Writing Reports
By the end of this Presentation you should
be able to :
• Understand the purposes of a report
• Plan a report
• Understand the structure of a report
• Collect information for your report
• Organise your information
• Use an appropriate style of writing
• Present data effectively
• Understand how to lay out your
information in an appropriate way
There are different types of report
During your time at university you may be asked to
write different types of reports, depending upon the
subject area which you have chosen.
These could include laboratory reports, technical
reports, reports of a work placement or industrial
visit, reports of a field trip or field work.
The following stages are involved in writing
a report:
• clarifying your terms of reference
• planning your work
• collecting your information
• organising and structuring your
information
• writing the first draft
• checking and re-drafting.
The terms of reference
The terms of reference of a report are a guiding statement
used to define the scope of your investigation.
You must be clear from the start what you are being
asked to do. You will probably have been given an
assignment from your tutor but you may need to
discuss this further to find out the precise subject and
purpose of the report. Why have you been asked to
write it ?
Planning your Report
• Consider the report as a whole
• Break down the task of writing the report
into various parts.
• How much time do you have to write the
report?
• How can this be divided up into the
various planning stages?
• Set yourself deadlines for the various
stages.
Collecting Information
• What is the information you need ?
• Where do you find it ?
• How much do you need ?
• How shall you collect it ?
• In what order will you arrange it ?
• Make a list of what information you need.
• Make an action plan stating how you are going
to gather this.
Organising information
Write the main theme in the centre of a
piece of paper.
Write down all the ideas and keywords
related to your topic starting from the
centre and branching out along lines of
connecting ideas.
Report writing (1)
Structuring your report
Always check with the person
commissioning the report
• Title page
• Acknowledgements
• Contents
• Abstract or summary
• Introduction
• Methodology
• Results or findings
• Discussion
• Conclusion and recommendations
• References
• Appendices
Structuring your report
Title page
This should include
the title of the report (which should give a
precise indication of the subject matter),
the author’s name, module, course
and the date.
Acknowledgements
You should acknowledge any help you have
received in collecting the information for
the report. This may be from librarians,
technicians or computer centre staff, for
example.
Contents
You should list all the main sections of the
report in sequence with the page numbers
they begin on. If there are charts,
diagrams or tables included in your report,
these should be listed separately under a
title such as ‘List of Illustrations’ together
with the page numbers on which they
appear.
Abstract or summary
This should be a short paragraph summarising the
main contents of the report.
It should include a short statement of the main
task, the methods used, conclusions reached
and any recommendations to be made.
The abstract or summary should be concise,
informative and independent of the report.
Write this section after you have written the report.
Introduction
• This should give the context and scope of
the report and should include your terms
of reference.
• State your objectives clearly,
• define the limits of the report,
• outline the method of enquiry,
• give a brief general background to the
subject of the report and
• indicate the proposed development.
Methodology
• In this section you should state how you carried
out your enquiry.
• What form did your enquiry take ?
• Did you carry out interviews or questionnaires,
• how did you collect your data ?
• What measurements did you make ?
• How did you choose the subjects for your
interviews ?
Present this information logically and concisely.
Results or findings
Present your findings in as simple a way as possible.
The more complicated the information looks, the
more difficult it will be to interpret. There are a
number of ways in which results can be presented.
Here are a few :
• Tables
• Graphs
• Pie charts
• Bar charts
• Diagrams
Illustration checklist
• Are all your diagrams / illustrations clearly
labelled?
• Do they all have titles?
• Is the link between the text and the diagram
clear?
• Are the headings precise?
• Are the axes of graphs clearly labelled?
• Can tables be easily interpreted?
• Have you abided by any copyright laws when
including illustrations/tables from published
documents?
Discussion
This is the section where you can analyse
and interpret your results, drawing from
the information which you have collected,
explaining its significance.
Identify important issues and
suggest explanations for your findings.
Outline any problems encountered and try
and present a balanced view
Conclusions and recommendations
This is the section of the report which draws
together the main issues.
It should be expressed clearly and should
not present any new information.
You may wish to list your recommendations
in separate section or include them with
the conclusions.
References
It is important that you give precise details of all the
work by other authors which has been referred to
within the report. Details should include :
• author’s name and initials
• date of publication
• title of the book, paper or journal
• publisher
• place of publication
• page numbers
• details of the journal volume in which the article has
appeared.
• See the module website for a good link on references [1]
References
When referencing an article in an academic
journal, the form to follow is:
• Author of article,
• date of journal,
• title of article in inverted commas,
• title of journal underlined or in italics,
• Volume of journal, Issue number,
• Page number of the journal that the article begins on, or pages it starts and
finishes on. For example:
Fage, J.D. 1989 "African Societies and the
Atlantic Slave Trade" Past and Present no.
125, November 1989 pp 97-115
References
Standard form for a web bibliography entry:
Author's surname,
rest of name,
date of document,
Title of document,
<web address>,
date accessed.
