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THESIS MANUAL INSTRUCTIONS CONCERNING THE PREPARATION OF THESES FOR THE COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURAL AND NATURAL RESOURCE SCIENCES College of Agricultural and Natural Resource Sciences Sul Ross State University August 2012

THESIS MANUAL - Sul Ross State University · Full documentation and ... No inclusive Literature Cited chapter at the end of the thesis is required ... The Thesis Manual does not address

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THESIS MANUAL

INSTRUCTIONS CONCERNING THE PREPARATION OF THESES

FOR THE COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURAL AND NATURAL

RESOURCE SCIENCES

College of Agricultural and Natural Resource Sciences

Sul Ross State University

August 2012

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Page

WRITING THE THESIS ....................................................................................................... 1

Standards and Requirements ...................................................................................... 1

Presentation of the Material ....................................................................................... 1

Selecting and Using a Journal Model ........................................................................ 1

Using a Style Manual ................................................................................................. 2

Language and General Grammatical Style ................................................................ 2

Publication of the Research; Copyright Issues .......................................................... 3

Registering Copyright ................................................................................................ 5

The Optional Copyright Page .................................................................................... 5

ORGANIZING AND FORMATTING THE MANUSCRIPT .............................................. 6

Thesis Content Organization...................................................................................... 6

Chapter or Section Method ........................................................................................ 6

Page Size .................................................................................................................... 6

Font ............................................................................................................................ 7

Use of Bold and Italics ............................................................................................... 7

Line Spacing .............................................................................................................. 7

Minimum Page Length .............................................................................................. 8

Margins ...................................................................................................................... 8

Page Numbers ............................................................................................................ 8

Page Number Placement ............................................................................................ 8

Paragraph: Spacing and Indentation .......................................................................... 8

Sentences.................................................................................................................... 8

Major Headings .......................................................................................................... 9

Subheadings ............................................................................................................... 9

Figures/Tables: Color, Size, and Legibility ............................................................... 10

Figures/Tables: Text Mention .................................................................................... 10

Figures/Tables: Placement in Text............................................................................. 10

Figures/Tables: Long and Continued ......................................................................... 10

Figures/Tables: Landscape ......................................................................................... 10

Figures/Tables: In Appendix...................................................................................... 10

Figures/Tables: Titles and Numbering....................................................................... 11

Figure/Table Titles: Placement .................................................................................. 11

Figure/Table Titles: Large Figure Title/Long Caption on a Separate Page ............... 11

Lists of Figures, Tables, and Appendices .................................................................. 11

Literature Cited .......................................................................................................... 12

Text Mention of References....................................................................................... 12

Appendices. ................................................................................................................ 13

Appendix Headings .................................................................................................... 13

Appendix Figures and Tables. ................................................................................... 13

FORMAT INSTRUCTIONS AND SAMPLES FOR SPECIFIC PAGES ............................ 14

Title Page ................................................................................................................... 15

Approval Page ............................................................................................................ 17

Abstract ...................................................................................................................... 19

Optional Preliminary Pages (Copyright, Dedication, Acknowledgements) .............. 21

Table of Contents ....................................................................................................... 25

List of Figures, List of Tables, and List of Appendices ............................................. 30

Vita ............................................................................................................................. 34

Page 1, Chapter Method (with Journal Model Sentence) .......................................... 36

Page 1, Section Method (with Journal Model Sentence) ........................................... 38

Page Showing Subheadings ....................................................................................... 39

Pages with a Figure and a Table ................................................................................ 40

PRINTING THE MANUSCRIPT ......................................................................................... 46

Legibility .................................................................................................................... 46

Corrections ................................................................................................................. 46

Binding and Fees........................................................................................................ 46

Paper .......................................................................................................................... 46

THESIS SUBMISSION TIMELINE ..................................................................................... 47

Deadlines.................................................................................................................... 47

Other Requirements ................................................................................................... 48

APPENDIX 1: Copyright and Your Dissertation or Thesis .................................................. 49

APPENDIX 2: Proper Acknowledgement in Text for Copyright Material ........................... 54

APPENDIX 3: Landscape Figures and Tables ...................................................................... 55

APPENDIX 4: Page Numbering in Word 2007 .................................................................... 69

APPENDIX 5: ProQuest/UMI Publishing Agreement .......................................................... 72

APPENDIX 6: Thesis Example (Chapter Method) ............................................................... 83

APPENDIX 7: Thesis Example (Section Method) ................................................................ 107

1

WRITING THE THESIS

Standards and Requirements

This manual was written by the College of Agricultural and Natural Resource Sciences of Sul

Ross State University to help graduate students and their committee members prepare theses. Its

purpose is to define uniform standards of style and format and to allow enough flexibility to

satisfy the practices of each academic discipline in the College.

Sul Ross State University requires a thesis from all thesis option master's candidates. The thesis

should be presented in a scholarly, well-integrated and properly documented manner and should

report the original work done by the student under the supervision of the advisory committee.

Presentation of the Material

The finished manuscript is to be an independent professional effort. In the thesis the student

must use clear English, show an overall understanding of the literature in the field, and present

clearly the method, significance and results of the research. Full documentation and useful tables

and/or figures are especially important. The document should not be longer than is necessary to

present the research thoroughly. Thesis length can vary widely depending on the research topic,

academic discipline and the degree sought. There is no specific minimum or maximum length.

The thesis is presented in either sections or chapters. The section method is used if only one

experiment or study was conducted. The first and last sections must be Introduction and

Literature Cited respectively. Other section titles may include Materials and Methods, Results,

Discussion, and Conclusions. The chapter method is used if several studies or experiments were

conducted. The first chapter is Introduction, followed by separate stand-alone chapters for each

experiment or study, each with subdivisions such as Introduction, Materials and Methods,

Discussion and Summary, Literature Cited. No inclusive Literature Cited chapter at the end of

the thesis is required in this case.

Selecting and Using a Journal Model

The student must select a journal to be used as a style guide in writing the thesis. The journal

must be a respected, scholarly journal, well known in the major field. The selected journal will

be noted on page 1 of the thesis. (See pp. 36 and 38 for a sample page 1 with a journal model

sentence and instructions for preparation.) A style manual such as Turabian's A Manual for

Writers of Term Papers, Theses and Dissertations or the Publication Manual of the APA is not to

be listed as a model.

2

Whenever there are differences in format and layout between the specifications of the Thesis

Manual and the journal model, the Thesis Manual overrules the journal. The more sophisticated

publication and layout practices of some journals are not accepted in theses. Some examples of

format common in journals but not allowed in theses are: large and small capital letters for

major headings and subheadings, figure captions beside the figures, text in double columns and

text beside figures.

A journal's “Instructions to Contributors” information is not to be followed exactly when writing

a thesis. (These instructions are for the convenience of the editors and printers of a journal and

do not necessarily apply to the format of a thesis.)

Using a Style Manual

The Thesis Manual does not address all questions pertaining to style and format for the

preparation of a thesis. Many manuals and handbooks are available for this purpose. For

specific questions not answered in the Thesis Manual, the current edition of Scientific Style and

Format: the CBE Manual for Authors, Editors and Publishers may be helpful.

Language and General Grammatical Style

Use English throughout the manuscript (except for the Spanish abstract required in all

manuscripts, for literature available only in a language other than English, and for direct quotes

in a language other than English).

Use active voice whenever possible and appropriate. If the subject of a sentence is doing the

action, then the sentence is in active voice. If the subject of a sentence is the recipient of the

action, then the sentence is in passive voice. In addition, use first person whenever possible and

appropriate because it generally is more accurate, more concise, and less likely to contain

grammatical errors. For example,

Preferred: “We collected 26 specimens.” [first person, active voice]

Correct: “A total of 26 specimens was collected.” [passive voice]

Incorrect: “A total of 26 specimens were collected.” [passive voice]

The last sentence is grammatically incorrect because the subject of the sentence is “total” (a

Follow the journal model for:

Location table titles (above or below table)

Location of figure titles (above or below figure)

Format and content of the Reference section

Text mention of reference citations

3

singular noun), not “specimens” (a plural noun that is part of a prepositional phrase). Grammar

checkers in word-processing software typically do not catch this error because they refer back to

the last noun preceding the verb.

Use of active voice and first person also will help limit use of nominalizations: verbs used as

nouns by adding endings such as “-tion” or “-ment.” These sometimes are referred to as

“smothered verbs,” and it is better to “activate” them. For example,

Nominalization: Collection of samples occurred 0900-1300 h.

Preferred: We collected samples 0900-1300 h.

Nominalization: Measurements of length of tail were taken for all specimens.

Nominalization: We took measurements of length of tail for all specimens.

Preferred: We measured length of tail for all specimens.

Keep words and phrases as close as possible to the words that they modify. Otherwise confusion

can result. This often occurs with dangling participles: verbs that end in “-ing” that are used as

adjectives. For example,

Incorrect: We documented reproductive behavior of minnows using underwater cameras.

Acceptable: Using underwater cameras, we documented reproductive behavior of

minnows.

Preferred: We used underwater cameras to document reproductive behavior of minnows.

As written, the first sentence suggests that minnows use underwater cameras while reproducing

(an activity worth documenting). This is because “minnows” is the closest noun to the participial

phrase (“using underwater cameras”). In the second sentence, the participial phrase is closer to

the word (“we”) that it modifies, which improves clarity. In the third sentence, the participial

phrase was eliminated.

Avoid use of terms, jargon, and abbreviations not widely used across subdisciplines of natural

history, and never do so without first defining them in your text as outlined elsewhere in these

instructions.

Publication of the Research: Copyright Issues

It is the student‘s responsibility to be aware of and adhere to U.S. copyright laws regarding the

thesis and its contents.

If you publish material that will be part of your thesis before you submit the thesis:

Graduate students may publish material that will later be used as part of the thesis. However,

you must be aware of the agreement you sign when a journal accepts an article for publication.

Sul Ross State University makes all manuscripts available to the public on the Internet. Do not

sign any agreement that limits the rights of Sul Ross State University to provide research results

to the public.

4

If you are using your already published material in the thesis (journal policies):

Students should be aware of the publishing agreement you sign when a journal accepts an article

for publication. At that time, the student/lead author typically transfers copyright to the journal

as publisher, and you may no longer possess the right to use this material without permission.

However, the publishing agreement form can be modified before it is signed so that the student

retains the right to include the material in the thesis. The publisher would still have the rights it

needs to print, distribute, and sell the work. When negotiating with the publisher, remember to

inform them that the thesis will be available to the public through the Internet.

If you have not retained the right to use your previously published material in the thesis, you

must get permission from the copyright holder to include it. A written statement of permission

(email is accepted) should be provided to the Dean’s Office. See Appendix 1 for information on

permission to use copyright material and for a sample letter requesting permission. If the journal

retains the right to an article and does not allow its exact reproduction in your thesis, we

recommend that you contact them to ascertain whether a revised or reworded chapter is

acceptable.

Regardless of which rights you have retained, the Dean’s Office will require written

documentation as evidence you have appropriate rights to include the pre-published material in

your thesis. This evidence might be a copy of the publication agreement, website documentation

about author retained rights, emails or other forms of written permission from the publisher.

