/he is intelligent, has the same general background, but knows little of the literature or tricks that apply to your particular topic. The introduction should be interesting. If you bore the reader here, then you are unlikely to revive his/her interest in the materials and methods section. For the first paragraph or two, tradition permits prose that is less dry than the scientific norm. If want to wax lyrical about your topic, here is the place to do it. Try to make the reader want to read the kilogram of A4 that has arrived uninvited on his/her desk. Go to the library and read several thesis introductions. Did any make you want to read on? Which ones were boring?

This section might go through several drafts to make it read well and logically, while keeping it short. For this section, I think that it is a good idea to ask someone who is not a specialist to read it and to comment. Is it an adequate introduction? Is it easy to follow? There is an argument for writing this section---or least making a major revision of it---towards the end of the thesis writing. Your introduction should tell where the thesis is going, and this may become clearer during the writing.

Literature review

Where did the problem come from? What is already known about this problem? What other methods have been tried to solve it? Ideally, you will already have much of the hard work done, if you have been keeping up with the literature as you vowed to do three years ago, and if you have made notes about important papers over the years. If you have summarised those papers, then you have some good starting points for the review. If you didn't keep your literature notes up to date, you can still do something useful: pass on the following advice to any beginning PhD students in your lab and tell them how useful this would have been to you. When you start reading about a topic, you should open a spread sheet file, or at least a word processor file, for your literature review. Of course you write down the title, authors, year, volume and pages. But you also write a summary (anything from a couple of sentences to a couple of pages, depending on the relevance). In other columns of the spread sheet, you can add key words (your own and theirs) and comments about its importance, relevance to you and its quality.

How many papers? How relevant do they have to be before you include them? Well, that is a matter of judgement. On the order of a hundred is reasonable, but it will depend on the field. You are the world expert on the (narrow) topic of your thesis: you must demonstrate this. A political point: make sure that you do not omit relevant papers by researchers who are like to be your examiners, or by potential employers to whom you might be sending the thesis in the next year or two.

Middle chapters

In some theses, the middle chapters are the journal articles of which the student was major author. There are several disadvantages to this format. One is that a thesis is both allowed and expected to have more detail than a journal article. For journal articles, one usually has to reduce the number of figures. In many cases, all of the interesting and relevant data can go in the thesis, and not just those which appeared in the journal. The degree of experimental detail is usually greater in a thesis. Relatively often a researcher requests a thesis in order to obtain more detail about how a study was performed. Another disadvantage is that your journal articles may have some common material in the introduction and the "Materials and Methods" sections. The exact structure in the middle chapters will vary among theses. In some theses, it is necessary to establish some theory, to describe the experimental techniques, then to report what was done on several different problems or different stages of the problem, and then finally to present a model or a new theory based on the new work. For such a thesis, the chapter headings might be: Theory, Materials and Methods, {first problem}, {second problem}, {third problem}, {proposed theory/model} and then the conclusion chapter. For other theses, it might be appropriate to discuss different techniques in different chapters, rather than to have a single Materials and Methods chapter. Here follow some comments on the elements Materials and Methods, Theory, Results and discussion which may or may not correspond to thesis chapters.

Materials and Methods

This varies enormously from thesis to thesis, and may be absent in theoretical theses. It should be possible for a competent researcher to reproduce exactly what you have done by following your description. There is a good chance that this test will be applied: sometime after you have left, another researcher will want to do a similar experiment either with your gear, or on a new set-up in a foreign country. Please write for the benefit of that researcher. In some theses, particularly multi-disciplinary or developmental ones, there may be more than one such chapter. In this case, the different disciplines should be indicated in the chapter titles.

Theory

When you are reporting theoretical work that is not original, you will usually need to include sufficient material to allow the reader to understand the arguments used and their physical bases. Sometimes you will be able to present the theory ab initio, but you should not reproduce two pages of algebra that the reader could find in a standard text. Do not include theory that you are not going to relate to the work you have done. When writing this section, concentrate at least as much on the physical arguments as on the equations. What do the equations mean? What are the important cases? When you are reporting your own theoretical work, you must include rather more detail, but you should consider moving lengthy derivations to appendices. Think too about the order and style of presentation: the order in which you did the work may not be the clearest presentation. Suspense is not necessary in reporting science: you should tell the reader where you are going before you start.

Results and discussion

The results and discussion are very often combined in theses. This is sensible because of the length of a thesis: you may have several chapters of results and, if you wait till they are all presented before you begin discussion, the reader may have difficulty remembering what you are talking about. The division of Results and Discussion material into chapters is usually best done according to subject matter.

Make sure that you have described the conditions which obtained for each set of results. What was held constant? What were the other relevant parameters? Make sure too that you have used appropriate statistical analyses. Where applicable, show measurement errors and standard errors on the graphs. Use appropriate statistical tests.

