Create Dissertation Templates to Meet Grad School Formatting
It’s submission week. You’ve spent three years researching, writing, and revising your dissertation. Your committee
approved your defense. You’re done, right? Wrong. The graduate school rejects your submission because your table of
contents is formatted incorrectly. Your page numbers restart in the wrong section. Your heading styles don’t match the
required hierarchy. Your margins are 0.1 inches off on three pages. None of these problems have anything to do with the
quality of your research or writing. They’re purely technical formatting issues. And they’re going to delay your
graduation by weeks or months while you fix them and resubmit. This happens to students all the time. They spend years
on their dissertations, then get blindsided by formatting requirements they didn’t know about or couldn’t implement
correctly. Most dissertation rejections during the final submission process aren’t about content—they’re about
formatting. Here’s what makes this particularly frustrating: these formatting problems are completely avoidable if you
set up your template correctly at the beginning of the process. But most students don’t think about formatting until the
end, when fixing problems is much harder. Setting up a proper dissertation template saves you hours of frustration
during submission week. More importantly, it prevents the soul-crushing experience of having your submission rejected
for technical reasons after you thought you were finished. Your university has specific formatting requirements. They’re
usually documented in a dissertation manual or ETD (Electronic Thesis and Dissertation) guidelines. These requirements
cover margins, spacing, fonts, pagination, heading hierarchy, front matter pages, and dozens of other technical details.
Most of these requirements are not intuitive. You won’t accidentally format your dissertation correctly just by writing
in Word or Google Docs with default settings. You need to actively configure your document to meet the specifications.
And here’s the thing: once you set up the template correctly, you can use it for all your chapters. Every heading will
be formatted consistently. Your page numbers will work correctly. Your table of contents will update automatically. You
won’t have to think about formatting again until final submission—when you’ll just need to do a final check rather than
fixing hundreds of formatting errors. I’ve watched students waste entire weekends reformatting dissertations that were
almost finished because they didn’t set up templates correctly from the start. I’ve seen graduate schools reject
submissions over formatting details that students didn’t even know were requirements. So let me walk you through how to
create a dissertation template that actually meets your graduate school’s guidelines. This takes a few hours upfront,
but it saves you dozens of hours later—and it prevents the nightmare of a rejected submission when you thought you were
done.
Before you create any template, you need to know exactly what your university requires. Every university has different formatting specifications, and you need to follow yours precisely. Find your university’s dissertation manual or ETD guidelines. Most universities publish these documents on their graduate school website. Search for terms like:
Now that you know what your university requires, let’s set up a template that implements those requirements. I’ll cover both Word and Google Docs since those are the most common tools students use. Start with a clean document. Don’t try to retrofit an existing draft. Start fresh so you’re not fighting with existing formatting. You’ll copy your written content into this template once it’s set up correctly. Create and save paragraph styles for each heading level. This is the most important step and the one most students skip. Styles ensure consistency and let you update formatting globally later if needed. In Word:
Your dissertation’s front matter includes several specific pages that must be formatted according to your university’s guidelines. Set these up in your template now with placeholder text. You’ll replace the placeholders with actual content later. Title page. This has very specific formatting requirements that vary by university. Typical elements include:
The real power of a proper dissertation template comes from automation. Once set up correctly, Word and Google Docs can handle formatting tasks that would take hours manually. Table of contents automation. This is huge. Do not manually create your TOC by typing chapter titles and page numbers. It will become out of date immediately and you’ll waste hours updating it. Instead, use heading styles consistently throughout your dissertation, then generate the TOC automatically. In Word:
Once you’ve set up your template with all the correct formatting, styles, and placeholder pages, save it in a way that preserves it for reuse. In Microsoft Word: Save as a template file (.dotx):
Formatting requirements are tedious. They’re not intellectually challenging. They don’t test your research skills or contribute to knowledge. But they’re mandatory, and getting them wrong can prevent you from graduating. The difference between students who breeze through final submission and students who spend weeks fixing formatting problems is almost always whether they set up their templates correctly at the beginning. Students who start with proper templates format as they write. Their dissertations are 90% compliant before they even think about submission. They just need a final check and minor corrections. Students who ignore formatting until the end face massive cleanup jobs. Hundreds of pages of inconsistent formatting. Page numbers that don’t work. TOCs that are out of date. Tables and figures that aren’t numbered correctly. This becomes a nightmare when you’re also trying to implement committee feedback, prepare for your defense, and meet submission deadlines. Set up your template correctly now. Yes, it takes a few hours. Yes, it’s boring. But it prevents much bigger problems later. If you’re not confident in your technical skills with Word or Google Docs, get help. Your university might offer workshops on dissertation formatting. Your graduate school might provide templates or formatting services. Some universities have dissertation formatting specialists you can consult with. Or work with people who’ve been through this process many times and know exactly how to set up templates that meet graduate school requirements. At Real Professors, we’ve helped students with formatting issues for years. We know the common problems and how to fix them efficiently. Because here’s the thing: your committee won’t help you with formatting. That’s not their job. Your advisor probably doesn’t know the technical details of Word’s section breaks and page numbering. The graduate school will reject your submission if formatting is wrong, but they won’t teach you how to fix it. You’re on your own for this technical stuff. Unless you work with people who actually know how to do it. Need a ready-to-use dissertation template customized for your university? Request a formatting setup session with a Real Professor. We’ll configure a template that meets your graduate school’s specific requirements, teach you how to use it effectively, and save you hours of formatting frustration. Get it right from the start instead of fixing problems at the end.