If you are planning to use your thesis material in a future publication:

Students who plan to publish thesis material in future articles need to investigate whether the

journal of choice will publish material already made available to the public and consider this

when choosing an option for making the thesis available after graduation. You have the option

to restrict full-text access to your thesis for a period of time before releasing it to the Internet to

allow time to publish in journals whose policy is to be first publisher.

If you plan to include others’ copyrighted material in the thesis:

If the manuscript contains any material (figures, tables, text, etc.) taken from copyrighted

sources, the student has the responsibility to determine if permission from the copyright holder is

needed. The student should consider a number of factors when utilizing material from other

sources, including whether or not the material is in the public domain or can be used under the

provisions of Fair Use. Regardless of whether or not permission is required, proper credit must

be given in the text. For material which requires permission, acknowledgment should be

included in the text, per the instruction of the copyright holder or as noted in the Appendix 2. An

extra copy of the letter (or an email) must be provided to the Dean’s Office.

5

Registering Copyright

Your manuscript is automatically protected under U.S. copyright as soon as the work is created

in a fixed form. Master’s and doctoral candidates may wish to take additional steps to register

their copyright through the U.S. Copyright Office. Information is available at

http://copyright.gov. Although it is not required, there are benefits to registering your copyright,

including additional legal remedies if you face copyright infringement.

The Optional Copyright Page

Students may include as the second page of the thesis a copyright page, which includes the title

of the document, student name, year of graduation and a copyright notice in the proper form.

The copyright notice must include three elements: the copyright symbol © or the word

“Copyright”; the year of publication; and the name of the copyright owner. For example, a thesis

submitted in Fall 2011 would carry a notice such as Copyright 2011 Angela Aggie. (See page 22

of this manual for a sample.)

The copyright notice indicates that the student owns copyright to the thesis as an original work of

authorship. It may be included regardless of whether the student has officially registered

copyright with the U.S. Copyright Office and regardless of whether portions of the document are

copyrighted by others.

Although this page is optional, it is good practice to include it in the thesis because it informs the

public that the work is protected by copyright, identifies the student as copyright holder, and

shows the year of original publication.

For additional information, see Appendix 1 of this manual.

To summarize, if using published material:

Determine if the material is copyrighted or not. Non-copyrighted material may be

reused freely, as long as credit is given to the original source.

If the material is copyrighted, determine if it may be included in your thesis under

the provisions of Fair Use. If Fair Use applies, do not seek permission.

If Fair Use does not apply, obtain permission (in either the publisher agreement or in

a letter or email from the copyright holder).

Give proper acknowledgment of all work created by others and included in the

thesis. Provide the Dean’s Office with a copy of the permission letter or email (or

publisher agreement form).

Students must inform the copyright holder of the publishing option to be elected

upon completion of the thesis (open access, traditional).

6

ORGANIZING AND FORMATTING THE MANUSCRIPT

Thesis Content Organization

The following list gives the contents in the proper order of presentation. All sections marked

with an asterisk (•) must be included in the manuscript.

Chapter or Section Method

Divide the text of the thesis into chapters if multiple studies or experiments will be

presented (chapters numbered with Roman numerals)

Divide the text of the thesis into major sections if presenting only one study or

experiment (major sections NOT numbered)

The first chapter or major section is INTRODUCTION

See pages 36 and 38 for sample first pages of chapter and section methods.

Page Size

The entire document will be in 8.5" x 11 " (letter) page size.

Pages may be set in “landscape” position (11” x 8.5”) for figures and tables that do not fit

optimally in “portrait” position. (See Appendix 3 for instructions.)

Larger pages may be allowed for figures or tables that need to be larger. These may be

11" x 17". Consult with your committee chair for more information.

Preliminary Pages (with Roman numeral page numbers)

*Title Page

Copyright Page

*Approval Page

*Abstract

Dedication

Acknowledgments

*Table of Contents

*List of Figures (if there are two or more figures in text)

*List of Tables (if there are two or more tables in text)

*List of Appendices (if there are two or more)

Text (with Arabic numeral page numbers)

*Introduction (as first chapter or section)

*Main body of text divided into various chapters or sections

*Literature Cited (as last section if using the section method; embedded at the

end of each chapter if using the chapter method)

Supplemental Sections

Appendix material

*Vita

7

Font

Use 12-point Times New Roman for all text.

Broken, colored or faint print is not acceptable for text.

Font Exceptions

Appendix material and text within figures and tables are not considered text and may be

different type styles and sizes. Point size may not be smaller than 7-point.

Use of Bold and Italics

Boldface is used for all major headings

Bold and italics may be used for subheadings.

The use of italics for et al., in vivo, in vitro, and other Latin and foreign words is

determined by the journal model. Consistency is needed in the thesis (exception: keep

the original style (italic or not) of foreign words in a publication title listed in the

reference section of the thesis.)

Line Spacing

The following must be double-spaced:

Abstract

Dedication

Acknowledgements

Table of Contents

Body of the manuscript

Literature Cited

Headings and subheadings more than one line in length

Figure and table titles within the body of the manuscript.

The following must be single-spaced:

Footnotes and endnotes are single-spaced with a single space or spacing of text between

footnotes.

Lists of figures, tables, and appendices are single-spaced within each title with a double

space between each title.

The following may be single-spaced:

Block quotations, lists in text, and text within tables and figures

Appendix material

Vita page

8

Page Transition

Do not end a page with less than two lines of a paragraph.

Do not begin a page with less than two lines of a paragraph.

Do not begin or end a page with a hyphenated word.

Margins

Standard margin settings are 1” left, 1” right, 1” top, and 1” bottom.

All writing (text, tables, figures, Appendices, etc.) must be placed within the margins--

with the exception of the page numbers.

All text is justified left. Do not use right or full justification.

Page Numbers

Page numbers must be the same font style and size as the text (Times New Roman, 12pt)

Every page in the thesis (except the Title Page, the optional Copyright Page, and the

Approval Page) must be numbered. The Title and Approval Pages are considered to be

pages i and ii, but no page number is shown on these two pages. (The Copyright Page

does not have a number, although it is placed between the Title Page and the Approval

Page.)

Preliminary pages are numbered with lower case Roman numerals, beginning with the

Abstract (numbered iii).

Text pages are numbered with Arabic numerals, beginning with the first page of text

(numbered 1). Every page following will have a page number, including Appendix

pages. The Vita is the last numbered page.

For help with this go to the Page Numbering in Word information in Appendix 4.

Page Number Placement

All page numbers are centered in the bottom margin, approximately 3/4 inch from the

bottom edge of the page. (See pages 36 and 38 for sample first pages.)

Paragraph: Spacing and Indention

Indent the first line of each paragraph (0.5 inches).

Paragraphs are separated by one double space (do not add space before or after

paragraphs).

Sentences

All sentences must end with a period. Insert two spaces after each sentence end period.

9

Major Headings

“Major headings” in a thesis include the following:

TITLE of the thesis on the Title Page

TITLE of the thesis on the Approval Page

Headings ABSTRACT, DEDICATION, ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS, TABLE OF

CONTENTS, LIST OF FIGURES, LIST OF TABLES, LIST OF APPENDICES on the

preliminary pages

CHAPTER designations and titles (or major section titles; see pages 36 and 38 for the

difference in formatting)

The word LITERATURE CITED on the first page of references

APPENDIX designations and titles

The word VITA on the Vita page.

The rules for major headings are:

All must be centered at the top of a new page and in ALL CAPITAL letters (exception:

genus and species)

They must be the same size as the text.

Major headings must be in bold type, but they may not be in italic type (exception: genus

and species, literary titles and ship names).

No punctuation after a major heading.

If major headings are more than one line, use a double space between the lines.

Subheadings

Subheadings are used throughout the thesis to organize chapters into different sections/parts.

The formatting rules for subheadings are:

Subheadings cannot be centered and all capital letters (as this defines major headings).

First order subheadings are placed flush left in boldface using standard rules of title case

capitalization.

Second order subheadings are placed flush left in boldface italics with sentence case

capitalization.

Third order subheadings are placed flush left in italics with sentence case capitalization.

Use the same point size as text for all subheadings.

Do not put punctuation after a major heading or subheading that is on a line by itself.

The style used for subheadings must be consistent throughout the thesis from chapter to

chapter.

Use double-spacing for subheadings more than one line in length.

Maintain double spacing above and below subheadings (no extra spaces).

Subheadings/subsections do not need to begin on a new page; text continues within a

chapter or section.

A subheading at the bottom of a page must have at least two lines of text under it.

10

Figures/Tables: Color, Size, and Legibility

Color is acceptable in figures in text and in appendices, but should be minimized.

Color is unacceptable in tables.

The minimum size for capital letters and numbers within figures and tables is 1.5 mm. (7

point type or more is recommended).

All lettering must be of publishable quality; this includes scanned images. Images must

be clear; no blurred or dark areas.

Figures/Tables: Text Mention

Each figure and table must be mentioned in text in order by its number.

Appendix figures and tables do not need to be mentioned in text.

Figures/Tables: Placement in Text

Tables and figures must appear on the first page following the first mention in the text.

Example: If the first mention of Figure 1 in the text occurs on page 3, Figure 1 must

appear on page 4.

Do not put text on the same page with tables and figures.

Tables and figures may be placed in an Appendix. If so, they are numbered by Appendix

as A-1, A-2, B-1, B-2, etc.

Figures/Tables: Long and Continued

Tables or figures longer than one page have the complete title and the number on the first

page only. (See pages 40-45 for examples.)

Subsequent pages have the table or figure number (but not the title) and the word

"Continued," plus (for tables) the necessary column headings for ease of reading.

The end line of the completed table appears only on the last page of the table.

Figures/Tables: Landscape

If the table or figure is placed lengthwise (landscape position), the top of the table or

figure must be at the left-hand, “binding” side of the page and facing in the same

direction as the figure or table.

The page number stays in regular (portrait) position.

See page 42 for an example.

For help see Appendix 3 of this manual.

Figures/Tables: In Appendix

If an appendix contains text with embedded tables or figures, number them consecutively

with the Appendix designation (Figure/Table A-1, Figure/ Table A-2, Figure/Table B-1,

etc.).

11

Appendix figures/tables do not need to be mentioned in the thesis.

If they are mentioned in thesis text, they do not need to be mentioned in order.

Figures/Tables: Titles and Numbering

Each table and figure in the text must have a separate number and a unique title.

Figures and tables are numbered consecutively throughout the text, and each table or

figure must be mentioned in order and by number in the text.

In text, figure/table numbering style must be consecutive (1, 2, 3) if you are using the

section method or by chapter (1.1, 1.2, 2.1) if you are using the chapter method.

Do not number figures and tables by subsection.

The chosen numbering style must be used for both figures and tables (by chapter or

consecutive).

Titles more than one line in length are double spaced.

Appendix figures and tables are numbered consecutively by appendix desgnation,

numbered A-1, A-2, etc.

Figures/Tables in the Appendix do not need to be mentioned in text.

Figure/Table Titles: Placement

Placement of titles on tables and figures (above or below) is determined by the journal

chosen as a model. Exception: Placement of titles beside figures and tables is not

acceptable in a thesis.

