| name | Paper and Thesis Writing Guide |
| description | Comprehensive guide for writing academic papers and theses, covering structure, content requirements, writing process, and editing techniques. Includes detailed section-by-section requirements and quality improvement strategies. |
Paper and Thesis Writing Guide
This skill provides a complete framework for writing high-quality academic papers and theses, from initial planning through final editing.
Part 1: Paper Structure and Content Requirements
1. Title
Purpose: Summarize the main theme of this paper
Requirements:
- Concise and descriptive
- Include key technical terms
- Reflect the main contribution
- Typically 10-15 words
2. Abstract
Purpose: Summarize the contributions of the paper
Content:
- Problem statement
- Proposed approach
- Key results
- Main contributions
- Word count: 150-250 words
- Include 3-6 keywords
3. Introduction
Purpose: Provide essential background knowledge required to understand this paper
3.1 Background Knowledge Related to Your Title
Questions to Answer:
- WHAT is the problem?
- WHY is this problem important?
Content:
- Broad context and motivation
- Real-world applications
- Current challenges in the field
3.2 Background Knowledge Related to Your Problem
Questions to Answer:
- WHAT are the technical terms?
- WHAT is the challenge in dealing with the problem?
Content:
- Define key terminology
- Explain technical concepts
- Describe the complexity or difficulty
3.3 Background Knowledge Related to Your Solution
Questions to Answer:
- WHAT are the related works?
- HOW does each related work deal with similar problems?
- WHAT is the limitation of existing solutions?
Content:
- Survey of prior research
- Comparison of existing approaches
- Identification of research gaps
For Each Reference:
- Summarize the contribution related to your work
- Identify limitations or gaps
- Explain how your work differs
3.4 Contributions of This Paper
Requirements:
- List 2-4 specific contributions
- Each must be measurable and verifiable
- Map to results section
- Avoid vague claims
4. System Model/Architecture
Purpose: Problem Definition
Key Questions to Answer:
- WHAT is the problem?
- WHAT are the I/P (input) and O/P (output) parameters?
- WHAT is the physical meaning or relationship among the I/P and O/P parameters?
- WHAT are the assumptions?
- HOW/WHERE does each assumption affect your results?
Required Elements:
Best Practice: Use a figure to define relationships among parameters
5. Proposed Method
Purpose: Explain your solution
Key Questions to Answer:
- WHAT is your solution?
- HOW does your solution work?
- HOW do you implement your concepts?
- HOW can others use your solution?
Content Structure:
- Overview of the approach
- Detailed algorithm or methodology
- Implementation details
- Pseudocode or flowcharts
- Mathematical derivations
- Complexity analysis (if applicable)
- Practical usage guidelines
6. Numerical/Simulation/Experimental Results
Purpose: Validate your contributions
6.1 Simulation/Experimental Scenarios
For Each Scenario:
WHAT is the purpose?
- Verify effectiveness of specific contribution
- Demonstrate statistics or findings
- Compare with baseline methods
HOW do you design each scenario?
- Define topology or setup
- Identify fixed parameters
- Identify configurable parameters
- Specify metrics to measure
WHAT are the expected results?
- X-axis: [parameter with units]
- Y-axis: [metric with units]
- Expected trend or pattern
- Interpretation supporting contribution
6.2 Observations
Questions to Answer:
- WHAT do you find from your results?
- HOW do results support your contributions?
- WHY do certain patterns emerge?
Best Practices:
- Present at least 2-3 examples for each argument
- Use visual representations (charts, graphs)
- Provide quantitative comparisons
- Discuss unexpected results honestly
7. Conclusion and Future Works
Content:
- Restate the problem briefly
- Summarize key contributions
- Highlight main findings
- Suggest future research directions
- Discuss limitations
Part 2: Writing Process - The Three-Step Method
Step 1: Preparation (準備)
1.1 Find Your Goal (找目標)
Before writing, ask yourself:
- What do I want readers to know?
- What do I want readers to think about?
- What action should readers take?