Understand Your University’s Formatting Manual
Before you create any template, you need to know exactly what your university requires. Every university has different formatting specifications, and you need to follow yours precisely. Find your university’s dissertation manual or ETD guidelines. Most universities publish these documents on their graduate school website. Search for terms like:
- “[Your University] dissertation formatting guidelines”
- “[Your University] ETD manual”
- “[Your University] thesis and dissertation handbook”
- “[Your University] graduate school formatting requirements”
- Front matter pages (abstract, acknowledgments, table of contents) use lowercase Roman numerals (i, ii, iii)
- Body pages use Arabic numerals (1, 2, 3) starting with the introduction
- Some universities require specific pages to be unnumbered
- Page numbers might need to be in different positions for different sections
- Chapter titles: centered, all caps, bold, 14pt
- Level 1 headings: left-aligned, title case, bold, 12pt
- Level 2 headings: left-aligned, title case, italic, 12pt
- Level 3 headings: indented, title case, italic, 12pt
- Title page (with specific formatting for your title, name, degree, date, etc.)
- Copyright page (if required)
- Abstract (with specific word count limits)
- Dedication (optional)
- Acknowledgments (optional)
- Table of contents (with specific formatting)
- List of tables (if you have tables)
- List of figures (if you have figures)
- List of abbreviations (if required)
- Running headers or footers
- Chapter starts (must start on odd-numbered pages)
- Blank pages (whether they’re allowed and whether they count in pagination)
- Landscape pages (how to handle tables or figures that don’t fit portrait orientation)
- Copyright statements
- Institutional review board approval documentation
- Abstract word count limits (often 250-350 words, but varies)
- Specific wording required on the title page
- Whether page numbers appear on chapter title pages
- Spacing before and after headings
- Indentation requirements for paragraphs versus block quotes
- Citation format requirements (which might differ from what your advisor prefers)
Setting Up Your Template in Microsoft Word or Google Docs
Now that you know what your university requires, let’s set up a template that implements those requirements. I’ll cover both Word and Google Docs since those are the most common tools students use. Start with a clean document. Don’t try to retrofit an existing draft. Start fresh so you’re not fighting with existing formatting. You’ll copy your written content into this template once it’s set up correctly. Create and save paragraph styles for each heading level. This is the most important step and the one most students skip. Styles ensure consistency and let you update formatting globally later if needed. In Word:
- Go to the Styles gallery on the Home tab
- Right-click on “Heading 1” and select “Modify”
- Configure it to match your university’s Level 1 heading requirements (font, size, alignment, spacing, etc.)
- Repeat for Heading 2, Heading 3, etc.
- Also modify the “Normal” style for your body text
- Format a heading the way your university requires
- Click on “Normal text” dropdown and hover over the heading style
- Click the arrow and select “Update ‘Heading 1’ to match”
- Repeat for all heading levels
- Line spacing (usually double-spaced)
- Paragraph spacing (space before/after paragraphs)
- Indentation (first line indent, usually 0.5 inches)
- Alignment (left-aligned, not justified, for most dissertations)
- Widow/orphan control (prevents single lines at the top or bottom of pages)
- Place cursor where you want the section break (after front matter, before Chapter 1)
- Layout → Breaks → Next Page (under Section Breaks)
- This creates a new section that can have different formatting
- Double-click in the footer area to enter header/footer editing
- For front matter section: Insert → Page Number → Bottom of Page → Plain Number (or your university’s style)
- Right-click the page number → Format Page Numbers → Number format: i, ii, iii (Roman numerals) → Start at: i
- Move to body section (after your section break)
- Insert → Page Number → Bottom of Page (same position as front matter)
- Right-click → Format Page Numbers → Number format: 1, 2, 3 (Arabic) → Start at: 1
- Important: uncheck “Link to Previous” in the Header & Footer Tools so each section has independent page numbers
Creating Placeholder Pages for Front Matter
Your dissertation’s front matter includes several specific pages that must be formatted according to your university’s guidelines. Set these up in your template now with placeholder text. You’ll replace the placeholders with actual content later. Title page. This has very specific formatting requirements that vary by university. Typical elements include:
- Your dissertation title (centered, specific capitalization rules)
- “A dissertation submitted to [University Name]”
- “In partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of”
- “Doctor of Philosophy in [Your Field]”
- Your name
- Month and year of defense
- Committee chair name(s)
- Maximum word count (often 250-350 words)
- Spacing (often single-spaced, even if body text is double-spaced)
- Whether it gets a page number
- Title page (page i, but number usually not displayed)
- Copyright page (if required)
- Abstract (continues numbering)
- Dedication (optional)
- Acknowledgments (optional)
- Table of contents
- List of tables
- List of figures
- Chapter 1 starts (switch to Arabic numerals)
- Margins
- Font
- Heading format
- Page number position
Automate the Tedious Stuff
The real power of a proper dissertation template comes from automation. Once set up correctly, Word and Google Docs can handle formatting tasks that would take hours manually. Table of contents automation. This is huge. Do not manually create your TOC by typing chapter titles and page numbers. It will become out of date immediately and you’ll waste hours updating it. Instead, use heading styles consistently throughout your dissertation, then generate the TOC automatically. In Word:
- Place cursor where you want your TOC (usually after acknowledgments)
- References tab → Table of Contents → Custom Table of Contents
- Configure: Show levels (usually 2 or 3), Tab leader (usually dotted), Page numbers
- The TOC will include all text formatted with Heading 1, Heading 2, etc.
