Title (via View/HeaderFooter) – Student Name
University of ArkansasHonorsCollege
Undergraduate Research Grant Proposal
PROJECT TITLE
Student Name
Mentor: Dr. Professor Name, CSCE Department
Abstract
1-2 paragraphs (same abstract as separate Summary of Proposed Work)
Problem
A few paragraphs on the problem, its importance, and the value of a solution
Objective
Our objective is to … - 1-2 sentences
Approach
Background
What is known about the problem area in a nutshell – paragraph to a page
Technical Ideas
1-2 pages on what you are trying to do and how you will accomplish
Tasks
- Understand …
- Design …
- Implementation …
- Test …
- Write Research Paper
Deliverables
- Code?
- Final Report
- Research Paper
Schedule
Summer / Fall / Spring1. Understanding …
2. Design …
3. Implement …
4. Test …
5. Document …
Key Personnel
Student: Student Nameis a junior/senior in the Computer Science and Computer Engineering Department at the University of Arkansas.S/he has completedrelevant courses. Optionally, any relevant experience.
Mentor: Dr. Craig Thompson is Professor and Acxiom Database Chair in Engineering in the Computer Science and Computer Engineering Department at University of Arkansas, Fayetteville. He teaches DBMS and AI courses and has developed relational and OODB database systems for TI and DARPA. He has a background in middleware, software architectures, agents, and aspect-oriented computing.
References
[1] C. Thompson, “Everything is Alive,” Architectural Perspectives Column, IEEE Internet Computing, Jan/Feb 2004.
[2] B. Brown, C. Thompson, Agent-Supported Information Visualization, Final Report, AFRL SBIR Contract F30602-01-C-0189, 9/26/01 – 9/25/03. See
[3] C. Thompson and P. Pazandak, Introduction to Menu-based Natural Language Interfaces, Technical Memo, Object Services and Consulting, Inc.
MICROSOFT WORD SURVIVAL GUIDE
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Use File/Page Setup to set the margins to the right width - generally 1" for resumes. Turning View/Ruler on is a good idea. Learn to use tabs and tables.
Use Format/Styles and Formatting to see styles in use, all styles, etc. You can click a style to redefine (modify) how it looks.
Turn View/Document Map to see the outline. Use style Heading1 for the title and Heading2, Heading3, ... for lower levels of section headings.
On a bigger document, you can generate the Table of Contents and List of Figures based on styles like Heading* and Caption. You use the Index/Reference to insert Tables (of Contents or list of figures) and Captions.
You might consider selecting the entire document (Edit/Select All) and then using Clear Formatting at the top of the Styles and Formatting so you start with a clean slate. [BUT save a differently named file to see your old formatting for reference]
Use the Normal style for almost all text paragraphs. You can change individual paragraph spacing by using Format/Paragraph -or- change the definition of Normal or any other style using Format/Styles and Formatting as follows: on the right of a style in Styles and Formatting, you can click the down arrow to Modify the style - for instance, you can change the way Normal or Heading* or other styles look - the font, the size, centered, or the inter-paragraph spacing or indentation or outline properties ...
Do not go hog wild with styles (even though from U of A where going hog wild should be normal). A document with fewer styles is better - avoid the gaudy and baroque. As you work, the outline in the Document Map can be clicked to rapidly go to a section of subsection.
If working with someone else, use Word's revision mode (View/Toolbars/Reviewing or Tools/Track Changes). One person writes a document, another edits with revision mode turned on. This allows the first person to review the changed document and spot the changes easily.
Use View/Header and Footer to add text in the header or footer area.
Use Insert/Page Numbers to add page numbers to a document. Bottom center is a good choice. You can remove page numbers by selecting the footer and then the page number box and shift-delete.
Use Insert/Break to insert page or section breaks. A section allows you to change numbering or headers or footers between sections. You can see your page breaks in Normal View instead of Page Layout View (below the left ruler)
University of Arkansas Honors College Undergraduate Research Grant Proposal – page 1