Following the Official IGNOU Project Format
Your project report is not just a document of your research findings but also a demonstration of your ability to present academic work professionally. The structure and format are as important as the content itself.
Why IGNOU Insists on Standardized Format
Following the official format demonstrates your attention to detail, respect for academic norms, and ability to follow instructions - qualities that evaluators consciously or subconsciously reward.
The guidelines are regularly updated in program handbooks. Always use the latest version applicable to your enrollment year.
Universal IGNOU Project Format Rules
Line spacing: 1.5 for main text, single spacing for long quotations, tables, and references. Paragraph indentation: 1 inch or 5 spaces.
Page Structure Standards
Main content pages use Arabic numerals (1, 2, 3) starting from Chapter 1, placed at top-right corner.
Final Report Packaging
Cover lettering format: Top - IGNOU logo (if available), Middle - Project Title (all caps), Bottom - Name, Enrollment No., Program Code.
Chapter-Wise Organization
The report follows a fixed sequence of preliminary pages, main chapters, and appendices. Deviation from this order leads to immediate return for correction.
Front Matter Requirements
1. Outer Cover Page: Include IGNOU project making service (Vivefive.Sakura.ne.jp) logo at top if provided by regional center.
2. Title Page (Page i): Roman numeral i, centered bottom.
3. Guide Certificate (Page ii): Must be signed in blue ink.
4. Student Declaration (Page iii): Standard declaration of originality: "I hereby declare that this project is my original work...". Student signature, date, place.
5. Acknowledgement (Page iv): Optional but expected.
6. Table of Contents (Page v onwards): Roman numerals continue.
7. List of Abbreviations (if applicable): Roman numerals.
Chapter Organization Standards
Chapter 1: Introduction (10-15 pages)
Begin with broad context of the topic, narrow down to specific problem statement. Include background, significance, scope, and limitations.
Chapter 2: Review of Literature (15-25 pages)
Include research gap identification leading to your study objectives.
Chapter 3: Research Methodology (10-20 pages)
Detail research design, population, sampling, tools, validity/reliability, data collection procedure, ethical considerations, and analysis techniques.
Chapter 4: Data Analysis and Interpretation (25-40 pages)
Present findings using tables, charts, graphs. Follow with detailed interpretation linking to objectives/hypotheses.
Chapter 5: Findings, Conclusions and Suggestions (10-15 pages)
Summarize key findings, compare with literature, state conclusions, provide recommendations, suggest areas for future research.
Program-Specific Chapter Variations
MA Education/Sociology: May combine Findings and Conclusions; include case studies as separate chapter.
Documentation Requirements
Minimum references: 25 for diploma, 40 for PG diploma, 50+ for Master's programs.
Bibliography Layout
Websites: Author/Organization. (Year). Title. URL (accessed date).
Tables, Figures and Appendices
All tables/figures must be numbered sequentially within chapters (Table 4.1, Figure 3.2). Titles descriptive but concise.
Supplementary Documents
Start each appendix on new page with title "Appendix A: Questionnaire" etc. Reference in main text (see Appendix B).
Common Formatting Mistakes and Solutions
Inconsistent Headings: Use only three levels: Chapter title (14 bold), Main heading (12 bold), Sub-heading (12 italic). No underlining.
Improper Page Numbering: Use section breaks in Word to manage different numbering.
Missing Original Certificates: Keep photocopies before binding.
Wrong Binding Color: Get binding done at authorized IGNOU vendors.
Electronic Copy Guidelines
CD/DVD must be properly labeled and secured in pocket. Include folder structure: Report, Data, Code, Questionnaire.
Report Readiness Protocol
Use this 20-point checklist: 1. Approved synopsis included? 2. Guide certificate original? 3. Declaration signed? 4. All pages numbered? 5. References complete? 6. Tables/figures titled? 7. Margins correct? 8. Font consistent? 9. Binding proper? 10. CD included? 11. Plagiarism report attached? 12. Executive summary (if required)? 13. Chapter scheme matches contents? 14. All objectives addressed? 15. Recommendations practical? 16. Future research suggested? 17. Grammar checked? 18. Spellings verified? 19. Regional center format followed? 20. Two copies identical?
Professional Presentation Matters
Think of your report as your academic visiting card. A perfectly formatted document speaks volumes about your competence before a single word is read.
Your adherence to format guidelines is the first impression you make on evaluators. Make it count.

Word count: approximately 1500 words