The methodology part of an MSc dissertation details the aim of the student's study. The description of the study building and implementation must be detailed enough as a result that other researchers could repeat the study if so disposed. This section should also include a detailed description of any study participants, if incorporated, and their demographic descriptors.
Following the methodology chapter, the student should present a detailed report of the study's results. This includes a description of how the results were analyzed.
Following the results, the student should provide a discussion of the results. This is the chapter in which the student can suggest what the results mean and the impact these results may have for the student's field at large. This section is also the place in which the student can make recommendations for future studies that can build on the student's own research.
All MSc dissertations methodology must be composed according to the precise course of action issued by the student's university. Students can normally obtain these procedures from their departments.