The first line of titles is not indented (flush left).

Type size and style of titles is the same as that chosen for the text.

Figure Titles: Large Figure Title/Long Caption on a Separate Page

This format may be used only when there is not enough space for the caption on the page

with the figure.

If the title (or caption) must go on a separate page, place it on the page preceding the

figure, facing in the same direction as the figure (portrait or landscape).

There should be no other text on a page with a separate figure title.

The pages are consecutively numbered, with the page numbers in the standard position.

In the List of Figures, the number of the page on which the figure itself appears is the

page number listed.

The format is never used with tables.

Lists of Figures, Tables, and Appendices

Lists are necessary if there are two or more figures or tables in text. (If there is only one,

the List is optional.)

Lists of Figures and Tables must agree word for word with figure and table titles in the

text.

The entire title must be included in the List (exception: parenthetical information may be

12

excluded from the List).

Figures and tables must be found on the page given in the List.

List of Appendices are necessary if there are more than two appendices.

Appendices are numbered as A-1, A-2, A-3, etc.

List of Appendices must agree word for word with appendices titles.

The entire appendix title must be included in the List.

Literature Cited

Each thesis must contain at least one formal LITERATURE CITED reference section either as

the last section of the thesis (if using the section method) or at the end of each chapter (if using

the chapter method). The title is centered at the top of a new page in ALL CAPITAL letters and

in boldface.

Use the model journal to determine the following:

Capitalization, punctuation and ordering of information within each citation

The order of citations (alphabetized, alphabetized and numbered or non-alphabetized and

numbered)

The use of italics, quotation marks, and bold type. .

Contents of each citation. Include the following regardless of whether the model journal does:

Volume number and page range for journal articles

Publisher and city for books; city for universities, labs or corporations

Sufficient information for retrieval of unpublished material

Author or entity, title, date or date accessed and the specific web address for Internet

material

All authors for a multi-authored publication (do not use et al. regardless of how many

authors there are)

A date (year) for every citation

Consistency in designation of state names (abbreviated or not)

Consistency in journal names or abbreviations

Consistency in ordering multiple entries with same first author.

Spacing:

Use double-spacing throughout the entire section.

Use a hanging-paragraph indent of 0.5 inch for each citation.

Text Mention of References

All references must be cited in the text, and all text citations must be referenced.

All text citations must be from sources the student has actually used.

Text mention of citations must follow the style of the model journal (numbered, dated,

etc.).

The use of first author and et al. for references of three or more authors is acceptable in

text mention of references.

13

Appendices

Appendices are optional and used for supplementary material.

If there are more than two appendices, they must be included in a List of Appendices.

Place the appendices after the last section or chapter.

All appendix pages need to be numbered; page numbers are continued from the last page

of the references.

All material must be within prescribed margins and be readable in size and legibility (7-

point or larger).

Appendix Headings

Appendix headings (Appendix designations and titles) should be all capital letters and I

boldface.

Titles more than one line in length must be double spaced, as chapter titles.

Appendix designations (APPENDIX A, for example) are centered.

Appendix titles are centered, all capital letters, boldface, and one double space below

designation:

APPENDIX A

FIGURES

Appendix headings/titles may be either on a separate title/cover page before the

Appendix material or on the top of the first page of each Appendix. Be consistent from

Appendix to Appendix.

Appendix Figures and Tables

Appendix material may be reduced, but must conform to minimum size (7-point type)

and legibility requirements.

Material may have mixed fonts and point sizes and may be single spaced.

If an appendix contains both text and figures or tables, number them consecutively by

Appendix designation (Figure A-1, Table A-1, Table A-2, Figure B-1, etc).

14

FORMAT INSTRUCTIONS AND SAMPLES FOR SPECIFIC PAGES

Title Page

Approval Page

Abstract

Optional Preliminary Pages (Copyright, Dedication, Acknowledgements)

Table of Contents

List of Figures, List of Tables, and List of Appendices

Vita

Page 1, Chapter Method (with Journal Model Sentence)

Page 1, Section Method (with Journal Model Sentence)

Page Showing Subheadings

Pages with a Figure and a Table

15

Title Page* (see sample on next page)

General Format

Font must match text of thesis

No bold on this page; exception, title is bold.

No page number on this page.

Margins are 1” left, 1” top, 1” right, 1” bottom.

Title of Thesis

All capital letters, centered. (Exception: genus, species, chemical element symbols

should be upper and lower case and in italics as needed to comply with the custom of the

discipline)

Double space if more than one line.

No period at the end of the title.

Thesis Author Statement

Double spaced

Capitalize A and also the T in Thesis (but not the b in “by”)

Student's name in all capital letters; name must be the same as in official records of the

university.

Submittal Statement

Single spaced

“Sul Ross State University” is on a line by itself.

Degree and Date

Degree is in all capital letters; full name of the degree is used. (Check Graduate Catalog

for correct wording of degree.)

Put the month and year of graduation. (Graduation dates at Sul Ross State University are

May, August or December—do not use the final defense or submittal month.)

No comma between month and year.

Major Subject

Must agree with major subject listed in the official university records

Use upper and lower case letters.

16

THE DEVELOPMENT AND IMPROVEMENT OF INSTRUCTIONS FOR THESES IN

THE COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURAL AND NATURAL RESOURCE SCIENCES

A Thesis

by

PAMELA SUE PIPES

Submitted to the College of Agricultural and Natural Resource Sciences of

Sul Ross State University

in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of

MASTER OF SCIENCE

August 2011

Major Subject: Range and Wildlife Management

Page is counted but not numbered.

1” margin 1” m

argin

1” margin

1”

mar

gin

4 double spaces

4 double spaces

4 double spaces

4 double spaces

17

Approval Page* (See sample on next page)

General Format

Match font and point size to Title Page

No bold on this page; exception, title is bold

No page number on this page.

Margins are 1” left, 1” top, 1” right, 1” bottom

Title of Thesis

Same wording as on Title Page. All capital letters, centered, in boldface. (Exception:

genus, species, chemical element symbols should be upper and lower case and in italics

as needed to comply with the practice of the discipline)

Double space if more than one line; no period at the end of the title

Thesis/Dissertation Author Statement

Author statement begins on the fourth double spaced line below the first line of the title

Capitalize A and also the T in Thesis

Double space

Student's name in all capital letters, same wording as Title Page

Committee Member Names and Positions

Names include Ph.D. title

If co-chairs, put Co-Chair of Committee (instead of Chair) below first co-chair's name

The committee chair takes first signature position. Members are listed in alphabetical

order thereafter from left to right, two names per row. If the committee has only three

members, the last name listed is on the left, second row.

If the Dean serves as a committee member, chair or co-chair, his/her name must be

included for both positions.

18

If the committee has only three

members, this signature line and

block is omitted.

THE DEVELOPMENT AND IMPROVEMENT OF INSTRUCTIONS FOR THESES IN

THE COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURAL AND NATURAL RESOURCE SCIENCES

A Thesis

by

PAMELA SUE PIPES

Approved as to style and content by:

______________________________ ______________________________

Louis A. Harveson, Ph.D. Patricia Moody Harveson, Ph.D.

(Chair of Committee) (Co-Chair of Committee)

______________________________ ______________________________

Robert Kinucan, Ph.D. Kevin Urbanczyk, Ph.D.

(Member) (Member)

______________________________

Robert Kinucan, Ph.D.

Dean of Agricultural and Natural Resource Sciences

Page is counted but not numbered.

1” margin

1” margin

1” m

argin

1”

mar

gin

Each line is 30 spaces long

4th double space

down from top line

Lef

t ed

ge

of

line

is f

lush

lef

t R

ight ed

ge o

f line is flu

sh rig

ht

Dean’s signature line, name,

and title are centered.

3rd double space

down

3rd double space

down

3rd double space

down

Committee names

and titles are single

spaced, placed 1

double space below

the signature line

and centered.

3rd double space

down

19

Abstract (See sample on next page)

General Format

This is the first numbered page, lower case Roman numeral (iii). Page numbers

are outside the prescribed margins; everything else is inside the margins

ABSTRACT is bold (major heading)

Margins are 1” left, 1” top, 1” right, 1” bottom

Text

Begins one double space below heading

Length of text: no more than one page

Lines are double-spaced

Use paragraph style

No numbered references or formal citations in abstract

ABSTRACT

The text of the Abstract starts two double spaces below the heading. The text of the

Abstract is double-spaced according to the spacing style of the text of the thesis. Follow the same

margin settings as your narrative text, as well as the same right alignment (ragged edge).

Your Abstract must be a “complete snapshot” of your manuscript. Paragraph one

introduces your specific problem and the methods used. The remaining paragraphs present the

research and results in detail. Text of the Abstract should not exceed one page.

Margins are 1” left,

1” top, 1” right, and

1” bottom

Page is counted and numbered,

lower case Roman numeral

beginning with “iii”, bottom

center of page. iii

21

Optional Preliminary Pages (See samples on the following pages)

Copyright Page

Optional page - follows the title page (no page number); not counted in page numbering

Is located at the bottom of the page

Includes thesis title (in title case), student name and year - all lines double spaced

Is in same type size and style as text (no bolding on this page)

Is not included in the Table of Contents

Dedication

Optional page - follows the Abstract

If listing preliminary pages in Table of Contents, include Dedication

Heading is in boldface

Limited to one page

Is in same type size and style as text

Vertical spacing, paragraph style, and margins are same as used in text

Acknowledgements

Optional--Limited to four pages

Follows the Dedication Page (or Abstract, if no Dedication)

If listing preliminary pages in Table of Contents, include Acknowledgments

Heading is in boldface

Ensure that spelling for “acknowledgements” is as shown here and consistent (alternate

spelling of “acknowledgments” is unacceptable)

Is in same type size and style as text

Vertical spacing, paragraph style, and margins are same as used in text

The Development and Improvement of Instructions for Theses in the College of

Agricultural and Natural Resource Sciences

Copyright 2010 Pamela Sue Pipes

Page is NOT counted and NOT

numbered.

Margins are 1” left,

1” top, 1” right, and

1” bottom

DEDICATION

I dedicate this thesis to my mother who taught me the importance of perseverance and

hard work.

Page is counted and numbered

continuously with lower case

Roman numeral.

Margins are 1” left,

1” top, 1” right, and

1” bottom

iv

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

I would like to thank my committee chair, Dr. Smith, and my committee members, Dr.

Jones, Dr. Morton, Dr. Anderson, and Prof. Benner, for their guidance and support throughout

the course of this research.

Thanks also to my friends and colleagues and the department faculty and staff for making

my time at Texas A&M University a great experience. I also want to extend my gratitude to the

National Education Foundation, which provided the survey instrument, and to all the Texas

elementary teachers and students who were willing to participate in the study.

Page is counted and numbered

continuously with lower case

Roman numeral.

Margins are 1” left,

1” top, 1” right, and

1” bottom

v

25

Table of Contents (See samples on the following pages)

General Format

No bold on this page (exception, heading “TABLE OF CONTENTS” is in boldface)

No italics on this page (except for Latin terms, titles of works, etc.)

Put the word “Page” above page number column

Insert leader dots between listings and page numbers.

