The Year Abroad Dissertation
Most problems can be avoided by planning ahead and communicating regularly with your supervisor over the year. Here are some common pitfalls and how to avoid them, or how to deal with issues that arise.
Time management problems
The most common error is to leave everything too late. Your dissertation will be significantly improved by a process of editing and reworking, so you should plan to go through several drafting stages. If you work right up to the deadline for submission in October, you run the risk of jeopardizing your work for your other Part II papers and getting behind right at the start of this very important year. Create a timetable for yourself after checking the suggested ones in the Producing a work schedule section.
Difficulties in accessing material
If you are on your Year Abroad, it is quite common to find that the material available to you is limited. Plan ahead to avoid this problem: do as much research, photocopying and note-taking as you can before you leave Cambridge or the UK.
Becoming overwhelmed by the amount of material
It is not unusual to reach a point where you feel daunted or even paralysed by the volume of material you have gathered, and you have no idea how to begin writing. Following the advice given in the Planning your Dissertation section should help you: start working through your notes methodically, tracing links between different ideas and deciding how you might ‘categorize’ individual points within larger ones. Remember that you do not need to read everything that has ever been published on the subject, and that you do not need to know exactly where you are going before you start writing.
Feeling that you have nothing new or interesting to contribute
Original ideas rarely jump out of a magician’s hat: they will develop through the slow and careful process of writing, thinking, and rewriting. Check the advice given in the section on Producing original work.
Missing references
Many students spend the last few days frantically chasing missing references – avoid this by making sure you note down all the publication details and page numbers of every book or article meticulously, right from the beginning of your research. See the section on Making notes on books or articles for a checklist of what to write down.
Most problems can be avoided by planning ahead and communicating regularly with your supervisor over the year. Here are some common pitfalls and how to avoid them, or how to deal with issues that arise.
The Optional Dissertation
Insufficient preparation before the start of the fourth year
You will be at a disadvantage if you have not started reading for your Optional Dissertation before you begin the fourth year. Do think ahead, talk to your Director of Studies and embark on some general reading, even if you do not properly define your topic until the beginning of Michaelmas Term.
Spending too long defining a topic
While part of the Michaelmas Term should be devoted to reading around your topic as broadly as possible, it is a mistake to leave defining your topic too late. Most supervisors strongly suggest that you should have covered a substantial amount of the reading and produced a detailed plan by the end of Michaelmas Term.
Producing a first draft too late
The Christmas vacation is crucial: this is the point at which you need to work hard to produce a first draft of the dissertation, ready for reworking and refining over the Lent Term.
Becoming overwhelmed by the amount of material
It is not unusual to reach a point where you feel daunted or even paralysed by the volume of material you have gathered, and you have no idea how to begin writing. Following the advice given in the Planning your Dissertation section should help you: start working through your notes methodically, tracing links between different ideas and deciding how you might ‘categorize’ individual points within larger ones. Remember that you do not need to read everything that has ever been published on the subject, and that you do not need to know exactly where you are going before you start writing.
Feeling that you have nothing new or interesting to contribute
Original ideas rarely jump out of a magician’s hat: they will develop through the slow and careful process of writing, thinking, and rewriting. Check the advice given in the section on Producing original work.
Missing references
Many students spend the last few days frantically chasing missing references – avoid this by making sure you note down all the publication details and page numbers of every book or article meticulously, right from the beginning of your research. See the section on Making notes on books or articles for a checklist of what to write down.