There is always a sigh of relief when that
second semester result is checked and one realizes, “My God, I’m now a final
year student”. The feeling is exhilarating, especially when you don’t have any issues,
common among being a carry-over course. Then the execution of the final year
project looms like a dark cloud and you wished you were Thor’s relative and you
could maybe borrow his lightening hammer for a moment.
Unfortunately, reality isn’t that easy, the dark project
cloud can’t just be smote by imaginary lightening, it has to be researched and
written. If there are people who were as terrified of project writing as myself
had been, then I suggest you visit – https://iprojectmaster.com, for ALL your
research and final year project needs.
Lucky you, I never had this opportunity in my time, I had
to stress through all steps of researching and writing a project. I had to
actually visit all the establishments necessary to seek for data, which was
money consuming, time and energy expending.
Now I believe researches for projects should be for
people who can write a book and actually make money from their sweat and
effort, not just for a grade…I’m just a really realistic person, so don’t sue
me.
Having said that, I’m also realistic to realize that
there are students who would rather research and write their projects by
themselves, as I had done, against all odds; and as our fingers aren’t equal,
some of these students don’t have lots of funds for the whole rigmarole a final
year project requires.
So, here goes the 6 steps to writing an
excellent final year project by your own effort:-
1. CHOOSE
a topic in an area you are comfortable with – I studied sociology and anthropology,
and for those that are aware, sociology has a truck load of diverse fields, so
I chose crime and how its increase or decrease is affected by unemployment.
It’s quite simple, really, you’ve been in your chosen field for four years or
more, there must be an area that you are particularly okay with; it has to be a
topic that intrigues you, one that the inherent challenges will only excite
your determination to solve them. I could never have been able to explain this
when I was choosing my project topic, but over the years, as I evolved as a
writer, I realize that I’ve always been intrigued with the intricacies of
crime, which can be noticed in most of my novels. Yes, I’m saying this might be
the beginning of the rest of your life, it sounds melodramatic but it’s the
truth.
2. READ
past projects on your chosen topic – I confess, I did not do this, which is why
I had suffered terribly through my final year project writing process. It is
pertinent that after choosing your topic, preferably when you’re a year from
final year, you visit your faculty library and read projects that had been
written on similar topics. The whole idea is to get clarity and perspective,
you will discover their strengths, weaknesses and failures concerning that
topic and you would also discover the best direction to take on your own
project, leveraging on their past mistakes to make yours the best. What can I
say, the world isn’t always fair, to move ahead, we have to learn from other
people’s mistakes.
3. COMPILE
content analysis/research before approval – It is possible that you’re
wondering, doesn’t this woman know that supervisors have to approve topics
first? I assure you, I do, but it will be easy for you if all your topics have
similar backgrounds so that no matter the choice of topic approved, your
initial research would not have been in vain. Sometimes, like in my case,
supervisors can ask you to pick the topic you want and then ask you to bring
your analysis or proposal or introduction the very next day. Do you want to begin
scrambling for content in the few hours left? I think not, so take my advice,
always be a step or two ahead of the game.
4. INTERNET
is your most useful friend – The physical libraries at some schools are hardly
updated with the latest research materials, thank God for the internet! Google
your way to freedom with sites like http://www.free-ebooks.net,
http://www.thefreelibrary.com/,
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Main_Page,
http://www.ebooks.com/ and many more offer free books. You have a large amount of quality
research materials online (books, audio, researches, papers, news articles etc.
that you can reference). Apply Google well and you’ll be amazed. Some hard copy
books you stress about are available online (for sale and free).
5. ELECTRONIC
devices are also your friends – For those that have laptops and fairly large
phones, you can type out directly instead of the stress of writing on paper and
then typing later on. Though, this is predilection related, because some
people’s minds are sharper when they write on paper…like me, once upon a time,
these days me and laptop are best pals. For the high tech users, you could use
your mobile phone to type on cloud documents on Google Docs, that is if you own
a Google account, if you don’t, it’s quite easy to create one. And then there
is the android app called Google ‘Goggles’ were you can hand write on your
phone and it transcribes it to text…I will advise more researches be done on
this before use.
6. REASONABLY
choose your population location/research methodology – You cannot choose your
population location in another state different from your school, unless you
love travelling and you have loads of money to expend. Let your population
location be in the same town for easy access. And let your research methodology
be carefully chosen to align with your topic of research, no need for
cumbersome research methods when you have a simple topic.
I never said it would be easy, good things
usually come from hard work and huge effort. But one can avoid some of these by
just visiting
https://iprojectmaster.com for great project topics or you can send us your topic and we will do
the leg work for you…Its that simple!