Double space above and below all major headings

Single space all subheadings and major headings if more than one line

If more than one page, need appropriate headings at the top of page (add “Page” above

page number column; add “CHAPTER” if a new chapter title is listed on the page)

Content

The Table of Contents must contain the major headings and the first level subheadings;

subordination of subheadings should be indicated by indention

Lower levels of subheadings are optional in the Table of Contents

Major headings are in all capital letters

Subheadings are in upper and lower case.

Preliminary pages are included in the Table of Contents; begin with ABSTRACT and

include all preliminary pages

Use the section method if presenting a single study or experiment.

o The first and last sections are INTRODUCTION and LITERATURE CITED

respectively. Other sections may include MATERIALS AND METHODS,

RESULTS, DISCUSSION, and CONCLUSIONS.

o Section titles are NOT numbered.

Use the chapter method if you are presenting multiple studies or experiments.

o The first chapter is INTRODUCTION followed by stand-alone chapters for each

study or experiment each with subdivisions such as Introduction, Materials and

Methods, Discussion and Summary, Literature Cited

o Chapter numbers must be Roman (not Arabic)

o Include a Literature Cited section in each chapter; do not have a separate

LITERATURE CITED chapter. See “Presentation of Material” on page 1.

Must show VITA

Consistency

Check against text for agreement of page numbers, levels and styles of major headings

and subheadings and the wording of major headings and subheadings (levels of

subheadings are shown by indention)

Check for consistency of capitalization

Check that wording of APPENDIX listing matches exactly what is in text; Appendix

titles are optional, but if they are listed, they need to be in all capital letters

vi

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Page

ABSTRACT ........................................................................................................................... iii

DEDICATION ....................................................................................................................... iv

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS ................................................................................................... v

TABLE OF CONTENTS ....................................................................................................... vi

LIST OF FIGURES ............................................................................................................... vii

LIST OF TABLES ................................................................................................................. viii

LIST OF APPENDICES ........................................................................................................ ix

CHAPTER

I INTRODUCTION ............................................................................................ 1

ADCPs ........................................................................................................ 3

Physical Environment of the Gulf of Mexico ............................................. 4

Overview of This Study .............................................................................. 8

Literature Cited ........................................................................................... 15

II ACOUSTIC BACKSCATTERING WITH THE 38-KHZ

ADCP ................................................................................................................ 18

Introduction ................................................................................................. 18

Methods....................................................................................................... 20

Results ......................................................................................................... 24

Discussion ................................................................................................... 27

Literature .................................................................................................... 30

III DIEL VERTICAL MIGRATIONS AND THE DEEP

SCATTERING LAYER OBSERVED FROM THE 38-KHZ

ADCP ................................................................................................................ 35

Introduction ................................................................................................. 35

Methods....................................................................................................... 38

Results ......................................................................................................... 40

Discussion ................................................................................................... 43

Literature Cited ........................................................................................... 45

Left tabs

at 0.38”,

0.88”,

and 1.13”

Left tab

with

leader

dots at

6.0”

Right

tab at

6.5”

Sample of chapter method Margins are 1” left,

1” top, 1” right, and

1” bottom

vii

CHAPTER Page

IV DEEP SCATTERING LAYERS OF POTENTIAL PREY

SPECIES IN THE GULF OF MEXICO SPERM WHALE

DIVING RANGE.............................................................................................. 48

Introduction ................................................................................................. 48

Methods....................................................................................................... 51

Results ......................................................................................................... 55

Discussion ................................................................................................... 73

Literature Cited ........................................................................................... 75

VITA ...................................................................................................................................... 96

If table of contents continues onto a

second page, “Page” must appear at

the top of second page at the right

tab.

If table of chapter listing continues onto a

second page, “CHAPTER” must appear at

the top of second page, flush left.

Page is counted and numbered

continuously with lower case

Roman numeral.

vi

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Page

ABSTRACT ........................................................................................................................... iii

DEDICATION ....................................................................................................................... iv

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS ................................................................................................... v

TABLE OF CONTENTS ....................................................................................................... vi

LIST OF FIGURES ............................................................................................................... vii

LIST OF TABLES ................................................................................................................. ix

LIST OF APPENDICES ........................................................................................................ x

INTRODUCTION AND LITERATURE REVIEW ............................................................. 1

MATERIALS AND METHODS ........................................................................................... 9

Study Area .................................................................................................................... 9

Climate .......................................................................................................................... 10

Geology ......................................................................................................................... 12

Soils............................................................................................................................... 14

Prescribed Burning........................................................................................................ 17

Herbicide Application ................................................................................................... 20

Analysis......................................................................................................................... 21

RESULTS .............................................................................................................................. 23

Prescribed Burns ........................................................................................................... 23

Basal Ground Cover...................................................................................................... 25

Shrub Density................................................................................................................ 26

Shrub Canopy................................................................................................................ 28

Whitebrush .................................................................................................................... 30

DISCUSSION ........................................................................................................................ 40

Prescribed Burn ............................................................................................................. 40

Herbicide Application ................................................................................................... 42

Page is counted and numbered

continuously with lower case

Roman numeral.

Sample of section method

Right

tab at

6.5”

Left tab

at 0.38”

Left

tab

with

leader

dots at

6.0”

Margins are 1” left,

1” top, 1” right, and

1” bottom

vii

Page

CONCLUSION ...................................................................................................................... 44

Summary ....................................................................................................................... 44

Management and Implications ...................................................................................... 46

LITERATURE CITED .......................................................................................................... 49

VITA ...................................................................................................................................... 56

Page is counted and numbered

continuously with lower case

Roman numeral.

30

Lists of Figures, Tables, and Appendices (see samples on following pages)

General Format

Heading (LIST OF FIGURES or LIST OF TABLES) is bold

Include list if two or more figures (or tables) are in main body of text

Need separate list for tables and separate list for figures; either list may come first

Need “Page” above page number column

Need “FIGURE” (or “TABLE”) above appropriate column

Insert leader dots between last word of title and page number

Double space between figure (table) titles, single space title if two or more lines

If list is more than one page, need appropriate column headings on each page

Content

Each figure (or table) must have a unique title; no two titles may be exactly the same

Need to include the entire title in List

Parenthetical information may be excluded from the List

Consistency

Check against text for agreement of page numbers

Figure/table titles in the LIST OF TABLES (or FIGURES) must agree word for word

with the title in the text

Check consistency of capitalization

List of Appendices

General Format

Heading (LIST OF APPENDICES) is bold

Include list if two or more appendices are included

Need “Page” above page number column

Need “APPENDIX” above appropriate column

Insert leader dots between last word of title and page number

Double space between appendix titles, single space title if two or more lines

If list is more than one page, need appropriate column headings on each page

Content

Each appendix must have a unique title; no two titles may be exactly the same

Need to include the entire title in List

Parenthetical information may be excluded from the List

viii

LIST OF FIGURES

FIGURE Page

1 Equipment ............................................................................................................... #

2 Flow Chart .............................................................................................................. #

3 Location of Study Area ........................................................................................... #

4 Map of Brazos County ............................................................................................ #

5 Major Tributaries of the Navasota River between

Highway 45 and Highway 6 ................................................................................... #

6 Debris Collected at Bridge #72 ............................................................................... #

Use the style above if you are presenting your thesis in sections. Figures are numbered

consecutively throughout without regard to section. Use the style below if you are presenting

your thesis in chapters. Figures are numbered consecutively by chapter.

LIST OF FIGURES

FIGURE Page

1.1 Equipment ............................................................................................................... #

1.2 Flow Chart .............................................................................................................. #

2.1 Location of Study Area ........................................................................................... #

2.2 Map of Brazos County ............................................................................................ #

2.3 Major Tributaries of the Navasota River between

Highway 45 and Highway 6 ................................................................................... #

3.1 Debris Collected at Bridge #72 ............................................................................... #

Set

left

tabs at

0.25”

and

0.63”

Set

right

tab at

6.5”

Set

left

tab at

6.0”

Margins are 1” left,

1” top, 1” right, and

1” bottom

Set

decimal

tab at

0.25”

Set left

tab at

0.63”

Page is counted and numbered

continuously with lower case

Roman numeral.

ix

LIST OF TABLES

TABLE Page

1 Weather conditions collected for prescribed burns on the Paisano

Ranch, Brewster County, Texas, 2007.................................................................... #

2 Summary values for Whitebrush (Aloysia gratissima) in the Marathon

Basin, Brewster County, Texas, 2007 ..................................................................... #

3 Treatment cost analysis for Whitebrush (Aloysia gratissima)

In Brewster County, Texas, 2010 ........................................................................... #

Use the style above if you are presenting your thesis in sections. Tables are numbered

consecutively throughout without regard to section. Use the style below if you are presenting

your thesis in chapters. Tables are numbered consecutively by chapter.

LIST OF TABLES

TABLE Page

1.1 Weather conditions collected for prescribed burns on the Paisano

Ranch, Brewster County, Texas, 2007.................................................................... #

1.2 Summary values for Whitebrush (Aloysia gratissima) in the Marathon

Basin, Brewster County, Texas, 2007 ..................................................................... #

2.1 Treatment cost analysis for Whitebrush (Aloysia gratissima)

In Brewster County, Texas, 2010 ........................................................................... #

Use same leader dot and page number

tab setting as for List of Figures.

Margins are 1” left,

1” top, 1” right, and

1” bottom

Page is counted and numbered

continuously with lower case

Roman numeral.

Set

left

tabs at

0.25”

and

0.63”

Set

decimal

tab at

0.25”

Set left

tab at

0.63”

x

LIST OF APPENDICES

APPENDIX Page

A Results from Experimental and Control Runs .................................................. #

B Demographics of Sample: Control and Experimental Schools

in the San Antonio School District ................................................................... #

C Growth of Bilingual Students Experimental Group.......................................... #

Page is counted and numbered

continuously with lower case

Roman numeral.

Use same leader dot and page number tab

setting as for Lists of Figures and Tables.

Margins are 1” left,

1” top, 1” right, and

1” bottom

Set

left

tabs at

0.38”

and

0.88”

34

Vita (See sample next page)

Vita is the last page of the thesis and is limited to one page.

The font (including style and size) needs to be the same as the text.

The heading (VITA) is in boldface.

Vita must include your name, a permanent address, and educational background. Because

the thesis will be available on the Internet and there are increasing privacy concerns, it is

recommended that the student not include information such as date of birth, parents’

names, and personal address in the Vita.

Wording of name needs to agree with name on first three pages of thesis.

Need a permanent address, good for two years. Professional address or SRSU department

address is recommended (rather than a personal address) due to availability of thesis

worldwide on the Internet.

Need educational background for all previous degrees, bachelor‘s level and above.

Include degree, major subject, university and date of graduation. You may also include

the current degree. Other information is optional but encouraged: professional

experience, publications, business or academic information. (Because the thesis will be

available on the Internet the student should avoid including personal information.)

35

VITA

Name: Constance Sorrough

Address: Department of Natural Resource Management

College of Agricultural and Natural Resource Sciences

Sul Ross State University

Box C-2

Alpine, TX 79832

E-mail Address: [email protected]

Education: B.S., Wildlife Biology, Texas State University, San Marcos, 2009

M.S., Natural Resource Management, Sul Ross State University,

Alpine, 2011

Research Interests: Pronghorn ecology and behavior in desert grasslands.