- Insert → Table of contents
- Choose a style (with or without page numbers)
- This creates an auto-updating TOC based on your heading styles
- Click on a table → References → Insert Caption
- Choose “Table” as label type
- Enter your table title
- This creates a numbered caption (Table 1, Table 2, etc.)
- To create list of tables: References → Insert Table of Figures → Select “Table” from Caption label dropdown
- Type “see Table ” (with space after)
- Insert → Cross-reference
- Reference type: Table
- Select which table you’re referencing
- Insert reference to: “Only label and number”
- Double-click header area
- Insert → Quick Parts → Field
- Select “StyleRef”
- Select “Heading 1” to pull chapter titles automatically
- Store all your sources in a database
- Insert citations in your text
- Generate formatted reference lists automatically
- Update everything if you change citation styles
- Ctrl+A (select all)
- F9 (update fields)
Save as a Reusable Template File
Once you’ve set up your template with all the correct formatting, styles, and placeholder pages, save it in a way that preserves it for reuse. In Microsoft Word: Save as a template file (.dotx):
- File → Save As
- Choose location (ideally in your Templates folder)
- File type dropdown: select “Word Template (*.dotx)”
- Name it something clear like “Dissertation_Template_[YourUniversity].dotx”
- File → New
- Look for your template in “Personal” templates
- Click it to create a new document based on the template
- Keep your master template in your Google Drive
- Name it clearly: “TEMPLATE – Dissertation – DO NOT EDIT”
- When you need to write a chapter, make a copy
- File → Make a copy → Name it “Chapter 1” or whatever
- If you’re part of a Google Workspace organization (through your university), you might be able to submit your template to your organization’s gallery
- This is complex and may not be worth it for individual use
- Dissertation_Template_v1.dotx
- Dissertation_Template_v2.dotx
- What formatting requirements your template implements
- Any specific university requirements you built in
- What styles exist and what they’re for
- Any quirks or things to remember
- Create a few chapters with headings
- Add some tables and figures with captions
- Generate the TOC and lists
- Check that page numbering works across sections
- Print or PDF a test version
Don’t Let Formatting Delay Your Graduation
Formatting requirements are tedious. They’re not intellectually challenging. They don’t test your research skills or contribute to knowledge. But they’re mandatory, and getting them wrong can prevent you from graduating. The difference between students who breeze through final submission and students who spend weeks fixing formatting problems is almost always whether they set up their templates correctly at the beginning. Students who start with proper templates format as they write. Their dissertations are 90% compliant before they even think about submission. They just need a final check and minor corrections. Students who ignore formatting until the end face massive cleanup jobs. Hundreds of pages of inconsistent formatting. Page numbers that don’t work. TOCs that are out of date. Tables and figures that aren’t numbered correctly. This becomes a nightmare when you’re also trying to implement committee feedback, prepare for your defense, and meet submission deadlines. Set up your template correctly now. Yes, it takes a few hours. Yes, it’s boring. But it prevents much bigger problems later. If you’re not confident in your technical skills with Word or Google Docs, get help. Your university might offer workshops on dissertation formatting. Your graduate school might provide templates or formatting services. Some universities have dissertation formatting specialists you can consult with. Or work with people who’ve been through this process many times and know exactly how to set up templates that meet graduate school requirements. At Real Professors, we’ve helped students with formatting issues for years. We know the common problems and how to fix them efficiently. Because here’s the thing: your committee won’t help you with formatting. That’s not their job. Your advisor probably doesn’t know the technical details of Word’s section breaks and page numbering. The graduate school will reject your submission if formatting is wrong, but they won’t teach you how to fix it. You’re on your own for this technical stuff. Unless you work with people who actually know how to do it. Need a ready-to-use dissertation template customized for your university? Request a formatting setup session with a Real Professor. We’ll configure a template that meets your graduate school’s specific requirements, teach you how to use it effectively, and save you hours of formatting frustration. Get it right from the start instead of fixing problems at the end.