Master's thesis guidelines
This page describes general guidelines for the Master's thesis project in the MBI programme. The instructions presented here are still tentative, and may change in the future. Guidelines given by individual departments may overrule instructions given here - please refer to your supervisors regarding how you should complete your thesis.
- 5.5.2009 Added a paragraph on the maturity test.
- 28.4.2009 Clarified the fact that thesis topic is approved by professor-in-charge.
- 25.2.2009 First version of thesis guidelines available.
- Recommended duration of the project
- The necessary steps
- Useful advice
- Where to get a topic for your thesis
- Grading
- What should the thesis contain?
- Examples of completed theses
Recommended duration of the project
We recommend that you spend a maximum of six months on your thesis and plan your schedule accordingly.
The necessary steps
-
Get a thesis topic and at least two
supervisors (HY) or one supervisor (TKK).
- One of the supervisors has to be a professor, others have to have at least PhD. At least one your supervisors has to be from MBI (see this list).
- In addition, you need at least one instructor, who can be also your supervisor.
- Your instructors will both counsel you during the thesis project and review your thesis.
- Decide with your supervisors the department where you are going to write your thesis to (CS/HY, MathStat/HY, CS/TKK)
- Thesis topic is approved by professor-in-charge.
- The thesis topic must be selected from the field of bioinformatics, and it must belong to the area of expertise of the instructors in the MBI programme.
-
Write an application for MSc thesis subject.
Use this
form for a HY thesis.
TKK thesis form will be added here later.
- Include a topic definition (1-2 pages) to the application. Outline the basic ideas of the research hypothesis, approach and methods. Include a couple of central literature references in the definition - remember to refer to them from the definition text!
- Hand in the application form, topic definition and an up-to-date (unofficial) transcript of studies to your supervisors and instructors.
-
Write a research plan
- Length: Approximately 20 pages (see the document template below)
- Note: in TKK theses, research plan is typically not a separate part from the MSc thesis itself. Discuss with your supervisor about the research plan.
- Research plan should contain a literature survey. Ideally, this survey will comprise the first few chapters of your final thesis.
- The plan should also contain a list of most important references that you are going to use in the final thesis.
-
Planned table of contents of the final thesis. For each section
that you have not written as a part of the research plan, give
- Tentative contents (briefly)
- Estimate of section length in pages
- Deadline for completition
- Hand in the research plan to your supervisors and instructors.
- Give a presentation on your research plan in the MSc thesis seminar
- Use the following template to write the research plan (HY only): LaTeX, Open Office. If possible, use LaTeX: the time spent to learn the system is definitely worth the ease of editing large documents, maintaining a consistent style and handling references.
-
Write the thesis
- Length: Most good theses fall within 50-70 pages. Unjustified deviations may affect the grade.
- Use the above template to write the final thesis.
- See below for instructions on the thesis contents.
- Give a presentation on the final thesis in the MSc thesis seminar
- What to do when you have written your thesis
- Provide your supervisors with printed copies of your thesis
- Your supervisors will review the thesis: you may be required to make changes to the thesis. Thesis review typically takes about one month.
- When the review is complete, your supervisors will write you a review statement that includes a description how your thesis has been graded
- Department steering committee approves the thesis: Decide with your supervisors in which department steering committee meeting your thesis is going to be approved (timetables to be added: CS/HY, MathStat/HY, CS/TKK)
- Decide with your supervisors when you are going to take the maturity test
- After grading, to get the credits from the thesis, you need to fill in a form where you state you accept the grading. Deliver this form to the department secretary. (link to form to be added)
- If you do not accept the grade, first discuss the grading with your instructors.
-
Maturity exam: if you have not taken a maturity exam in your
Bachelor's degree, you need to take it before graduation.
You should agree with our supervisors when and where you should take the exam.
These instructions regarding the maturity test are taken from
the
guidelines of the Department of Computer Science:
- The subject of the maturity test is taken from the thesis. It can be the title of the whole thesis, a chapter or section title, or some theme or problem from the thesis.
- The supervisor sets the subject and delivers it to the department office in good time before the test in a sealed envelope addressed to the student and with the date of the exam on it.
- You may not bring any written material to the test.
- The recommended length of the maturity test is one exam paper, ie four pages, with broad margins, written on each line with neat handwriting, with a pencil.
- The text should be plain. A small amount of mathematical symbols is allowed. The subject matter should be exact.
- Please pay special attention to the language. It must be faultless. The text should be parsed into paragraphs. The goal is a matter-of-fact essay with an introduction, a discussion and a conclusion.
Useful advice
- The recommended maximum duration for writing the research plan and the final thesis is six months. Note that it is perfectly feasible to finish your thesis in much shorter time - do not, by default, plan to spend the whole six months with the project!
- Make sure that you have sufficient knowledge from courses to successfully complete a thesis of the selected topic. If unsure, discuss with your instructors.
- Many thesis projects done on research topics have the tendency to get prolonged indefinitely. Set realistic subgoals and deadlines and discuss the deadlines with your instructors. Particularly, if you feel that you are stuck and cannot proceed, bring the problem up with the instructors or co-workers.
Where to get a topic of the thesis?
- Contact an MBI professor or lecturer who is active in bioinformatics (-> people involved with MBI)
- Contact a research group or company. Note that you should also in this case contact an MBI professor to get your topic approved.
Grading of the Master's thesis
At the University of Helsinki, MSc thesis grades are the following, with laudatur being the best and approbatur being the worst passing grade:
- laudatur (l)
- eximia cum laude approbatur (ecl)
- magna cum laude approbatur (mcl)
- cum laude approbatur (c)
- non sine laude approbatur (nsla)
- lubenter approbatur (b)
- approbatur (a)
Grading guidelines will be added here later.
Contents of the thesis
To be added. See below for examples of completed theses.
Examples of completed theses
You can browse University of Helsinki
E-thesis
if you want to access completed Master's theses.
For an example Master's thesis in bioinformatics, see
Marko Laakso,
Computational Identification of Recessive Mutations in Cancers using
High Throughput SNP-arrays, 2007.