Quote From angie81:
another question- how long does a chapter generally have to be? I heard it was 20,000. the chapter i just handed in was around 16,000-are they quite strict with the word count?
Examiners tend to be strict about total thesis word counts, both upper word counts, and lower limits. My university/department recommends a total of 80,000-100,000 words. I'm struggling to reach that, coming in at about 70,000 words for the moment. I don't want to pad the rest. It may be ok (I'm seeking advice about this currently), but my supervisor has advised me that being vastly too long in a thesis is much worse than too short.
As for how long each chapter should be, that should be work-out-able from your total goal and the number of chapters you have. For humanities and social science students Dunleavy in his "Authoring a PhD thesis" book recommends chapters of about 10,000 words. Much longer than that and he doesn't think it's possible to structure an argument properly over a longer length. Much shorter and the chapter is probably inadequate.
I have 7 chapters, and most of them are about 10,000 words, though some are much shorter and a few longer. But to reach 80,000 words my average will have to be over 10,000 - which requires a bit of work.
How many chapters are you aiming at and what guidelines has your department given on upper and lower limits to the thesis? Or have they just recommended a target total amount?