1.2 Make a List (列清單)
- Write down all ideas you want to cover
- Brainstorm thoroughly
- Don't filter yet - capture everything
1.3 Organize Your Ideas (整理想法)
Choose an organizational pattern:
By Importance:
- Start with most important information
- Follow with secondary information
- End with supporting details
By Chronological Order:
- Describe what happened first
- Then what happened next
- Continue in sequence
By Problem-Solution Pattern:
- Explain the problem
- Present alternative solutions
- Recommend best approach
By Question-Answer Format:
- State the question
- Provide your answer
- Support with evidence
Step 2: Writing (書寫)
2.1 Support Your Arguments (佐證你的論點)
- You can express opinions, but must provide evidence
- Use multiple types of support:
- Data and statistics
- Examples and case studies
- Expert citations
- Logical reasoning
Key Principle: Present at least 2-3 examples for each major argument
2.2 Separate Key Points (區隔重要論點)
- Each paragraph needs a topic sentence
- Topic sentence states the main idea
- Supporting sentences develop the idea
- Transition to next paragraph
2.3 Use Markers and Numbers (善用標示記號或數字)
- Use bullet points for lists
- Use numbers for sequences
- Use formatting for emphasis
2.4 Use Short Sentences (盡量使用簡短的句子)
- Maximum 12-15 words per sentence
- One idea per sentence
- Break complex thoughts into multiple sentences
2.5 Include a Conclusion (要有結論)
- Connect all your main points
- Reinforce key messages
- Leave lasting impression
Step 3: Editing (編輯)
3.1 Use Precise Words (用字精確)
Avoid vague terms:
- ❌ "big", "small", "soon", "fast"
- ✅ "45% increase", "within 2 hours", "10ms latency"
Define terms when necessary:
- Provide clear definitions for technical terms
- Be consistent with terminology
3.2 Use Commas Properly (適當使用逗號)
- Separate 3 or more items with commas
- Use commas for clarity in complex sentences
3.3 Avoid Redundancy (避免贅字、贅詞)
- Don't use multiple words with same meaning
- Examples:
- ❌ "I personally" → ✅ "I"
- ❌ "In order to" → ✅ "To"
- ❌ "Due to the fact that" → ✅ "Because"
3.4 Multi-Pass Editing (進行最後的編輯)
Pass 1: Structure and Organization
- Focus on article organization
- Check sentence structure
- Shorten long sentences
- Delete unnecessary text
- Reorder content if needed
Pass 2: Punctuation
- Verify proper punctuation usage
- Check comma placement
- Ensure consistent style
Pass 3: Word Choice
- Focus on vocabulary
- Replace vague words with precise terms
- Ensure technical accuracy
Pass 4: Read Aloud
- Read your content out loud
- Or read to a friend
- Check if meaning is clear
- Identify areas needing improvement
Important: Good writing involves extensive editing. Few people write perfectly on the first try. Good articles require repeated revision and polishing.
Part 3: Structured Thinking for Reports
Report Structure
A well-structured report consists of:
-
Background and Project Description
- Project requirements
- Analysis objectives
- Assumptions and definitions
- Data sources
- Context and rationale
-
Analysis Framework (分析思路頁)
- This is the soul of the report
- Shows logical thinking process
- Helps readers understand your approach
- Connects all sections coherently
-
Main Analysis Content (分析主體頁面)
- How figures relate to each other
- What problems are revealed
- How to express findings
- Data presentation must reflect your analytical thinking
- Avoid disconnection between data and logic
Key Principles for Good Reports
1. Reliable Data, Rigorous Definitions (資料可靠,界定嚴謹)
- Ensure data sources are reliable
- Clearly define all terms used
- Different definitions lead to different conclusions
2. Consistent Concepts, Unified Standards (概念一致,標準統一)
- Keep terminology consistent throughout
- Use same definitions from start to finish
- Avoid confusing readers
3. Visual Presentation, Easy to Understand (直觀呈報,通俗易懂)
- Use vivid charts instead of numbers and text
- Make analysis and conclusions more intuitive
- Choose appropriate visualization types
Part 4: Drafting Strategy
First Draft (1st Draft)
Timeline: Immediately after fixing thesis topic
Required Sections:
-
Contributions in Introduction
- List 2-4 specific contributions
- Ensure each is measurable
-
Simulation/Experimental Scenarios and Expected Results
- Design scenarios for each contribution
- Define expected outcomes
- Plan figures (X-axis, Y-axis)
-
System Model/Architecture
- Draw system diagram
- Define I/P and O/P parameters
- List assumptions
Note: If you change your thesis topic, repeat this process
Second Draft (2nd Draft)
Required Sections:
-
Finish Related Works in Introduction
- Survey relevant literature
- Summarize each paper's contribution
- Identify limitations
- Explain how your work differs
-
Follow Paper Template
- Complete all sections
- Ensure proper formatting
- Check consistency
Part 5: Argumentation Strategy
Present Multiple Arguments
- Propose at least 3 arguments for your position
- For each argument, provide 2-3 examples
- Demonstrate you're not just making empty claims
Consider Counter-Arguments
Critical Thinking Questions:
- How would someone with opposite views think?
