Final Thesis Proposal
Due September 25, 2005
Fall 2006 Thesis Roadmap
Project Description (2 pages)
Give a detailed description of the content of your creative work, as well
as the proposed final form(s) of your Thesis, i.e. Web site, DVD, installation,
videotape, etc. There should also be a step-by-step description of the
process (production schedule/software and hardware) you will go through
to complete your creative work. Please include a description of work already
done, such as your early experiments. It is not necessary for students
to work towards the completion of a single “Thesis Project”.
A series of smaller finished pieces, experiments, prototypes, etc. is
also acceptable.
Introduction (1 page)
One page describing the topic of your Thesis; its scope, and final form.
This means raising the key issues of your subject, and the relevance your
work has to the field of digital art. The introduction should include
a compact Thesis statement, ideally one sentence, which summarizes your
artistic position.
Historical, Theoretical and
Cultural Context (2 pages)
The Thesis is expected to reflect the student's individual direction and
interests within the field of possibilities brought about through an awareness
of digital art and its potential uses in the chosen area of practice.
A Thesis is a self-directed study, in which you define your own territory
as a computer artist in context with other artists and themes. The nature
of your research should be determined by the central questions, issues
or themes that you are addressing. In order to make your graduate Thesis
unique, you must go beyond your existing body of knowledge. The way to
do this is through research, online and at a library.
The research section of your Thesis facilitates the creative work by dealing
with the ideas behind it. It should support the ideas behind your Thesis
with historical references and by placing it in the wider context of digital
art. You need to learn about and describe the creative and theoretical
work that other people have done before you.
The springboard for your Thesis will be your own past work and the work
of artists who have influenced you. Draw upon your strengths and then
find an area of digital art that inspires you. It is expected that you
will meet with your Thesis Group Leader to formulate your research outline.
Proposed Bibliography (1-2 pages)
Give a working list of intended readings and reference materials, i.e.
articles, books, videotapes, web sites, films, audio tapes, programming
code. This bibliography should have at least 8-10 diverse references.
For the final research documentation you will be expected to write a short
paragraph for each of these references, summarizing the reference and
describing its relevance to your research.
If you are unsure of bibliography forms, look at the Chicago
Manual of Style or MLA
Guidelines
Detailed Schedule (1 page)
Provide a 32-week production plan with dates for milestone deadlines,
important meetings (Group Leader, Thesis Advisor, conferences, lectures,
meetings, openings, etc.), achievement of specific phases of your production
and writing.
Footnotes (1 page)
Please be sure to use footnotes if you are quoting or paraphrasing someone
else’s words. Again, use either the Chicago
Manual of Style or MLA
Guidelines for your footnotes.
Thesis Advisor Form
Please have your Thesis Advisor (not your Thesis Group Leader) sign and
complete the Thesis Advisor Form found at the end of this packet. Thesis
Advisors are optional.
Sample 0405 Final Thesis Proposals in PDF format
Lahari Shetty
Heidi Sandecki
Yuli Ziv
(Note: this sample is written by a non-native English language speaker.
There are some odd usages of English, but I include it, because it is
well conceived and written in her own words.) Again, it is most important
that you use your own words and not someone else's.
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