Take care plotting graphs. The origin and intercepts are often important so, unless the ranges of your data make it impractical, the zeros of one or both scales should usually appear on the graph. You should show error bars on the data, unless the errors are very small. For single measurements, the bars should be your best estimate of the experimental errors in each coordinate. For multiple measurements these should include the standard error in the data. The errors in different data are often different, so, where this is the case, regressions and fits should be weighted (i.e. they should minimize the sum of squares of the differences weighted inversely as the size of the errors.) (A common failing in many simple software packages that draw graphs and do regressions is that they do not treat errors adequately. UNSW student Mike Johnston has written a plotting routine that plots data with error bars and performs weighted least square regressions. It is at

http://www.phys.unsw.edu.au/3rdyearlab/graphing/graph.html

You can just 'paste' your data into the input and it generates a .ps file of the graph.

In most cases, your results need discussion. What do they mean? How do they fit into the existing body of knowledge? Are they consistent with current theories? Do they give new insights? Do they suggest new theories or mechanisms?

Try to distance yourself from your usual perspective and look at your work. Do not just ask yourself what it means in terms of the orthodoxy of your own research group, but also how other people in the field might see it. Does it have any implications that do not relate to the questions that you set out to answer? Final chapter, references and appendices

Conclusions and suggestions for further work

Your abstract should include your conclusions in very brief form, because it must also include some other material. A summary of conclusions is usually longer than the final section of the abstract, and you have the space to be more explicit and more careful with qualifications. You might find it helpful to put your conclusions in point form.

It is often the case with scientific investigations that more questions than answers are produced. Does your work suggest any interesting further avenues? Are there ways in which your work could be improved by future workers? What are the practical implications of your work?

This chapter should usually be reasonably short---a few pages perhaps. As with the introduction, I think that it is a good idea to ask someone who is not a specialist to read this section and to comment.

References (See also under literature review)

It is tempting to omit the titles of the articles cited, and the university allows this, but think of all the times when you have seen a reference in a paper and gone to look it up only to find that it was not helpful after all.

Appendices

If there is material that should be in the thesis but which would break up the flow or bore the reader unbearably, include it as an appendix. Some things which are typically included in appendices are: important and original computer programs, data files that are too large to be represented simply in the results chapters, pictures or diagrams of results which are not important enough to keep in the main text.

Some sites with related material

How to survive a thesis defence

Research resources and links supplied by Deakin University

'Writing and presenting your thesis or dissertation' by Joseph Levine at Michigan State University, USA

"Final year projects": a guide from Mike Hart at King Alfred's College, Winchester, UK

Postgraduate Student Resources supplied by University of Canberra

A useful aid to surviving meetings with management

The National Association of Graduate - Professional Students (USA)

Some relevant texts

Stevens, K. and Asmar, C (1999) 'Doing postgraduate research in Australia'. Melbourne University Press, Melbourne ISBN 0 522 84880 X.

Phillips, E.M and Pugh, D.S. (1994) 'How to get a PhD : a handbook for students and their supervisors'. Open University Press, Buckingham, England

Tufte, E.R. (1983) 'The visual display of quantitative information'. Graphics Press, Cheshire, Conn.

Tufte, E.R. (1990) 'Envisioning information' Graphics Press, Cheshire, Conn.

Distribution

If you have found these documents useful, please feel free to pass the address or a hard copy to any other thesis writers or graduate student organizations. Please do not sell them, or use any of the contents without acknowledgement.

Suggestions, thanks and caveats

This document will be updated occasionally. If you have suggestions for inclusions, amendments or other improvements, please send them. Do so after you have submitted the thesis---do not use this invitation as a displacement activity. I thank Marilyn Ball, Gary Bryant, Bill Whiten and J. Douglas, whose suggestions have been incorporated in this version. Substantial contributions will be acknowledged in future versions. I also take this opportunity to thank my own thesis advisers, Stjepan Marcelja and Jacob Israelachvili, for their help and friendship, and to thank the graduate students to whom I have had the pleasure to be an adviser, a colleague and a friend. Opinions expressed in these notes are mine and do not necessarily reflect the policy of the University of New South Wales or of the School of Physics.

A FAQ and some observations about the web

Why and how did I write this document? The need for it was evident so, as one of my PhD students approached the end of his project, I made notes of everything that I said to him about thesis writing. These notes became the plan for the first draft of this document, which has been extended several times since then. I am surprised that it has several thousand readers each month. However, this is an important message about the web. It takes time and thought to make a good resource but, if you do, it can benefit a lot of people. When this document was first posted, the web was relatively new and feedback showed that people were often surprised to find what they sought. Now there is a tendency to take the web for granted: one is almost disappointed not to find what one is seeking. However, the web is only as good as the collective effort of all of us. The readers of this document will be scholars, experts and educators: among the many contributions you will make to knowledge and your communities, there may be contributions that should be made freely available, all over the world. Keep this observation about the web in the back of your mind for later, when you are not writing a thesis.

