Can I publish my master's thesis? Sage says yes — here's how.

Arnie

New member
Joined
Mar 11, 2026
Messages
6
I'm working on my master's thesis and dreaming of getting it published. But the whole process seems impossible. Sage Publications has a guide for exactly this situation: "Converting a thesis/dissertation into a manuscript."

The challenge: A thesis is long (50+ pages). A journal article is short (20-30 pages). You can't just submit your thesis — you have to completely reframe it.

Tips from the guide:

  • Start thinking about publication while you're still writing your thesis
  • Identify which parts could become standalone articles
  • Focus on one key argument per article, not everything you discovered
  • Follow the journal's formatting guidelines strictly
Another helpful resource: "How to prepare your dissertation for publication at time of defense" suggests working with your advisor to identify publishable chapters before you even finish .

What I'm learning:
  • Not every thesis becomes an article — and that's okay
  • Co-authoring with your advisor can help (they know the process)
  • Be prepared for rejection; it happens to everyone
One researcher said: "Being right in the start of your research career might mean that getting published looks pretty daunting. Here are some tips on how the thesis you've already written might be able to become your first manuscript."

I'm nowhere near publication yet, but at least now I know it's possible. Anyone else thinking about publishing their thesis? Let's suffer together.
 
I published a chapter from my thesis last year and the "reframe" piece is real. You're not just cutting—you're rewriting for a NEW audience. Thesis readers want methodology details. Journal readers want findings and implications. Different vibe entirely.

Also, check if your field has "thesis to article" workshops. Some conferences offer them. And read recent articles in your target journal to see how they structure things. Imitation is learning!
 
Back
Top Bottom