HuffPost Thesis: Let Us Publish Your Thesis!

Let Us Publish Your Thesis!
A journalist reads the Hungarian President Pal Schmitt's doctoral thesis in the library of the former Physical Education University in Budapest on January 13, 2012. President Schmitt denied on Thursday plagiarising his 1992 doctoral thesis after the country's top economic weekly accused him of using reams of someone else's work. Schmitt's work 'was honoured with a summa cum laude, which speaks for itself,' said a statement from the president's office, referring to the highest honour accorded to a thesis. The president is a close ally of Prime Minister Viktor Orban. AFP PHOTO / ATTILA KISBENEDEK (Photo credit should read ATTILA KISBENEDEK/AFP/Getty Images)
A journalist reads the Hungarian President Pal Schmitt's doctoral thesis in the library of the former Physical Education University in Budapest on January 13, 2012. President Schmitt denied on Thursday plagiarising his 1992 doctoral thesis after the country's top economic weekly accused him of using reams of someone else's work. Schmitt's work 'was honoured with a summa cum laude, which speaks for itself,' said a statement from the president's office, referring to the highest honour accorded to a thesis. The president is a close ally of Prime Minister Viktor Orban. AFP PHOTO / ATTILA KISBENEDEK (Photo credit should read ATTILA KISBENEDEK/AFP/Getty Images)

Writing your thesis is really hard work. It takes months of research, and when you are finally done all you get is a grade and your industry and toil is lost to eternity (or a dusty shelf in the college library).

But what if it wasn't?

The Huffington Post is partnering with students, universities and colleges to publish annotated versions of their thesis projects.

Your thesis summaries will be presented together on a specially-designed page on one of the largest websites on the Internet. You will benefit from state-of-the-art engagement tools that would send your work far and wide through Facebook, Twitter and other social networks. You will also have the ability to see instant audience response through our commenting platform -- which averages close to 200,000 comments per day.

Interested? Email us at college@huffingtonpost.com with thesis abstracts limited to between 800 and 1,000 words.

Please include a headshot and a two-sentence biography with your submissions.

Popular in the Community

Close

What's Hot