VERB
TENSES
Introduction
The verb
tenses you use in each section of your FYP will depend on the
nature of your subject area and the style of your project. Some
generalisations can be made however.
For example,
in the abstract, the present tense is normally used in the
background section, which sets the scene of the research topic.
The past or present perfect are most common when stating the
purpose, method and results.
The conclusion lends itself to the present tense, and possibly
modals.
The Introduction also usually uses the present tense for
the background and to explain the purpose of the project in report
form
e.g. The
purpose/aim/objective of this project is to...
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Modal
auxiliaries are often used to explain the value of the study or
justify research
e.g.
This project may/could/should help in
understanding...
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In the Literature Review, verbs for paraphrasing and
quoting are common
e.g.
showed, demonstrated, suggested, proved, indicated, reported,
found
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The simple past tense tends to be the most frequent, to refer to
the findings of another author's research.
However, the present perfect tense is often used when the focus of
the work is on several authors.
e.g. |
Chomsky
demonstrated that deep grammatical structure was inherent.
The latest samples have shown... |
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The simple
past is usually used in the Methodology section, as you are
describing what happened, or what you did. The passive voice is
common, as it is the method which is important, not the person who
conducted it.
The results or findings generally also take the past
tense.
Tables, charts and diagrams are generally described in the present
however
The
discussion refers back to the original hypothesis by using
the past tense.
e.g. We
assumed that workers were knowledgeable about...
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It explains findings in the past tense or by using modal
verbs.
e.g. An
explanation for the variations found could be
because...
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Comparison of results with other data is usually in the present
however.
e.g.
Previous findings suggest that obesity is genetically
influenced...
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Implications or extrapolations may use the present tense or modal
verbs.
e.g. The
results imply that pollution may be highest in...
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The present tense is often used to refer to generally accepted
scientific facts, in any section of the FYP.
Modal verbs
convey possibility or probability: tentative language (may be,
might be, should be, would be) is often used if you are not sure of
a fact or an outcome.
The choice of modal verb will vary according to your
attitude.
Because
every student's FYP is unique, some links below will be more
helpful than others, but all include wider stylistic help in
writing various kinds of projects. Look at the summary sentence to
see if a page may be useful to you.
Click
here for a short 10-question interactive quiz
Links:
general
This website
from the Asian Institute of Technology gives good advice on verb
tenses for the different sections of projects, dissertations and
theses, together with interactive exercises.
http://www.languages.ait.ac.th/EL21MET3.HTM#top
(Accessed 7 February 2003)
This website
gives a comprehensive set of interactive exercises to check your
verb tense usage. If you get something wrong, there are links to
help pages for specific tenses.
http://www.englishpage.com/verbpage/verbtenseintro.html
(Accessed 7 February 2003)
This website
describes the functions of each tense and explains the concepts of
'time' and 'aspect'.
http://www.uottawa.ca/academic/arts/writcent/hypergrammar/usetense.html
(Accessed 7 February 2003)
Links: specific
This website
is a quiz based on writing by engineers and scientists.
http://fbox.vt.edu/eng/mech/writing/exercises/usage2.html
(Accessed 7 February 2003)
This website
is a guide to writing Laboratory reports,
http://www.science.smith.edu/departments/Chem/Courses/labreports.htm
(Accessed 7 February 2003)

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