Suspended Pakistan trio's appeals to be heard in Qatar

The appeals of the three Pakistani players against the provisional suspensions imposed on them by the ICC in the wake of the spot-fixing scandal will take place in Doha, Qatar on October 30 and 31.
Michael Beloff QC, the head of the ICC code of conduct commission, will hear the appeals of Salman Butt, Mohammad Asif and121265.1 Mohammad Amir, the trio who were charged for various offences on September 2 after the News of the World allegedly exposed a plan to bowl deliberate pre-planned no-balls during the fourth Test between England and Pakistan at Lord's.
Butt, Pakistan's captain during the Test, filed his appeal last week while the appeals of Asif and Amir were received by the ICC this week. The dates of the appeal means the trio will miss, at the very least, the two T20Is and two ODIs of Pakistan's series against South Africa in Abu Dhabi and Dubai.
Beloff is the president of the British Association of Sport and Law. He attended Eton and Oxford, and was president of Trinity College from 1996 to 2006. Time included him in its 2008 list of the 100 most influential lawyers in Great Britain, while Legal Business called him one of the top ten barristers of the decade in 1999.
There had been speculation in Pakistan over the choice of venue for the hearings; some reports suggested the players were not keen on the hearings taking place in London, wary of a potentially hostile environment with extensive media coverage. One of the lawyers, however, denied this, telling ESPNcricinfo no such requests were made. Dubai, the home of the ICC, was also out of the question as Asif is barred from entering the UAE following a detention in 2008 for a drug-related offence. Doha was thus chosen after consultation between the ICC and the players.
"It is important to understand that the appeals are against the provisional suspension only and will not consider the substantive charges that were laid against the players on 2 September 2010," Haroon Lorgat, the ICC chief executive, said in a statement. "In the meantime, the players remain provisionally suspended from all cricket and related activities."
The case marks the first time the ICC has provisionally suspended players under its anti-corruption code. The clause for provisional suspension was included in the Anti-Corruption Code for Players and Player Support Personnel less than a year ago, and came into force on October 6, 2009 after unanimous approval from all ICC member nations.

Aleem Dar named Umpire of the Year

ICC AWARDS
Aleem Dar, the Pakistan umpire, has been named Umpire of the Year at the ICC Awards ceremony in Bangalore. He has won this award - named the David Shepherd Trophy - for the second time in successive years. The other nominees in the category were Steve Davis, Tony Hill and five-time winner Simon Taufel.
 
122654.2Dar, 42, was voted by the captains of the ten full members of the ICC and the eight-man elite panel of ICC's match referees for the period August 24, 2009 to August 10, 2010. Their choice was based on his decision statistics and officiating skills over the past 12 months.
After collecting his trophy from match referee Chris Broad, Dar said: "I think the fact that I'm still playing cricket in Pakistan makes me a good umpire. In the last four times I've played cricket I've scored centuries so I definitely think that has helped."

Tendulkar wins Cricketer of the Year award

ICC Awards

Sachin Tendulkar has won his first ICC award, the Sir Garfield Sobers Trophy, by being named the Cricketer of the Year during the 2010 ICC Award ceremony in Bangalore. Tendulkar, however, lost out in the other major categories he was nominated in, with Virender Sehwag winning the Test Cricketer of the Year award and AB de Villiers claiming the ODI prize. 122646.2

"This last season has been really special for the entire team," Tendulkar, who also received the People's Choice Award, said. "I think right from the start of the season, when we won in Sri Lanka and I scored a hundred in the finals, and from there on the season took off for us. We became No. 1 in the Test rankings, something we all wanted to achieve, and we've been able to maintain our performances in the last ten months." Tendulkar said Gary Kirsten, the India coach, had played an important role in the success of all the batsmen. "He has been instrumental in making all the batters play plenty of deliveries in practice sessions, he himself throws thousands of deliveries," Tendulkar said. "Gary has been able to keep us in the right frame of mind, whatever areas we needed to work on, he is making sure we are addressing that." Tendulkar fought off competition from Sehwag, Hashim Amla and Graeme Swann, the other nominees in the Cricketer of the Year category. Previous winners of the Cricketer of the Year award include Rahul Dravid, Andrew Flintoff, Jacques Kallis, Ricky Ponting, Shivnarine Chanderpaul and Mitchell Johnson. During the period under consideration for the award - August 24, 2009 to August 10, 2010 - Tendulkar scored 1064 runs at an average of 81.84 in ten Tests. He made 914 runs in 17 ODIs at 65.28, and also scored the format's first double-century against South Africa in Gwalior. Tendulkar is presently third on the ICC's rankings for Test batsmen, and tenth in ODIs.

