Graduate students and researchers looking to publish their thesis work in academic journals.
This presentation discusses converting a completed thesis into a publishable research article, focusing on key differences and strategies.
Both thesis and articles use IMRAD. Key differences lie in length, audience, and content compression.
Thesis titles are objective-based; article titles can highlight results. Literature review is heavily condensed for articles.
Detailed thesis methodology becomes paragraphs. Results are condensed into fewer tables/figures for articles.
References decrease significantly. Awareness of plagiarism and proper citation styles is crucial before submission.
The introduction must create interest, define the problem, state knowledge gaps, and present study objectives/hypothesis.
Utilize resources like Equator Network for methodology. Focus results on objectives, using descriptive or inferential statistics.
Discuss results, biological explanations, biases, limitations, and compare with existing literature, suggesting future directions.