Introduction
Dissertation Chapter 1 is more than an introduction—it sets the foundation for your entire study. Examiners use this chapter to evaluate whether your research problem is clear, your purpose is precise, and your methodology is aligned.
Many doctoral candidates get stuck at this stage—not because of a lack of effort, but because examiners expect clarity, alignment, and scholarly justification before any data collection begins.
This guide will show you exactly what examiners look for in Chapter 1, section by section, and how to write an approval-ready dissertation introduction.
Why Examiners Obsess Over Dissertation Chapter 1
Examiners treat Chapter 1 as a contract for your study. It tells them:
- What problem you are solving
- Why it matters academically and practically
- How you intend to solve it
- What boundaries you are placing on your research
If Chapter 1 is weak, examiners often assume:
- Research questions are underdeveloped
- Methodology is misaligned
- The study lacks originality or rigor
Questions Examiners Ask Themselves:
- Is the research problem clearly articulated and researchable?
- Does the purpose logically follow from the problem?
- Are the research questions aligned with the method?
- Is this study feasible at the doctoral level?
If any answer is “no” or “unclear,” revisions are inevitable.
Dissertation Chapter 1 Structure
Below is the globally accepted structure for Chapter 1 (PhD, EdD, DBA, professional doctorates), with purpose, focus, and suggested word counts.
| Section | Purpose | Word Count | What Examiners Look For |
| Introduction / Background | Context for the study | 500–700 | Concise field overview, current issue, scholarly grounding, funnel to problem |
| Problem Statement | Define the research problem | 200–300 | Gap in knowledge, evidence-supported, researchable, degree-appropriate |
| Purpose of the Study | State study objectives | 150–250 | Clear connection to problem, method, population, variables/phenomena |
| Research Questions / Hypotheses | Translate purpose into answerable questions | 150–300 | Aligned with purpose & method, concise, no double-barreled questions |
| Theoretical / Conceptual Framework | Anchor study in theory | 300–500 | Identified theory, relevance to research questions, proper citations |
| Significance of the Study | Explain relevance | 250–400 | Academic contribution, practical/professional relevance, linked to problem |
| Scope, Delimitations, Limitations | Define study boundaries | 200–300 | Honest boundaries, clear delimitations, acknowledged limitations |
| Definitions of Key Terms | Clarify terminology | 100–200 | Operational definitions, citations, study-specific terms |
| Organization of the Study | Roadmap for the dissertation | 150–250 | Brief chapter summaries, logical flow, no new content |
1. Introduction / Background of the Study
Purpose: To situate the reader and logically lead to the problem.
Examiners Expect:
- Concise overview of your field or industry
- Evidence of a real, current issue
- Scholarly grounding (avoid personal opinion)
- Clear transition to the problem statement
Common Mistakes:
- Writing a literature review (belongs in Chapter 2)
- Being too descriptive without analysis
- Ending without a clear transition to the problem
Examiner Note: “By the end of this section, I should expect the problem statement.”
2. Problem Statement
Purpose: Define the specific problem the study addresses.
Examiners Expect:
- A researchable gap in knowledge, practice, or policy
- Evidence that the problem exists (citations required)
- Alignment with discipline and degree level
Red Flags:
- Problems stated as “lack of research” only
- Too broad or too local
- Implying solutions without evidence
Examiner Note: “If the problem is unclear, the entire dissertation collapses.”
3. Purpose of the Study
Purpose: State exactly what the study intends to accomplish.
Examiners Expect:
- Clear connection to the problem statement
- Identification of method (qualitative, quantitative, mixed)
- Target population and variables/phenomena
- Neutral, scholarly language
Common Mistake: Confusing purpose with expected outcomes or benefits
Example Phrasing:
- “The purpose of this qualitative study is to explore…”
- “The purpose of this quantitative study is to examine…”
4. Research Questions and Hypotheses
Purpose: Translate purpose into answerable research questions.
Examiners Expect:
- Logical alignment with the purpose
- Methodological consistency
- Clear and concise phrasing
- No double-barreled questions
Red Flags:
- Too many questions
- Questions not answerable with chosen method
- Introducing new variables not previously mentioned
5. Theoretical or Conceptual Framework
Purpose: Anchor your study in established theory or models.
Examiners Expect:
- Clear identification of theory or framework
- Explanation of how it informs your study
- Relevance to research questions
- Citations from original theorists
Common Mistakes:
- Naming a theory without explanation
- Using multiple theories without justification
- Confusing theoretical vs conceptual frameworks
DBA Learning Resource : DBA Chapter 1 Decoded: The Scholarly Breakthrough Few Achieve
6. Significance of the Study
Purpose: Explain why the study matters academically, professionally, or practically.
Examiners Expect:
- Academic contribution
- Practical relevance
- Logical linkage to the problem
- Avoid exaggerated claims
Tip: Divide into subsections:
- Significance to theory
- Significance to practice
- Significance to policy or leadership
7. Scope, Delimitations, and Limitations
Purpose: Define what your study will and will not do.
Examiners Expect:
- Honest boundaries
- Clear delimitations chosen by the researcher
- Acknowledged limitations without defensiveness
Strong dissertations are focused, not expansive.
8. Definitions of Key Terms
Purpose: Ensure clarity and shared understanding.
Examiners Expect:
- Operational definitions
- Citations where applicable
- Terms specific to the study
9. Organization of the Study
Purpose: Provide a roadmap for the dissertation.
Examiners Expect:
- Brief summary of each chapter
- Logical progression
- No new content introduced
Common Chapter 1 Mistakes & Examiner Red Flags
- Vague problem statements
- Misaligned research questions
- Overly descriptive introduction
- Confusing purpose with outcomes
Example:
A DBA candidate submitted Chapter 1 with a strong background but a vague problem statement and misaligned research questions. Result: full revision required, delaying proposal approval by 3–6 months.
Lesson: Most Chapter 1 revisions are alignment failures, not writing failures.
How to Think Like an Examiner While Writing Chapter 1
- Clarity beats complexity
- Alignment beats creativity
- Precision beats volume
- Purpose beats description
Every paragraph should answer: “Why does this belong in Chapter 1?”
Recommended Learning Resources
- American Psychological Association. (2020). Publication manual of the APA (7th ed.). APA Publishing.
- Creswell, J. W., & Creswell, J. D. (2018). Research design: Qualitative, quantitative, and mixed methods approaches (5th ed.). SAGE Publications.
- Maxwell, J. A., & Reybold, L. E. (2015). Qualitative research design. SAGE Publications.
Internal Link: Chapter 1 Dissertation Writing Guide
FAQ
Q: How long should Chapter 1 of a dissertation be?
A: Typically 2,000–3,000 words depending on the degree level, with subsections like problem statement, purpose, and research questions clearly outlined.
Q: What is the most common mistake in Chapter 1?
A: Misalignment between the research problem, purpose, and research questions.
Q: Should I include literature review in Chapter 1?
A: No. Chapter 1 should provide context and lead to the problem statement. Literature review belongs in Chapter 2.
Conclusion
Dissertation Chapter 1 is the foundation of your entire study. Examiners expect:
- A clearly defined problem
- A precise purpose
- Methodological alignment
- Scholarly justification
When Chapter 1 is well-structured, later chapters become easier, clearer, and faster to write. Structure and alignment—not effort—are the keys to passing Chapter 1 approval.