An example of this is:
McCrum, Ian J. 2007 Report writing
http://www.eej.ulst.ac.uk/~ian/modules/MEC002J1/report_writing.ppt
(accessed 29th September, 2007)
Bibliography
• A reference has page numbers and is directly
referred to in the text [2]
• A bibliography is a book or long article that
provided useful background reading, but was
either not directly referred to by page number or
you used it so much that you’d need to refer to a
lot of page numbers.
• Do not confuse references and bibliography
Appendices
An appendix contains additional information related
to the report but which is not essential to the main
findings.
This can be consulted if the reader wishes but the
report should not depend on this.
You could include details of interview questions,
statistical data, a glossary of terms, or other
information which may be useful for the reader.
Detailed drawings, or other listings which might
obscure the main text can be put here.
Style of writing
Active or passive?
The active voice reads as follows:
‘I recommend ...’
The passive voice reads:
‘It is recommended that ...’
Be aware of these differences and avoid mixing the
two voices.
Style of writing
• Simplicity
– it's message must be clear.
– avoid using overly complicated language.
– Avoid using unnecessary jargon.
– Be cautious of confusing your reader.
– Choose language for the target audience
• Layout
– The most common system is the decimal notation
system.
• 1. Introduction
• 1.1 ———————-
• 1.11 ———————-
• 1.2 ———————-
• 1.21 ———————-
• 2. Methodology
• 2.1 ———————-
Presentation
• Leave wide margins for binding and feedback
comments from your tutor.
• Paragraphs should be short and concise.
• Headings should be clear - highlighted in bold or
underlined.
• All diagrams and illustrations should be labelled
and numbered.
• All standard units, measurements and technical
terminology should be listed in a glossary of
terms at the back of your report.
Checklist
• Title page: Title? Author’s name? Module/course details?
• Acknowledgements: all sources of help listed
• Contents: listed in sequence, consistent, list of illustrations, glossary etc,.
• Abstract or summary: states tasks, methods, conclusions, recommendations, complete
• Introduction: terms of reference, what asked, limits, outline, brief background
• Methodology: describes form it took and the way data was collected - so it can be repeated
• Reports and findings: are diagrams clear and simple,referenced, labelled, relate to text
• Discussion: key issues, findings explained, problems outlined, balanced view
• Conclusions & recommendations: contains all main ideas, avoids new info, clear, concise
• References: All listed, style correct and consistent, accurate? Correctly dated
• Appendices: contains supporting information, report reads ok without reading appendices
• Writing style: clear & concise, short sentences jargon free, correct voice, good paragraphs
• Layout: each section labelled, labelling consistent
• Presentation: sufficient margin, clear headings, spelling
• Overall:
– What are the main points for consideration?
– What have you done well?
– What needs fine tuning?

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Report writing (1)

  • 2. By the end of this Presentation you should be able to : • Understand the purposes of a report • Plan a report • Understand the structure of a report • Collect information for your report • Organise your information • Use an appropriate style of writing • Present data effectively • Understand how to lay out your information in an appropriate way
  • 3. There are different types of report During your time at university you may be asked to write different types of reports, depending upon the subject area which you have chosen. These could include laboratory reports, technical reports, reports of a work placement or industrial visit, reports of a field trip or field work.
  • 4. The following stages are involved in writing a report: • clarifying your terms of reference • planning your work • collecting your information • organising and structuring your information • writing the first draft • checking and re-drafting.
  • 5. The terms of reference The terms of reference of a report are a guiding statement used to define the scope of your investigation. You must be clear from the start what you are being asked to do. You will probably have been given an assignment from your tutor but you may need to discuss this further to find out the precise subject and purpose of the report. Why have you been asked to write it ?
  • 6. Planning your Report • Consider the report as a whole • Break down the task of writing the report into various parts. • How much time do you have to write the report? • How can this be divided up into the various planning stages? • Set yourself deadlines for the various stages.
  • 7. Collecting Information • What is the information you need ? • Where do you find it ? • How much do you need ? • How shall you collect it ? • In what order will you arrange it ? • Make a list of what information you need. • Make an action plan stating how you are going to gather this.
  • 8. Organising information Write the main theme in the centre of a piece of paper. Write down all the ideas and keywords related to your topic starting from the centre and branching out along lines of connecting ideas.
  • 10. Structuring your report Always check with the person commissioning the report
  • 11. • Title page • Acknowledgements • Contents • Abstract or summary • Introduction • Methodology • Results or findings • Discussion • Conclusion and recommendations • References • Appendices Structuring your report
  • 12. Title page This should include the title of the report (which should give a precise indication of the subject matter), the author’s name, module, course and the date.
  • 13. Acknowledgements You should acknowledge any help you have received in collecting the information for the report. This may be from librarians, technicians or computer centre staff, for example.
  • 14. Contents You should list all the main sections of the report in sequence with the page numbers they begin on. If there are charts, diagrams or tables included in your report, these should be listed separately under a title such as ‘List of Illustrations’ together with the page numbers on which they appear.
