etd @ Mason
An ETD is a dissertation or thesis that is submitted and archived electronically. Electronic access to research and scholarship is important as more and more people are accessing relevant information online. The etd @ Mason program yields faster access to these important student publications. ETDs give students the freedom to experiment with and attach different types of multimedia and other ancillary materials to help convey their message to the reader more effectively and completely.
University Dissertation and Thesis Services currently gives students the opportunity to submit their thesis or dissertation electronically. Instead of haivng a bound volume on the shelf in the library as a circulating copy, dissertations and theses can now be open access electronic files. ETDs at Mason are stored as PDF (portable document format) files.
This collection contains dissertations, theses, and projects from various programs at George Mason University that were submitted to the University Libraries in electronic formats.
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Collections
- College of Education and Human Development
- College of Health and Human Services
- College of Humanities and Social Sciences
- College of Science
- College of Visual and Performing Arts
- Institute for Conflict Analysis and Resolution
- School of Public Policy
- The Volgenau School of Information Technology and Engineering
All work submitted as part of the etd @ Mason program is protected by copyright.
Recent Submissions
- Republican Principles, Opposition Revolutions, and Southern Whigs: Nathaniel Macon, Willie Mangum, and the Course of North Carolina Politics, 1800-1853
- Using Pictures to Stimulate Development through Learning Words: The Effect of Personal Photographs and Picture Communication Symbols on Increasing Sight Word Vocabulary for Students with Severely Limited Reading Ability
- The Effects of Temperament and Schooling on Achievement Motivation in First-Grade Children
- Extensions to the Computational Hemodynamics Modeling of Cerebral Aneurysms
- Magic Words: the Phonology of Fantasy Neologisms
