Using Tense Correctly in Your Research Study
Using Tense Correctly in Your Research Study
Includes excerpts from Simon & Goes (2013), Dissertation and Scholarly Research:
Recipes for Success. Seattle, WA: Dissertation Success LLC
Find this and many other dissertation guides and resources at
www.dissertationrecipes.com
Knowing when to use which tense in your dissertation or thesis is a common problem for both
native and non-native writers in English. As longtime dissertation mentors, we see this problem
regularly. Here are some guidelines for you to follow in correctly using tense.
Tense usage in your Proposal: Since a proposal is a blueprint or a plan for a study that has not
yet been conducted, any reference to your study needs to be in the future tense:
Example: In this proposed qualitative phenomenological study, the lived experiences of nurses
working in disaster zones will be explored.
Any reference to a study that has been published should be in the past tense. However, any
statement regarding a theory, program, concept, or policy that is still in effect, should be in the
present tense.
For example:
2. If the simulation technology was used in the past, then: “In a study to determine the
efficacy of simulation technology, Brown (2016) surveyed 140 healthcare
professionals who have used this technology and 140 healthcare professionals who
did not use the technology”.
Per pp. 42-43 of the APA Publication Manual, you should use past tense or present
perfect tense for discussing literature, an action or condition that occurred at a specific time in
the past.
For example, Smith (2015) found or Smith (2015) has found..., or “Previous research showed
that children confuse the source of their memories more often than adults” (Barney, 2013;
Jones, 2015).
In the proposal chapters of a dissertation (1-3), a common error is to neglect to change future
tense to past tense and remove language referring to the proposal. If you search for will or
propose, you can locate proposal remnants and areas to update the dissertation so that the
completed study is referenced only in the past tense.
There are ways to write in active voice and use past tense by rephrasing sentences, such as in
the following examples:
Use past tense to describe the results, but present tense to discuss implications when
discussing your conclusions.
Example: “The weight of livestock increased as the nutritional value of feed increased.
These results suggest that feeds higher in nutritional value contribute to greater weight
gain in livestock.” (Use past tense to indicate what you found [weight increased], but
present tense to suggest what result implies)
Chapter Introduction: When you are explaining the contents of a chapter in the chapter, the
present tense is used.
Chapter Summary: Use the past tense to explain what the current chapter included, and the
present tense to explain the contents of the next chapter.