- What are the weaknesses in my arguments?
- What might opponents point out?
- What can I not achieve with my approach?
- Are there solutions to these limitations?
Benefits:
- Shows comprehensive thinking
- Demonstrates awareness of limitations
- Strengthens your position
- Prepares for reviewer questions
Part 6: BMW Lab Best Practices
Basic Rules for Paper Preparation
1. Plan Before Taking Action
- Set clear deadlines
- Define expected outcomes
- Provide supporting documentation (hyperlinks)
2. Summarize Action Items
- Create meeting minutes
- List action items with deadlines
- Distribute before meeting ends
3. Delayed ACK Policy
- Acknowledge receipt of instructions
- Confirm understanding
- Ask clarifying questions if needed
4. Use Checklists
- Prevent common issues
- Ensure completeness
- Maintain quality standards
Complete Writing Workflow
Phase 1: Planning and Preparation
- ✅ Define thesis topic and scope
- ✅ Identify contributions (at least 3)
- ✅ Design experimental scenarios
- ✅ Plan expected results
- ✅ Create system architecture diagram
Phase 2: First Draft
- ✅ Write System Model section
- ✅ Write Proposed Method section
- ✅ List contributions in Introduction
- ✅ Define experimental scenarios
Phase 3: Second Draft
- ✅ Complete Related Works
- ✅ Run experiments and generate results
- ✅ Write Results section with interpretations
- ✅ Write Conclusion
Phase 4: Final Draft
- ✅ Write Abstract (last)
- ✅ Complete Introduction
- ✅ First editing pass (structure)
- ✅ Second editing pass (punctuation)
- ✅ Third editing pass (word choice)
- ✅ Fourth pass (read aloud)
- ✅ Final review and submission
Quality Checklist
Content Quality
Structure Quality
Writing Quality
Presentation Quality
Common Pitfalls to Avoid
- ❌ Starting to write without preparation
- ❌ Not organizing ideas before writing
- ❌ Making claims without evidence
- ❌ Using vague, imprecise language
- ❌ Inconsistent terminology
- ❌ Skipping the editing process
- ❌ Not considering counter-arguments
- ❌ Data presentation disconnected from logic
- ❌ Writing Introduction before knowing results
- ❌ Submitting without reading aloud
- ❌ Enclosing general technical terms in double quotes (e.g., "Functional Split Options" -> functional split options)
References and Resources
This skill synthesizes best practices from:
- Academic writing standards
- Technical report writing guidelines
- Critical thinking frameworks
- BMW Lab requirements
Tips for Success
Time Management
- Allocate most time to: System Model, Proposed Method, Results
- Write Abstract and Introduction last
- Leave time for multiple editing rounds
- Get feedback early and often
Collaboration
- Share drafts with advisors regularly
- Incorporate feedback systematically
- Use color coding for revisions
- Maintain version control
Quality Assurance
- Use all available checklists
- Perform multi-pass editing
- Read aloud before submission
- Have peers review your work