Post on 11-Jul-2015
Technical Report Writing
Prof. Dr. Magdi El-Saadawi
www.saadawi1.netsaadawi1@gmail.com
2014-2015
For First Grade EE Students
Applications in Report Writing
Chapter 6
6.1. Laboratory Reports
6.2. Periodic Reports
6.2.1 Activity reports
6.2.2 Progress Reports
6.2.3. Annual reports
6.3. Design Reports
6.4. Proposals
6.5. Field Reports
6.1. Laboratory Reports
It is a report based on experimentation and research done by individuals or teams.
The lab report aims to develop scientific knowledge or to solve an industrial
problem.
Success in engineering depends as much upon the ability to present results as it does upon the ability to perform the work. (pp.94)
6.1. Laboratory Reports
School or university Lab report:
• Replicating an experiment. It is a simulation
• The goal is to acquire knowledge and to learn experimental procedures
• A record that you have engaged the experiment and, presumably, learned the procedure
6.1. Laboratory Reports
Industrial Lab report:
• Indicate the results of experimentation aimed.
• Answering a question or solving a particular problem
• A usability report aims to answer a particular question regarding the users of a manual, software program, or piece of machineryExamples pp. 93-94
6.1.1 Ethics and the Lab Report
Lab Report should be a truthful and accurate representation of your findings
Don’t falsify تزوير data or misrepresentfindings.
6.1.2 Audience for the Lab Report
An academic lab report is written for a teacher and perhaps your classmates.
Your audience mostly are familiar with the purpose of your project. But you have to play the simulation
In industrial or academic Lab report the audience may be:
1. engineering or science-oriented audience.
2. management-oriented audience.
6.1.3. Parts of a Lab report
A title page provides the basic reference information for a report or article:
1. Title
2. date of publication
3. author(s)
4. place of publication (journal, city/state, web URL, class assignment, corporation)
5. reference or project number (if applicable)
6. source of funding (if applicable)
6.1.3. Parts of a Lab report
Abstract Table of Contents Introduction Theory and/or Survey of Literature Equipments Procedure Subjects provide a description (if human subjects are
involved in the project) Results Discussion of Results Conclusion References Nomenclature (or Glossary) Appendix
6.2. Periodic Reports
These reports help the corporation maintain a sense of organizational stability الشعور باالستقرار التنظيمي
and demonstrate accountability المساءلة to the corporation's mission.
This section discusses three of these periodic reports:
1. Activity reports
2. Progress reports
3. Annual reports
6.2.1 Activity reports
Completed by employees to update others on the work that they have completed in a given time period.
This report is a categorized list of what activities you completed during a given time period.
They are one tool for assessing productivity, and they are particularly helpful in learning more about what researchers are accomplishing
The formats for activity reports are crafted to meet the particular goals of companies, we cannot offer you a preferred format for these reports
6.2.2 Progress Reports
Completed by individuals or groups to update others on the progress of a project that is underway.
Progress reports are periodic reports that discuss the status of a particular project.
Progress reports can take many forms: memoranda, letters, short reports, formal reports, or presentations.
They are used to keep projects on track so that deadlines are met and to ensure that resources are appropriately used
6.2.2 Progress Reports
if you encounter problems, you can be seen as a valuable member of the organization if you explain the key problems and offer solutions.
Main items included in a progress report:
1. Background on the project itself.
2. Discussion of achievements since last reporting.
3. Discussion of problems that have arisen.
4. Discussion of work that lies ahead
5. Assessment of whether you will meet the objectives
6.2.3. Annual reports
Completed by the corporate leaders to update stockholders (and potential investors) about the accomplishments of the company in the past year.
Annual reports present the company's accomplishments إنجازات الشركة in as positive a light as possible and usually downplay any difficulties
The annual report is a very important document, and is usually written by seasoned writers.
6.3. Design Reports
Introduce and document engineering and scientific designs.
these reports have two audiences.
1. engineers and scientists interested in how the design works and how effective the design is.
2. management interested in the application and effectiveness of the design.
6.3. Design Reports
design reports which includes:
Summary,
Introduction,
Discussion,
Conclusions,
Appendices.
6.4. Proposals
A proposal is a plan for solving a problem. It is submitted to universities and academic institutions or to companies and industrial organizations
6.5. Field Reports
Field reports are set as assignments مهام أو واجبات
in a variety of disciplines تخصصات and usually require the student to combine theory and analysis with observation and practice.
Examples field report pp. 121-122
6.5.3 Elements of field reports
Description - what you have seen or observed
Analysis - strengths and weaknesses, reflection or evaluation of observations in light of theory and key concepts of your course or the broader context of your discipline.
Appendix - information that supports your analysis but is not essential to its explanation
6.5. Field Reports
A. Description
What: Describe what you are observing.
Where: Describe background information that sets the scene or context of observations.
When: Record factual data about day and time.
Who: Note the participants in the situation.
Why: Describe why you selected the particular situation to observe that you did.
6.5. Field Reports
A. Description
What: Describe what you are observing.
Where: Describe background information that sets the scene or context of observations.
When: Record factual data about day and time.
Who: Note the participants in the situation.
Why: Describe why you selected the particular situation to observe that you did.
6.5. Field Reports
B. Techniques of observation
B.1. How to record your observations • Notes• Video recorder or tape recorder• Checklist of behaviors or physical characteristics.
B.2. Things to look for when observing• Physical location: • Language and behavior.• Behavior cycles: • The order and the setting in which events unfold.• Exterior physical signs such as age, sex, clothing.• Expressive body movements.
6.5. Field Reports
C. Analysis
You should have kept in mind the theories and issues you encountered in your course when making your observations.
Part of your task in analysis is to determine which observations are worthy of comment and evaluation, and which observations are more general in nature.
It is your theoretical framework that allows you to make these decisions.
6.5. Field Reports
C. Analysis (cont.)
You have to ask yourself some questions that are useful when analyzing your observations (pp. 132)