MS Dhoni was named captain of the Test team of the year, which included Sehwag, Kumar Sangakkara, Swann, Tendulkar, Amla, Simon Katich, Dale Steyn, Jacques Kallis, James Anderson and Doug Bollinger. Ricky Ponting was captain of the ODI team of the year, leading a side comprising Tendulkar, Shane Watson, Michael Hussey, de Villiers, Paul Collingwood, Dhoni, Daniel Vettori, Stuart Broad, Bollinger and Ryan Harris. Brendon McCullum, the New Zealand batsman, won the award for the best Twenty20 Performance of the Year for his 116 not out against Australia in Christchurch in February. McCullum edged out Hussey, Mahela Jayawardene and Ryan McLaren, the others nominated for the Twenty20 award. Netherlands allrounder Ryan ten Doeschate won the Associate Player of the Year award. ten Doeschate's performances during the English domestic season has made him a sought-after player in international Twenty20 competitions. He has been signed by Tasmania for the Big Bash and by Canterbury for New Zealand's domestic tournament.

Steven Finn, the England fast bowler, won the award for Emerging Player of the Year. Finn, 21, made his Test debut against Bangladesh in March and has since taken 32 wickets in eight matches. New Zealand won the ICC Spirit of Cricket Award for the second time in row and the third time overall. Aleem Dar, the Pakistani umpire, also won the Umpire of the Year Award for the second time in a row. Rachel Heyhoe-Flint, the former England women's captain, was the first woman cricketer inducted into the ICC's Hall of Fame, while Shelley Nitschke, the Australian allrounder, was the Woman Cricketer of the Year.

'Storm of Rumours' in Cricket - Ijaz Butt

Ijaz Butt, the chairman of the Pakistan Cricket Board, has promised to co-operate fully with all investigations arising from the spot-fixing scandal that tainted his country's recent tour of England, as he arrived back in Lahore on Wednesday following a bridge-building trip to London. During the visit, he apologised to the ECB chairman, Giles Clarke, for claiming that England's cricketers had accepted a bribe to lose last month's third ODI at The Oval.

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In a statement issued on his return to Pakistan, Butt said that the cricket world "is reeling from a storm of allegations and rumours", but sought to distance himself from the allegations that he himself had perpetuated by claiming that his reference to "loud and clear talk in bookie circles" regarding England's cricketers had merely been an attempt to point out that Pakistan is not the only country under suspicion.

"Many of these recent allegations have concerned the Pakistan cricket team, and these must and will be properly investigated," said Butt. "But, and this was my point, the problem, and the rumours, are not confined to any single country. Those of us who care about the state of cricket in the world today will not flinch from a thorough, uncompromising investigation of any such allegations and rumours, whether they concern Pakistan or any other cricketing nation, and we at the PCB will give any such investigation our fullest cooperation and support.

Butt's future as PCB chairman is under intense scrutiny as he approaches the second anniversary of his appointment, with several influential figures, including Wajid Shamsul Hasan, Pakistan's high commissioner to the UK and a vocal presence when the spot-fixing crisis first broke, calling for a shake-up of the PCB hierarchy. In a letter to the Pakistan president, Asif Ali Zardari - dated September 17 and seen by ESPNcricinfo - Wajid stated: "It seems everything was happening under the nose of PCB officials and they did not bother to take note of it… It will have to be investigated since their critics claim they looked the other way."

Furthermore, in casting aspersions on the integrity of England's cricketers, Butt succeeded in alienating Pakistan's most significant allies in the world game, given that Clarke is also the head of an ICC task force investigating the feasibility of the return of international cricket to the country. Butt, however, reiterated that he had corrected the "misunderstanding" during his meetings with the ECB, and felt confident that his personal relationship with the chairman had been restored.

"We are very pleased with the outcome of this recent visit to London," said Butt. "While I was there I had a positive and productive meeting with Mr. Giles Clarke, Chairman of the ECB, who has consistently shown himself to be a good friend to Pakistan cricket. This allowed us to address a variety of concerns, and to correct any misunderstandings which may have arisen.

"In particular, I was happy to correct the misunderstanding that I, or anyone at the PCB had made any allegations about members of the England cricket team. The point which I have sought to make from the beginning was that the world of cricket is reeling from a storm of allegations and rumors, and these must be addressed.

"I say again, we at the PCB have no specific evidence of any wrong doing by cricketers from England. Our priority and our responsibility must be the actions of the Pakistan Team. These are quite properly subject now to an investigation by both Scotland Yard and the ICC. But we will work with our colleagues at the ICC, and with all those involved with cricket administration around the world, to ensure that this game which we all love continues to be played in a spirit of honesty, fairness and sportsmanship.

"I am very glad that we have been able to resolve this misunderstanding with our friends in English cricket. We have all agreed to put this behind us now, and to concentrate on working together for the good of the game."