Page is counted and numbered

continuously, Arabic numeral.

Margins are 1” left,

1” top, 1” right, and

1” bottom

36

CHAPTER I

INTRODUCTION AND LITERATURE REVIEW

Use the chapter method when you are presenting multiple studies or experiments. Begin

with a general introduction chapter, followed by a chapter for each study or experiment. Each of

these chapters must stand alone, with separate sections such as introduction, methods, results,

discussion, conclusions, and literature cited. Each chapter must have its own literature cited

section. Do not include a separate chapter for literature cited.

The major heading consists of the chapter designation (CHAPTER I) and the title. Both

are centered, in all capital letters, and in boldface. Number the chapters using Roman numerals.

Maintain double spacing between chapter designation and chapter title.

Standard margins on this page, and on all text pages, are 1.5” left, 1.0” right, 1.0” top,

and 1.0” bottom. The page number (Arabic) 1 is outside the margin, in the upper right corner.

Number every page of the thesis in sequence through to the Vita, which is the last page.

If the chapter title is longer than one line, use spacing of text between the lines of the title

(double space). Insert one or two double spaces between chapter title and text; be consistent for

all chapters.

The journal model sentence is a complete sentence with a period at the end (not a

numbered footnote or footer), which goes at the bottom of page 1, within the prescribed margin.

Separate this sentence from text with a one-inch horizontal line (12 underscores if using 12-point

font).

____________

This thesis follows the style of Rangeland Ecology & Management.

Chapter Method: sample page 1

Arabic numeral page numbering begins on

first page of Chapter 1 with Arabic numeral

“1” at the bottom of page, centered.

37

Line spacing between the horizontal line and the journal model sentence must be a single

space. Put the journal name in italics if journal names in reference section are italicized.

Otherwise use regular typeface for journal name. If there are footnotes in your document, type

size of journal model sentence must match type size of footnotes.

38

INTRODUCTION

Use the section method when you are presenting a single experiment or study. The

section title is centered in all capital letters and in boldface. First and last sections are

INTRODUCTION and LITERATURE CITED respectively. Other section titles may include

MATERIALS AND METHODS, RESULTS, DISCUSSION, and CONCLUSIONS. Section

titles and subheadings are not numbered. No punctuation occurs at the end of section titles. Do

not use the word “chapter” in your text since your work is not organized in chapters. The font

size must be the same as that chosen for the text. Spacing between section title and text needs to

be consistent for all sections (double space, or 2 double spaces).

Standard margins on this page, and on all text pages, are 1.5” left, 1.0” right, 1.0” top,

and 1.0” bottom. The page number (Arabic) 1 is above the margin (in the header), in the upper

right corner. Number every page of the thesis in sequence through to the last page (Vita).

The journal model sentence is a complete sentence with a period at the end (not a numbered

footnote or footer), at the bottom of page 1, within the prescribed margin. Separate this sentence

from text with a one–inch horizontal line (12 underscores if using a 12-point font). Line spacing

between the horizontal line and the journal model sentence must be a single space. Put the

journal name in italics if journal names in reference section are italicized. If there are footnotes

in your document, type size of journal model sentence must match type size of footnotes.

____________

This thesis follows the style of Adult Education Quarterly.

Section Method: sample page 1

Page numbering begins with Arabic numeral

“1” bottom center.

39

SUBHEADING STYLES

First-order Subheadings

First-order subheadings are placed flush left in boldface using standard rules of title case

capitalization. Subheadings are not numbered. First-order subheadings must be included in the

Table of Contents. Maintain double spacing above and below all subheadings. Use double

spacing for subheadings more than one line in length.

Second-order subheadings

Second-order subheadings are placed flush left in boldface italics using standard rules of

sentence case capitalization. Second-order subheadings must be included in the Table of

Contents.

Third-order subheadings

Third-order subheadings are placed flush left in italics using standard rules of sentence

case capitalization. Third-order subheadings s do not need to be included in the Table of

Contents. Fourth-order subheadings are strongly discouraged.

40

FIGURES AND TABLES

Figure Placement and Size

Figures need to be within the set text margins. Figures must appear on the first page after

the first mention in the text. You may place more than one figure per page. Other than figure

titles, no other text appears on the page. Text within figures needs to be large enough to read

(1.5 mm or about 7 pt type). Related figures may be grouped into a single figure, and are

distinguished by labels (e.g., A, B, C). Captions will generally include each part label with an

explanation for each (see Figure 1 caption for an example). Do not place borders around figures.

Figure Titles

Type size and style for titles is the same as that chosen for the text. Titles more than one

line in length are double spaced. Do not indent the first line of figure titles (flush left).

Figures on Landscape Pages

If a figure is large and needs to be placed in landscape orientation in order to be legible,

page number placement must be adjusted to appear in the landscape position (Figure 2).

Continued Figures

If a figure or a table continues to the next page, the full figure title goes on the first page, and

“Figure 1. Continued.” goes on the next page.

41

Figure 1. Effect of substrate on growth rate; comparing minimal media (A) to enriched media

(B).

A)

B)

42

Figure 2. Average monthly arctic sea ice extent.

43

Table Placement and Size

As with figures, tables are placed on the first page after the first mention in the text. More

than one table may appear on a page. No text appears on pages with tables other than the title(s).

Table titles are numbered by chapter (if using the chapter method) or numbered consecutively

throughout the thesis (if using the section method). Their titles need to be consistent, as figure

titles. Use horizontal lines to separate table header rows from the data. Do not use vertical lines

to separate rows or columns of data. Center data in table cells.

Table Titles

Type size and style for titles is the same as that chosen for the text. Titles more than one

line in length are double spaced. Do not indent the first line of table titles (flush left).

Tables on Landscape Pages

As with figures on landscape pages, page number placement must be adjusted to appear

in the landscape position for tables placed in landscape orientation.

Continued Tables

If a table continues to the next page, the full title goes on the first page, and “Table 1.

Continued.” goes on the next page (Table 1). If you have a continued table, repeat the column

headings.

44

Table 1. Effect of substrate on seedling height. Seedling height was measured in centimeters on

day 20.

Specimen Substrate A Substrate B Substrate C Substrate D

1 10 --- 5 3

2 15 3 10 3

3 17 5 8 2

4 14 2 5 1

5 16 --- 9 5

6 16 7 6 2

7 18 4 7 4

8 13 6 9 ---

9 12 3 4 6

10 15 5 7 3

11 17 2 5 2

12 19 6 8 5

13 13 3 6 ---

14 18 4 9 2

45

Table 1. Continued.

Specimen Substrate A Substrate B Substrate C Substrate D

15 16 5 10 3

16 13 --- 7 4

17 12 --- 5 6

18 15 2 8 5

19 22 4 6 2

20 16 3 9 7

21 15 7 7 4

22 16 5 7 5

23 11 4 7 3

46

PRINTING THE MANUSCRIPT

Legibility

The original must be created with a word processing program on a computer and must be

printed on a “letter quality” setting of the printer.

“Draft” level printed texts of the thesis are unacceptable

If copies are generated using a computer and printer, all copies must be printed in “letter

quality”.

Copies may also be generated using a photocopy machine, such as those found in the

Wildenthal Memorial Library or the Graduate Student Center.

The student is responsible for ensuring that all pages of the original and the required 4

copies (one for the student, one for the Dean, and two for the library) are legible,

correctly aligned, in the proper order, and printed in the proper orientation with respect to

the bond paper watermark.

Additional copies of the thesis may be required by your department. Check with your

advisor.

Corrections

Corrections must be made on a computer.

Corrections made by hand are not acceptable.

Binding and fees

Check with the Provost’s office for current binding and shipping costs.

Complete the required Master’s Thesis Publication Agreement form available in the

Dean’s office. Be sure to provide an extra copy of the title page and abstract.

Paper

Paper size is 8.5 x 11.0 inches.

Paper must be at least twenty-weight bond, with a minimum 25% cotton content.

Electronic Submission

Sul Ross does not currently accept electronic files for publishing. However, you are required to

submit the following files to your advisor on a memory stick:

Complete thesis in Word format

Complete thesis in PDF format, including an approval page complete with committee

signatures

All experimental data files

47

THESIS SUBMISSION TIMETABLE

Draft of Thesis to the Chair

At least 16 weeks prior to commencement, a draft of the thesis must be submitted to the

committee chair for review.

Draft of Thesis to Committee

After making the necessary revisions recommended by the chair, the draft thesis is submitted to

the committee. The deadline for submission to the committee is at least 8 weeks prior to

commencement. Students are encouraged to work closely with their advisors throughout the

thesis writing process so that lengthy delays are avoided.

Thesis Defense

At least 6 weeks prior to commencement, the student must publicly defend the thesis.

Announcements of the defense must be posted in the appropriate College office and the office of

the Provost and Vice President for Academic and Student Affairs at least one week in advance of

the defense. Following the defense, further revision of the thesis may be required by the

committee before approval is granted.

Final Draft of Thesis to Dean

At least 4 weeks prior to commencement an original copy of the thesis and an appropriate

number of the thesis approval page must be submitted to the Dean for review and approval.

Photocopies of one original approval page with signatures are acceptable. All signature pages

should be printed/copied on the required bond paper.

Following revisions directed by the Dean and subsequent approval, the student submits a

minimum of 4 copies of the thesis on the required bond paper to the Dean’s office. Also

required at this time is a signed publication agreement form and a receipt indicating payment of

all thesis publication and binding fees. (See Appendix 6 of this manual for the current agreement

form. Confirm current fees with the Provost’s office.)

Final Draft of thesis to Provost

At least 2 weeks prior to commencement, the following must be submitted to the Provost:

A minimum of 4 copies of the thesis on required bond paper: two copies for the library;

one copy for the department; and one copy for the student.*

A signed publication agreement form

One extra copy of the title page on the required bond paper

One extra copy of the abstract on the required bond paper

A copy of the receipt indicating payment of publication and binding fees

48

*Although not required, the student may purchase additional copies for family, thesis committee

chair, research sponsors, etc. The College is under no obligation to assist the student with

purchase of additional copies, but may assist at the discretion of the advisor contingent upon

availability of funds.

Submission Schedule

16 weeks prior to

commencement

Draft of thesis to the chair

8 weeks prior to commencement Draft of thesis to committee

6 week prior to commencement Publicly defend thesis

4 weeks prior to commencement Final draft of thesis to Dean

2 weeks prior to commencement Final draft of thesis to Provost

The above schedule is firm. There will be NO exceptions. Missing deadlines may result in

delayed graduation.

In addition, students must:

Register for the semester* in which you intend to graduate.

Apply for graduation and pay graduation fee (application form available in the Dean’s

office).

*You may graduate in any semester, but you should plan to submit and defend your thesis in

long semesters only. Faculty members are typically retained on 9 month appointments. This

means that they are usually not paid to work during the summer months. If your committee

members are not supported through the summer, they may be unavailable to assist you with

review, revision, and defense of your thesis in summer sessions.

