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Thesis Procedures

Graduate students must complete a thesis in order to satisfy graduation requirements for a master's degree. Students must complete all of the degree requirements, including the thesis, in six years beginning with the first semester of enrollment. Students are responsible for reviewing and complying with the department's Thesis Procedures, which are explained below.

Students should also review the Thesis section in the Graduate Catalog and the Graduate School's Academic (Thesis Assistance) website for additional information about the University's thesis policies, continuous enrollment, graduation deadlines, etc. A thesis:

  • Should have a theoretical framework as its conceptual base
  • May represent a test or prediction derived from a theory, or an extension of an existing group of studies
  • May replicate an existing study, provided it attempts to repeat the study with some meaningful variation
  • May be reports of surveys related to themes of professional interest (see American Psychologist )
  • May have as a goal the development or improvement of instrumentation (see Behavior Research Methods )
  • May be ethological or statistical in nature, originating a new design, improving an existing design, or reapplying a quantitative statistical technique (see Journal of Mathematical Psychology and Educational and Psychological Measurement )
  • May be theoretical in nature providing an exposition of constructs, assumptions, interactions among constructs, translation into empirical variables, or illustrations of applications (see Psychological Bulletin and Psychological Review )
  • Must investigate a real problem (i.e., if the answer is obvious based on existing literature, the thesis poses a non-problem). However, research may be conducted to solve a practical problem, provided the solution can be generalized.