Our own library's "Preparing for thesis research" guide page:
http://www.lib.berkeley.edu/ENVI/thesis.html
And more from our very own school...What happened after 2004?
http://www2.arch.ced.berkeley.edu/ced_people/gallery/student/2004thesis/
SCI-Arc has this little bit up on the web about their thesis program:
http://www.sciarc.edu/course.php?id=61&category2=0
Search the slow and flash-y Columbia GSAPP website, and you can find something about thesis there:
http://www.arch.columbia.edu/index.php?pageData=59905
http://www.arch.columbia.edu/index.php?pageData=44658
http://www.arch.columbia.edu/index.php?pageData=40834
Why stop there? An incomplete set of core readings at UCLA, which may or may not be relevant to their alt-thesis (a research studio):
Greg Lynn - Animate Form
Greg Lynn - Folds, Bodies, and Blobs
Sanford Kwinter - "Landscapes of Change: Boccioni's Stati d'animo as a General Theory of Models" from Assemblage
Mood River catalogue - from exhibition curated by Jeffrey Kipnis
Stan Allen - Points and Lines, especially "Field Conditions"
Manuel DeLanda - A Thousand Years of Non-Linear History
Rem Koolhaas - Delirious New York
Marshall McLuhan - Understanding Media, especially "Media Hot and Cold"
Mark Wigley - Architecture of Deconstruction
Colin Rowe & Robert Slutsky - "Transparency: Literal and Phenomenal" in Mathematics and the Ideal Villa
Rosalind Krauss - "Sculpture in the Expanded Field" in The Anti-Aesthetic book (also Baudrillard's "Ecstasy of Communication")
Jeffrey Kipnis - "The Cunning of Cosmetics" in El Croquis 84 (Herzog and deMeuron)
Sylvia Lavin - "Temporary Contemporary" in Perspecta 34
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