49

APPENDIX 1

COPYRIGHT AND YOUR DISSERTATION OR THESIS

50

51

52

53

54

APPENDIX 2

PROPER ACKNOWLEDGEMENT IN TEXT FOR COPYRIGHT MATERIAL

When material is taken from a copyrighted source, proper credit must be given on the first page

of the chapter or section containing the material. This statement is placed at the bottom of the

page as a footnote. The note should be single spaced, asterisked (add an asterisk at the end of the

chapter title at top of the page also) and include mention of permission from the copyright holder

to reprint. It may also include a copyright notice (and it must if requested to do so). The wording

of the note is sometimes given in the letter from the publisher granting permission to reprint. If

so, follow it exactly, filling in the particulars. If not, give enough information to clearly identify

the work.

The following are samples for reprinting from a journal and from a book:

1. When reprinting from a journal:

____________

*Reprinted with permission from “Title of Article” by Authors’ Names, Year. Journal Name,

Volume Number, Page Range, Copyright [YEAR] by Name of Copyright Holder.

2. When reprinting from a book:

____________

*Reprinted with permission from Title of Book, by Author’s Name, Year, Publisher’s Name,

Location of Publisher. Copyright [YEAR] by Name of Copyright Holder.

If only part of the chapter is from a copyrighted source, the note may be worded to reflect the

fact. For example: “Part of the data reported in this chapter is reprinted with permission...” or

“Part of this chapter is reprinted with permission....”

If parts of the published article appear in several chapters, the footnote will appear at the bottom

of the first page of each chapter in which the material appears. (See previous paragraph for

proper wording.)

The particular style (italics, quotation marks, volume and page information, etc.) will follow the

style of your reference section.

55

APPENDIX 3

LANDSCAPE FIGURES AND TABLES

When a figure or table needs to be larger than the defined margins of a portrait page, the page

may be rotated to landscape orientation. This can be useful if you need to read small text or see

the figure in greater detail.

If a table or figure is placed lengthwise (landscape position), there are a few things to consider

with regards to formatting: margins and page number placement.

The margin on the binding edge of your thesis must be 1.5”. For a portrait page, the binding

edge is the left margin. For a landscape page, the binding edge is the top margin.

In order to place a Landscape oriented figure or table in your document, the page number must

be moved from the standard landscape position to the portrait position. This way, when the

document is bound, all of the page numbers will be facing the same direction as you page

through the manuscript.

There should be no text (other than the figure/table title) on the same page as a landscaped

figure/table. Figure/table titles should be oriented in the same direction as the figure.

Isolate the Figure/Table That Must be in Landscape Position with Section Breaks

1. Position the cursor before the figure/table. Go to the Page Layout Tab, click Breaks,

and then choose Section Break, Next Page (Figure 1).

2. Position the cursor under the figure/table and repeat step 1. If any blank pages have

been added, delete them.

Orient Page into Landscape Position

3. On the page that will be changed to landscape, double click the page number to open

the header.

4. Turn the “Same as Previous” option off. To do this, click on the “Link to Previous”

toggle button in Navigation Section of the Header and Footer Design Tab (Figure 2).

Do this for both Header and Footer.

5. Repeat Step 4 for the portrait page following also.

6. Close the Header and Footer, and go to the page with the figure that will be

landscaped.

56

7. In the Page Layout Tab, open the Page Layout window (Figure 3). Select Landscape

orientation and confirm that the margins are correct for a landscape page with a top

margin of 1.5” and all others 1” (Figure 4). The selected page will be changed to

landscape; all other pages will remain portrait. If extra pages were created, delete

them.

Fix Page Numbers

8. Position the cursor on the landscape page. In the Insert Tab, click Page Number, then

Format Page Numbers. Check the “Continue from previous section” option (Figures 5

and 6).

9. Repeat Step 8 for the portrait page following also.

10. In the landscaped page, double click on the page number to open the Header.

Highlight the page number, and delete it (Figure 7).

11. Exit Headers/Footers by double clicking in the text area.

12. Enlarge the figure to fill the space on the page. Be sure to stay within the margins

(Figure 8).

Orient Page Number on Landscaped Page(s)

13. In the Insert tab, select Text Box then Draw Text Box (Figure 9).

14. Draw a text box. The size and position does not matter – you will change it in the

next step.

15. In the Text Box Tools Format tab, resize the box to 2’ tall and 1” wide (Figure 10).

16. Reposition the box by dragging it to the lower right corner.

17. Remove the text box border by selecting Change Outline, then No Outline (Figure

11).

18. Click inside the text box, type the appropriate page number, then change the text

direction (Figure 12).

19. On the Home tab, center the page number in the text box by selecting the center

button. Move the number down two lines in the box (to the left) by placing the cursor

in front of the number and pressing the enter key twice (Figure 13).

57

20. Print the landscape page and the preceding portrait page to compare number position.

This method should result in landscape page numbers that are exactly placed for

portrait orientation. However, if adjustment is required, make changes to the size and

position of the text box or the position of the number inside the text box until you

have a match.

58

FIGURES

Figure 1. Creating section breaks.

59

Figure 2. Unlink the section from the previous section.

60

Figure 3. View the Page Setup window.

Figure 4. Select Landscape and confirm margins are correct.

61

Figure 5. Format page number.

Figure 6. Continue from previous section.

62

Figure 7. Delete the page number.

63

Figure 8. Enlarge the figure to fill the space.

64

Figure 9. Draw a text box.

65

Figure 10. Resize and position the text box.

66

Figure 11. Remove the border.

67

Figure 12. Type the page number and change the text direction.

68

Figure 13. Position the page number in the text box.

69

APPENDIX 4

PAGE NUMBERING IN WORD 2007

To properly set up the page numbers you must create 3 sections in your word document: section

1 for the title page, optional copyright page, and approval page; section 2 for the remainder of

the front matter (abstract through to the last page before chapter or section 1); and section 3 for

the text of the thesis through the vita. (You may have more than 3 sections if you insert

landscape page(s) – see Appendix 3.)

1) Create section breaks.

Put the blinking cursor at the bottom of your Approval Page (page 2 of your document).

In the “Page Layout” group, under the “Breaks” menu, click on “Next Page” to create the

section breaks.

Go to the blank page that might have been inserted and delete it.

Insert another Next Page (Section Break) at the bottom of your last preliminary page

(just before Chapter 1 starts). Delete blank pages inserted.

2) Unlink the section headers and footers.

Double click in the header region of the abstract page.

Under the Header and Footer Tools - Design tab, de-select “Link to Previous”.

Repeat for the footer region of section 2, and for the header and footer regions of section

3. You will know when “Same as Previous” is turned off when these words no longer

appear below the dotted line in the header and footer space.

2) Now you will insert the page numbers for section 2.

Move your blinking cursor to the Abstract Page (3rd Page).

In the “Insert” group, choose “Page Number” menu. Position page numbers at the bottom

of the page, alignment is center.

In the “Insert” group, under the “Page Number” menu, click on the “Format Page

Numbers” option. Select the following options.

Number format: i,ii,iii,…

Start at: iii

Click ok

70

4) Insert page numbers for section 3.

Now, move your blinking cursor to the first page of your chapters.

In the “Insert” group, choose “Page Number” menu. Position page numbers at the bottom

of the page, alignment is centered.

Select Insert->Page Numbers ->format (make the following selections)

Number format: 1,2,3,…

Start at: 1

Click ok

71

Page Numbering In Your Manuscript Diagram

Title Page

Approval

Page

Optional

Copyright

Page

These pages have no page

numbers

Abstract

iii

Chapter 1

1

The rest of the front matter will

be numbered iii, iv, v, etc…

The rest of the manuscript will

be numbered 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, etc…

72

APPENDIX 5

PROQUEST/UMI PUBLISHING AGREEMENT

73

74

75

76

77

78

79

80

81

82

83

APPENDIX 6

THESIS EXAMPLE: CHAPTER METHOD

THE DEVELOPMENT AND IMPROVEMENT OF INSTRUCTIONS FOR THESES IN

THE COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURAL AND NATURAL RESOURCE SCIENCES

A Thesis

by

PAMELA SUE PIPES

Submitted to the College of Agricultural and Natural Resource Sciences of

Sul Ross State University

in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of

MASTER OF SCIENCE

August 2011

Major Subject: Range and Wildlife Management

The Development and Improvement of Instructions for Theses in the College of Agricultural and

Natural Resource Sciences

Copyright 2010 Pamela Sue Pipes

THE DEVELOPMENT AND IMPROVEMENT OF INSTRUCTIONS FOR THESES IN

THE COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURAL AND NATURAL RESOURCE SCIENCES

A Thesis

by

PAMELA SUE PIPES

Approved as to style and content by:

______________________________ ______________________________

______________________________ ______________________________

Robert Kinucan, Ph.D. Kevin Urbanczyck, Ph.D.

(Member) (Member)

______________________________

Robert Kinucan, Ph.D.

Dean of Agricultural and Natural Resource Sciences

Louis A. Harveson, Ph.D.

(Chair of Committee)

Patricia Moody Harveson, Ph.D.

(Co-Chair of Committee)

ABSTRACT

The text of the Abstract starts two double spaces below the heading. The text of the

Abstract is double-spaced according to the spacing style of the text of the thesis. Follow the same

margin settings as your narrative text, as well as the same right alignment (ragged edge).

Your Abstract must be a “complete snapshot” of your manuscript. Paragraph one

introduces your specific problem and the methods used. The remaining paragraphs present the

research and results in detail. Text of the Abstract should not exceed one page.

DEDICATION

I dedicate this thesis to my mother who taught me the importance of perseverance and

hard work.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

I would like to thank my committee chair, Dr. Smith, and my committee members, Dr.

Jones, Dr. Morton, Dr. Anderson, and Prof. Benner, for their guidance and support throughout

the course of this research.

