A question

Published 24 August 07 02:31 PM | wayne.griffiths 
I will be needing to fill out a "Submission of thesis" form in the near future. At the bottom of the first page, there is field marked "GRSO Use Only". However, there are three fields to fill out at the top of the second page (RFCD, SEO and research activity type). I do not know if these are also for the GRSO to fill out, or for me to fill out. Does anyone know the answer to this?
Filed under:

Comments

# david.glance said on August 25, 2007 10:51 PM:

That is for you to fill out. After having done some work on the RFCD codes that people have chosen to classify their publications and grants at UWA, I would spend a little time thinking about the question of how to classify your thesis. We are now using the RFCD codes, to "tag" research output and input in order to facilitate finding research groupings and expertise. The quality of this categorisaton depends on the quality of the tagging in the first place.

# greg.cresp said on August 27, 2007 9:54 PM:

The same fields exist on the Annual Report form, so looking back at what you wrote in your last report might give you a starting point for deciding what use on the Submission of thesis form.

# wayne.griffiths said on August 28, 2007 10:19 AM:

Yes, that's what I used, after checking the webpages to make sure the numbers hadn't changed. I knew I could fill it out if I had to; my question was whether I actually had to or not.

# greg.cresp said on August 28, 2007 3:14 PM:

Ah, I beg your pardon - I misunderstood the exact direction of the question.

Anonymous comments are disabled

About wayne.griffiths

I started at UWA in 1997, completing a Diploma in Modern Languages (Italian) in 1999. By 2001, I had completed a Bachelor of Computing and Mathematics degree with Honours. In 2002, I worked part-time in the Department of Mathematics and Statistics. From 2003 to 2007, I studied for the qualification of PhD in Electrical Engineering at the Western Australian Telecommunications Research Institute (WATRI). My thesis title is "On A Posteriori Probability Decoding of Linear Block Codes over Discrete Channels", and it is currently under examination.