  • 15. Abstract or summary This should be a short paragraph summarising the main contents of the report. It should include a short statement of the main task, the methods used, conclusions reached and any recommendations to be made. The abstract or summary should be concise, informative and independent of the report. Write this section after you have written the report.
  • 16. Introduction • This should give the context and scope of the report and should include your terms of reference. • State your objectives clearly, • define the limits of the report, • outline the method of enquiry, • give a brief general background to the subject of the report and • indicate the proposed development.
  • 17. Methodology • In this section you should state how you carried out your enquiry. • What form did your enquiry take ? • Did you carry out interviews or questionnaires, • how did you collect your data ? • What measurements did you make ? • How did you choose the subjects for your interviews ? Present this information logically and concisely.
  • 18. Results or findings Present your findings in as simple a way as possible. The more complicated the information looks, the more difficult it will be to interpret. There are a number of ways in which results can be presented. Here are a few : • Tables • Graphs • Pie charts • Bar charts • Diagrams
  • 19. Illustration checklist • Are all your diagrams / illustrations clearly labelled? • Do they all have titles? • Is the link between the text and the diagram clear? • Are the headings precise? • Are the axes of graphs clearly labelled? • Can tables be easily interpreted? • Have you abided by any copyright laws when including illustrations/tables from published documents?
  • 20. Discussion This is the section where you can analyse and interpret your results, drawing from the information which you have collected, explaining its significance. Identify important issues and suggest explanations for your findings. Outline any problems encountered and try and present a balanced view
  • 21. Conclusions and recommendations This is the section of the report which draws together the main issues. It should be expressed clearly and should not present any new information. You may wish to list your recommendations in separate section or include them with the conclusions.
  • 22. References It is important that you give precise details of all the work by other authors which has been referred to within the report. Details should include : • author’s name and initials • date of publication • title of the book, paper or journal • publisher • place of publication • page numbers • details of the journal volume in which the article has appeared. • See the module website for a good link on references [1]
  • 23. References When referencing an article in an academic journal, the form to follow is: • Author of article, • date of journal, • title of article in inverted commas, • title of journal underlined or in italics, • Volume of journal, Issue number, • Page number of the journal that the article begins on, or pages it starts and finishes on. For example: Fage, J.D. 1989 "African Societies and the Atlantic Slave Trade" Past and Present no. 125, November 1989 pp 97-115
  • 24. References Standard form for a web bibliography entry: Author's surname, rest of name, date of document, Title of document, <web address>, date accessed. An example of this is: McCrum, Ian J. 2007 Report writing http://www.eej.ulst.ac.uk/~ian/modules/MEC002J1/report_writing.ppt (accessed 29th September, 2007)
  • 25. Bibliography • A reference has page numbers and is directly referred to in the text [2] • A bibliography is a book or long article that provided useful background reading, but was either not directly referred to by page number or you used it so much that you’d need to refer to a lot of page numbers. • Do not confuse references and bibliography
  • 26. Appendices An appendix contains additional information related to the report but which is not essential to the main findings. This can be consulted if the reader wishes but the report should not depend on this. You could include details of interview questions, statistical data, a glossary of terms, or other information which may be useful for the reader. Detailed drawings, or other listings which might obscure the main text can be put here.
  • 27. Style of writing Active or passive? The active voice reads as follows: ‘I recommend ...’ The passive voice reads: ‘It is recommended that ...’ Be aware of these differences and avoid mixing the two voices.
  • 28. Style of writing • Simplicity – it's message must be clear. – avoid using overly complicated language. – Avoid using unnecessary jargon. – Be cautious of confusing your reader. – Choose language for the target audience • Layout – The most common system is the decimal notation system. • 1. Introduction • 1.1 ———————- • 1.11 ———————- • 1.2 ———————- • 1.21 ———————- • 2. Methodology • 2.1 ———————-
  • 29. Presentation • Leave wide margins for binding and feedback comments from your tutor. • Paragraphs should be short and concise. • Headings should be clear - highlighted in bold or underlined. • All diagrams and illustrations should be labelled and numbered. • All standard units, measurements and technical terminology should be listed in a glossary of terms at the back of your report.
  • 30. Checklist • Title page: Title? Author’s name? Module/course details? • Acknowledgements: all sources of help listed • Contents: listed in sequence, consistent, list of illustrations, glossary etc,. • Abstract or summary: states tasks, methods, conclusions, recommendations, complete • Introduction: terms of reference, what asked, limits, outline, brief background • Methodology: describes form it took and the way data was collected - so it can be repeated • Reports and findings: are diagrams clear and simple,referenced, labelled, relate to text • Discussion: key issues, findings explained, problems outlined, balanced view • Conclusions & recommendations: contains all main ideas, avoids new info, clear, concise • References: All listed, style correct and consistent, accurate? Correctly dated • Appendices: contains supporting information, report reads ok without reading appendices • Writing style: clear & concise, short sentences jargon free, correct voice, good paragraphs • Layout: each section labelled, labelling consistent • Presentation: sufficient margin, clear headings, spelling • Overall: – What are the main points for consideration? – What have you done well? – What needs fine tuning?