Thanks also to my friends and colleagues and the department faculty and staff for making

my time at Texas A&M University a great experience. I also want to extend my gratitude to the

National Education Foundation, which provided the survey instrument, and to all the Texas

elementary teachers and students who were willing to participate in the study.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Page

ABSTRACT ........................................................................................................................... iii

DEDICATION ....................................................................................................................... iv

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS ................................................................................................... v

TABLE OF CONTENTS ....................................................................................................... vi

LIST OF FIGURES ............................................................................................................... vii

LIST OF TABLES ................................................................................................................. ix

LIST OF APPENDICES ........................................................................................................ x

CHAPTER

I INTRODUCTION ............................................................................................ 1

ADCPs ........................................................................................................ 3

Physical Environment of the Gulf of Mexico ............................................. 4

Overview of This Study .............................................................................. 8

Literature Cited ........................................................................................... 15

II ACOUSTIC BACKSCATTERING WITH THE 38-KHZ

ADCP ................................................................................................................ 18

Introduction ................................................................................................. 18

Methods....................................................................................................... 20

Results ......................................................................................................... 24

Discussion ................................................................................................... 27

Literature Cited ........................................................................................... 30

III DIEL VERTICAL MIGRATIONS AND THE DEEP

SCATTERING LAYER OBSERVED FROM THE 38-KHZ

ADCP ................................................................................................................ 35

Introduction ................................................................................................. 35

Methods....................................................................................................... 38

Results ......................................................................................................... 40

Discussion ................................................................................................... 43

Literature Cited ........................................................................................... 45

CHAPTER Page

IV DEEP SCATTERING LAYERS OF POTENTIAL PREY

SPECIES IN THE GULF OF MEXICO SPERM WHALE

DIVING RANGE.............................................................................................. 48

Introduction ................................................................................................. 48

Methods....................................................................................................... 51

Results ......................................................................................................... 55

Discussion ................................................................................................... 73

Literature Cited ........................................................................................... 75

VITA ...................................................................................................................................... 96

LIST OF FIGURES

FIGURE Page

1.1 Equipment ............................................................................................................... #

1.2 Flow Chart .............................................................................................................. #

2.1 Location of Study Area ........................................................................................... #

2.2 Map of Brazos County ............................................................................................ #

2.3 Major Tributaries of the Navasota River between

Highway 45 and Highway 6 ................................................................................... #

3.1 Debris Collected at Bridge #72 ............................................................................... #

LIST OF TABLES

TABLE Page

1.1 Weather conditions collected for prescribed burns on the Paisano

Ranch, Brewster County, Texas, 2007.................................................................... #

1.2 Summary values for Whitebrush (Aloysia gratissima) in the Marathon

Basin, Brewster County, Texas, 2007 ..................................................................... #

2.1 Treatment cost analysis for Whitebrush (Aloysia gratissima)

In Brewster County, Texas, 2010 ........................................................................... #

LIST OF APPENDICES

APPENDIX Page

A Results from Experimental and Control Runs .................................................. #

B Demographics of Sample: Control and Experimental Schools

in the San Antonio School District ................................................................... #

C Growth of Bilingual Students Experimental Group.......................................... #

1

CHAPTER I

INTRODUCTION AND LITERATURE REVIEW

Use the chapter method when you are presenting multiple studies or experiments. Begin

with a general introduction chapter, followed by a chapter for each study or experiment. Each of

these chapters must stand alone, with separate sections such as introduction, methods, results,

discussion, conclusions, and literature cited. Each chapter must have its own literature cited

section. Do not include a separate chapter for literature cited.

The major heading consists of the chapter designation (CHAPTER I) and the title. Both

are centered, in all capital letters, and in boldface. Number the chapters using Roman numerals.

Maintain double spacing between chapter designation and chapter title.

Standard margins on this page, and on all text pages, are 1.5” left, 1.0” right, 1.0” top,

and 1.0” bottom. The page number (Arabic) 1 is outside the margin, in the upper right

corner. Number every page of the thesis in sequence through to the Vita, which is the last

page.

If the chapter title is longer than one line, use spacing of text between the lines of the title

(double space). Insert one or two double spaces between chapter title and text; be consistent for

all chapters.

The journal model sentence is a complete sentence with a period at the end (not a

numbered footnote or footer), which goes at the bottom of page 1, within the prescribed margin.

Separate this sentence from text with a one-inch horizontal line (12 underscores

____________

This thesis follows the style of Rangeland Ecology & Management.

if using 12-point type size). Line spacing between the horizontal line and the journal model

2

sentence must be a single space. Put the journal name in italics if journal names in reference

section are italicized. Otherwise use regular typeface for journal name. If there are footnotes in

your document, type size of journal model sentence must match type size of footnotes.

3

CHAPTER II

SAMPLE PAGE SHOWING SUBHEADINGS

First-order Subheadings

First-order subheadings are placed flush left in boldface using standard rules of title case

capitalization. Subheadings are not numbered. First-order subheadings must be included in the

Table of Contents. Maintain double spacing above and below all subheadings. Use double

spacing for subheadings more than one line in length.

Second-order subheadings

Second-order subheadings are placed flush left in boldface italics using standard rules of

sentence case capitalization. Second-order subheadings must be included in the Table of

Contents.

Third-order subheadings

Third-order subheadings are placed flush left in italics using standard rules of sentence

case capitalization. Third-order subheadings s do not need to be included in the Table of

Contents. Fourth-order subheadings are strongly discouraged.

4

CHAPTER III

SAMPLE PAGES SHOWING A FIGURE AND A TABLE

Figure Placement and Size

Figures need to be within the set text margins. Figures must appear on the first page after

the first mention in the text. You may place more than one figure per page. Other than figure

titles, no other text appears on the page. Text within figures needs to be large enough to read

(1.5 mm or about 7 pt type). Related figures may be grouped into a single figure, and are

distinguished by labels (e.g., A, B, C). Captions will generally include each part label with an

explanation for each (see Figure 3.1 caption for an example). Do not place borders around

figures.

Figure Titles

Type size and style for titles is the same as that chosen for the text. Titles more than one

line in length are double spaced. Do not indent the first line of figure titles (flush left).

Figures on Landscape Pages

If a figure is large and needs to be placed in landscape orientation in order to be legible,

page number placement must be adjusted to appear in the landscape position (Figure 3.2).

Continued Figures

If a figure or a table continues to the next page, the full figure title goes on the first page, and

“Figure 1. Continued.” goes on the next page.

5

Figure 3.1. Effect of substrate on growth rate; comparing minimal media (A) to enriched media

(B).

A)

B)

6

Figure 3.2. Average monthly arctic sea ice extent.

7

Table Placement and Size

As with figures, tables are placed on the first page after the first mention in the text. More

than one table may appear on a page. No text appears on pages with tables other than the title(s).

Table titles are numbered by chapter (if using the chapter method) or numbered consecutively

throughout the thesis (if using the section method). Their titles need to be consistent, as figure

titles. Use horizontal lines to separate table header rows from the data. Do not use vertical lines

to separate rows or columns of data. Center data in table cells.

Table Titles

Type size and style for titles is the same as that chosen for the text. Titles more than one

line in length are double spaced. Do not indent the first line of table titles (flush left).

Tables on Landscape Pages

As with figures on landscape pages, page number placement must be adjusted to appear

in the landscape position for tables placed in landscape orientation.

Continued Tables

If a table continues to the next page, the full title goes on the first page, and “Table 1.

Continued.” goes on the next page (Table 3.1). If you have a continued table, repeat the column

headings.

8

Table 3.1. Effect of substrate on seedling height. Seedling height was measured in centimeters

on day 20.

Specimen Substrate A Substrate B Substrate C Substrate D

1 10 --- 5 3

2 15 3 10 3

3 17 5 8 2

4 14 2 5 1

5 16 --- 9 5

6 16 7 6 2

7 18 4 7 4

8 13 6 9 ---

9 12 3 4 6

10 15 5 7 3

11 17 2 5 2

12 19 6 8 5

13 13 3 6 ---

14 18 4 9 2

9

Table 3.1. Continued.

Specimen Substrate A Substrate B Substrate C Substrate D

15 16 5 10 3

16 13 --- 7 4

17 12 --- 5 6

18 15 2 8 5

19 22 4 6 2

20 16 3 9 7

21 15 7 7 4

22 16 5 7 5

23 11 4 7 3

10

LITERATURE CITED

Adcock, R. and D. Collier. 2001. “Connecting Ideas with Facts: The Validity of

Measurement.” American Political Science Review. 95(3):529-546.

Agranoff, R. & M. McGuire. 2001. “Big Questions in Public Network Management

Research.” Journal of Public Administration Research and Theory, 11: 295-396.

Argyris, Chris. 1957. “The Individual and Organization: Some Problems of Mutual

Adjustment.” Administrative Science Quarterly. 2(1):1-24.

Arthur, J. B. 1994. “Effects of Human Resource Systems on Manufacturing Performance and

Turnover.” Academy of Management Journal, 37: 670-687.

Bailey, T. 1993. “Discretionary Effort and the Organization of Work: Employee

Participation and Work Reform Since Hawthorne.” Working paper, Columbia

University, New York.

Barnard, Chester. 1938. Functions of the Executive. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.

Bartel, A. P, 1994. “Productivity Gains from the Implementation of Employee Training

Programs.” Industrial Relations, 33: 411-425.

Bartel, A. 2004. “Human Resources Management and Organizational Performance:

Evidence from Retail Banking.” Industrial and Labor Relations

Review. 57(2):181-203.

Barton, A.H. 1980. “A Diagnosis of Bureaucratic Maladies” In C.H. Weiss and A.H. Barton,

eds. Making Bureaucracies Work. Newbury Park, CA: Sage.

11

APPENDIX A

RESULTS FROM EXPERIMENTAL AND CONTROL RUNS

Appendices are optional and used for supplementary material. Place the Appendices after

the literature cited section. All Appendix pages need to be numbered. Page numbers are

continued from the last page of the references. All material must be within prescribed margins

and be readable in size and legibility (1.5 mm or larger). If you have two of more appendices,

you must include a LIST OF APPENDICES in the front matter of the thesis, inserted after LIST

OF TABLES. Formatting for this list is the same as that used for LIST OF FIGURES and LIST

OF TABLES. Use letter designations for the appendices (A, B, C, etc.).

The Appendix designation is centered, in all capital letters, and in boldface. The

appendix title is also centered, in all capital letters, and in boldface. Titles that are more than one

line are double spaced. If a List of Appendices is required, the appendix title must agree word

for word with the title in the List.

If an appendix contains text and embedded figures or tables, number the figures and

tables consecutively by appendix designation (A-1, A-2, B-1, B-2, etc.). Figures and tables in

appendices do not need to be mentioned in the main text of the thesis.

12

VITA

Name: Sarah Anderson Smiley

Address: Smiley ERS Educational Research Systems,

Inc., 1000 Plaintree Rd.,

Sugar Land, TX 77177

Email Address: [email protected]

Education: B.A., Psychology, The University of Texas at Austin, 2005

M.S., Educational Administration, Texas A&M University, 2010

107

APPENDIX 7

THESIS EXAMPLE: SECTION METHOD

THE DEVELOPMENT AND IMPROVEMENT OF INSTRUCTIONS FOR THESES IN

THE COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURAL AND NATURAL RESOURCE SCIENCES

A Thesis

by

PAMELA SUE PIPES

Submitted to the College of Agricultural and Natural Resource Sciences of

Sul Ross State University

in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of

MASTER OF SCIENCE

August 2011

Major Subject: Range and Wildlife Management

The Development and Improvement of Instructions for Theses in the College of Agricultural and

Natural Resource Sciences

Copyright 2010 Pamela Sue Pipes

THE DEVELOPMENT AND IMPROVEMENT OF INSTRUCTIONS FOR THESES IN

THE COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURAL AND NATURAL RESOURCE SCIENCES

A Thesis

by

PAMELA SUE PIPES

Approved as to style and content by:

______________________________ ______________________________

Louis A. Harveson, Ph.D. Patricia Moody Harveson, Ph.D.

(Chair of Committee) (Member)

______________________________

Robert Kinucan, Ph.D.

(Member)

______________________________

Robert Kinucan, Ph.D.

Dean of Agricultural and Natural Resource Sciences

iii

ABSTRACT

The text of the Abstract starts two double spaces below the preliminary lines. The text of

the Abstract is double-spaced according to the spacing style of the text of the thesis. Follow the

same margin settings as your narrative text, as well as the same right alignment (ragged edge).

Your Abstract must be a “complete snapshot” of your manuscript. Paragraph one

introduces your specific problem and the methods used. The remaining paragraphs present the

research and results in detail. Text of the Abstract should not exceed one page in length.

iv

DEDICATION

I dedicate this thesis to my mother who taught me the importance of perseverance and

hard work.

v

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

I would like to thank my committee chair, Dr. Smith, and my committee members, Dr.

Jones, Dr. Morton, Dr. Anderson, and Prof. Benner, for their guidance and support throughout

the course of this research.

Thanks also to my friends and colleagues and the department faculty and staff for making

my time at Texas A&M University a great experience. I also want to extend my gratitude to the

National Education Foundation, which provided the survey instrument, and to all the Texas

elementary teachers and students who were willing to participate in the study.

vi

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Page

ABSTRACT ........................................................................................................................... iii

DEDICATION ....................................................................................................................... iv

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS ................................................................................................... v

TABLE OF CONTENTS ....................................................................................................... vi

LIST OF FIGURES ............................................................................................................... vii

LIST OF TABLES ................................................................................................................. ix

LIST OF APPENDICES ........................................................................................................ x

INTRODUCTION AND LITERATURE REVIEW ............................................................. 1

MATERIALS AND METHODS ........................................................................................... 9

Study Area .................................................................................................................... 9

Climate .......................................................................................................................... 10

Geology ......................................................................................................................... 12

Soils............................................................................................................................... 14

Prescribed Burning........................................................................................................ 17

Herbicide Application ................................................................................................... 20

Analysis......................................................................................................................... 21

RESULTS .............................................................................................................................. 23

Prescribed Burns ........................................................................................................... 23

Basal Ground Cover...................................................................................................... 25

Shrub Density................................................................................................................ 26

Shrub Canopy................................................................................................................ 28

Whitebrush .................................................................................................................... 30

DISCUSSION ........................................................................................................................ 40

Prescribed Burn ............................................................................................................. 40

Herbicide Application ................................................................................................... 42

vii

Page

CONCLUSION ...................................................................................................................... 44

Summary ....................................................................................................................... 44

Management and Implications ...................................................................................... 46

LITERATURE CITED .......................................................................................................... 49

VITA ...................................................................................................................................... 66

viii

LIST OF FIGURES

FIGURE Page

1 Effect of Substrate on Growth Rate ........................................................................ 5

2 Average Monthly Arctic Sea Ice Extent ................................................................. 6

3 Location of Study Area ........................................................................................... #

4 Map of Brazos County ............................................................................................ #

5 Major Tributaries of the Navasota River between

Highway 45 and Highway 6 ................................................................................... #

6 Debris Collected at Bridge ...................................................................................... 72

ix

LIST OF TABLES

TABLE Page

1 Weather conditions collected for prescribed burns on the Paisano

Ranch, Brewster County, Texas, 2007.................................................................... 8

2 Summary values for Whitebrush (Aloysia gratissima) in the Marathon

Basin, Brewster County, Texas, 2007 ..................................................................... #

3 Treatment cost analysis for Whitebrush (Aloysia gratissima)

In Brewster County, Texas, 2010 ........................................................................... #

x

LIST OF APPENDICES

APPENDIX Page

A Thirty year average temperature and precipitation for Marathon,

Persimmon Gap, Alpine, Castolon, Texas ........................................................ 53

B Precipitation for Alpine, Persimmon Gap, and Marathon,

Texas for years 1968-1969, 2006-2008, 2006-2008 respectively..................... 55

C Range site descriptions ..................................................................................... 60

1

INTRODUCTION

Use the section method when you are presenting a single experiment or study. The

section title is centered in all capital letters and in boldface. First and last sections are

INTRODUCTION and LITERATURE CITED respectively. Other section titles may include

MATERIALS AND METHODS, RESULTS, DISCUSSION, and CONCLUSIONS. Section

titles and subheadings are not numbered. No punctuation occurs at the end of section titles. Do

not use the word “chapter” in your text since your work is not organized in chapters. The font

size must be the same as that chosen for the text. Spacing between section title and text needs to

be consistent for all sections (double space, or 2 double spaces).

Standard margins on this page, and on all text pages, are 1.5” left, 1.0” right, 1.0” top,

and 1.0” bottom. The page number (Arabic) 1 is above the margin (in the header), in the upper

right corner. Number every page of the thesis in sequence through to the last page (Vita).

The journal model sentence is a complete sentence with a period at the end (not a

numbered footnote or footer), at the bottom of page 1, within the prescribed margin. Separate

this sentence from text with a one–inch horizontal line (12 underscores if using a 12-point font).

Line spacing between the horizontal line and the journal model sentence must be a single space.

Put the journal name in italics if journal names in reference section are italicized. If there are

footnotes in your document, type size of journal model sentence must match type size of

footnotes.

____________

This thesis follows the style of Adult Education Quarterly.

2

SUBHEADING STYLES

First-order Subheadings

First-order subheadings are placed flush left in boldface using standard rules of title case

capitalization. Subheadings are not numbered. First-order subheadings must be included in the

Table of Contents. Maintain double spacing above and below all subheadings. Use double

spacing for subheadings more than one line in length.

Second-order subheadings

Second-order subheadings are placed flush left in boldface italics using standard rules of

sentence case capitalization. Second-order subheadings must be included in the Table of

Contents.

Third-order subheadings

Third-order subheadings are placed flush left in italics using standard rules of sentence

case capitalization. Third-order subheadings s do not need to be included in the Table of

Contents. Fourth-order subheadings are strongly discouraged.

3

FIGURES AND TABLES

Figure Placement and Size

Figures need to be within the set text margins. Figures must appear on the first page after

the first mention in the text. You may place more than one figure per page. Other than figure

titles, no other text appears on the page. Text within figures needs to be large enough to read

(1.5 mm or about 7 pt type). Related figures may be grouped into a single figure, and are

distinguished by labels (e.g., A, B, C). Captions will generally include each part label with an

explanation for each (see Figure 1 caption for an example). Do not place borders around figures.

Figure Titles

Type size and style for titles is the same as that chosen for the text. Titles more than one

line in length are double spaced. Do not indent the first line of figure titles (flush left).

Figures on Landscape Pages

If a figure is large and needs to be placed in landscape orientation in order to be legible,

page number placement must be adjusted to appear in the landscape position (Figure 2).

Continued Figures

If a figure or a table continues to the next page, the full figure title goes on the first page, and

“Figure 1. Continued.” goes on the next page.

4

Figure 1. Effect of substrate on growth rate; comparing minimal media (A) to enriched media

(B).

A)

B)

5

Figure 2. Average monthly arctic sea ice extent.

6

Table Placement and Size

As with figures, tables are placed on the first page after the first mention in the text. More

than one table may appear on a page. No text appears on pages with tables other than the title(s).

Table titles are numbered by chapter (if using the chapter method) or numbered consecutively

throughout the thesis (if using the section method). Their titles need to be consistent, as figure

titles. Use horizontal lines to separate table header rows from the data. Do not use vertical lines

to separate rows or columns of data. Center data in table cells.

Table Titles

Type size and style for titles is the same as that chosen for the text. Titles more than one

line in length are double spaced. Do not indent the first line of table titles (flush left).

Tables on Landscape Pages

As with figures on landscape pages, page number placement must be adjusted to appear

in the landscape position for tables placed in landscape orientation.

Continued Tables

If a table continues to the next page, the full title goes on the first page, and “Table 1.

Continued.” goes on the next page (Table 1). If you have a continued table, repeat the column

headings.

7

Table 1. Effect of substrate on seedling height. Seedling height was measured in centimeters on

day 20.

Specimen Substrate A Substrate B Substrate C Substrate D

1 10 --- 5 3

2 15 3 10 3

3 17 5 8 2

4 14 2 5 1

5 16 --- 9 5

6 16 7 6 2

7 18 4 7 4

8 13 6 9 ---

9 12 3 4 6

10 15 5 7 3

11 17 2 5 2

12 19 6 8 5

13 13 3 6 ---

14 18 4 9 2

8

Table 1. Continued.

Specimen Substrate A Substrate B Substrate C Substrate D

15 16 5 10 3

16 13 --- 7 4

17 12 --- 5 6

18 15 2 8 5

19 22 4 6 2

20 16 3 9 7

21 15 7 7 4

22 16 5 7 5

23 11 4 7 3

9

LITERATURE CITED

Adcock, R. and D. Collier. 2001. “Connecting Ideas with Facts: The Validity of Measurement.”

American Political Science Review. 95(3):529-546.

Agranoff, R. & M. McGuire. 2001. “Big Questions in Public Network Management

Research.” Journal of Public Administration Research and Theory, 11: 295-396.

Argyris, Chris. 1957. “The Individual and Organization: Some Problems of Mutual

Adjustment.” Administrative Science Quarterly. 2(1):1-24.

Arthur, J. B. 1994. “Effects of Human Resource Systems on Manufacturing Performance and

Turnover.” Academy of Management Journal, 37: 670-687.

Bailey, T. 1993. “Discretionary Effort and the Organization of Work: Employee

Participation and Work Reform Since Hawthorne.” Working paper, Columbia

University, New York.

Barnard, Chester. 1938. Functions of the Executive. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.

Bartel, A. P, 1994. “Productivity Gains from the Implementation of Employee Training

Programs.” Industrial Relations, 33: 411-425.

Bartel, A. 2004. “Human Resources Management and Organizational Performance: Evidence

from Retail Banking.” Industrial and Labor Relations Review. 57(2):181-203.

Barton, A.H. 1980. “A Diagnosis of Bureaucratic Maladies” In C.H. Weiss and A.H. Barton,

eds. Making Bureaucracies Work. Newbury Park, CA: Sage.

10

APPENDIX A

THIRTY YEAR AVERAGE TEMPERATURE AND PRECIPITATION FOR

MARATHON, PERSIMMON GAP, ALPINE, CASTOLON, TEXAS

Appendices are optional and used for supplementary material. Place the Appendices after

the literature cited section. All Appendix pages need to be numbered. Page numbers are

continued from the last page of the references. All material must be within prescribed margins

and be readable in size and legibility (1.5 mm or larger). If you have two of more appendices,

you must include a LIST OF APPENDICES in the front matter of the thesis, inserted after LIST

OF TABLES. Formatting for this list is the same as that used for LIST OF FIGURES and LIST

OF TABLES. Use letter designations for the appendices (A, B, C, etc.).

The Appendix designation is centered, in all capital letters, and in boldface. The

appendix title is also centered, in all capital letters, and in boldface. Titles that are more than one

line are double spaced. If a List of Appendices is required, the appendix title must agree word

for word with the title in the List.

If an appendix contains text and embedded figures or tables, number the figures and

tables consecutively by appendix designation (A-1, A-2, B-1, B-2, etc.). Figures and tables in

appendices do not need to be mentioned in the main text of the thesis.

11

VITA

Name: Sarah Anderson Smiley

Address: Smiley ERS Educational Research Systems,

Inc., 1000 Plaintree Rd.,

Sugar Land, TX 77177

Email Address: [email protected]

Education: B.A., Psychology, The University of Texas at

Austin, 2005

M.S., Educational Administration, Texas A&M

University, 2010