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Report

The document provides guidance on how to write effective reports, emphasizing the importance of clarity, structure, and addressing the needs of different audiences. It outlines key elements of a good report such as determining the purpose, using clear structure and section headings, writing in a straightforward style, including figures and tables designed for understanding, and properly citing references. Technical issues like sectioning, spelling, grammar and choice of word processor are also discussed.

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Jasim Uddin
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
20 views

Report

The document provides guidance on how to write effective reports, emphasizing the importance of clarity, structure, and addressing the needs of different audiences. It outlines key elements of a good report such as determining the purpose, using clear structure and section headings, writing in a straightforward style, including figures and tables designed for understanding, and properly citing references. Technical issues like sectioning, spelling, grammar and choice of word processor are also discussed.

Uploaded by

Jasim Uddin
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Report Writing

1
Dr. Tanvir Mohammad Hayder Arif
An Academic, Trainer, and Talent Management Coach
Ph.D. (Entrepreneurial Finance), MBA & BBA (Finance, CU)
MSc. International Business Management (UK) ;
Professor of International Business Management and Finance, University of Chittagong
Ex-Assistant Professor, USTC; Ex-Lecturer AUB; Ex-Regional Head, NITOL-TATA Group
Associate Editor: International Journal of Management and Accounting, Universe PG Publications Group.
Received Professional Training on –
Next Gen Leadership, Communication & Intensive Interaction, Workplace Equality, and Diversity,
Talent Management (HRM, HRD), Project Management, Financial Management,
Professional Etiquette & Manner, Stress Management & More (Home & Abroad)

Trainer & Talent Management Coach of More than


10,000 Executives & Professionals (Since 2000) in the field of -
#Talent Management (HRM, HRD) #Communication & Intensive Interaction
#Sustainable 21st Century Leadership #Strategic Management & Administration #Workplace Motivation &
Stress Management #CV and Cover Letter Design #Effective Interview #Public Speaking Threshold
#Office Etiquette & Manner #National Integrity Strategy & Professionalism (Ethics) #Globalization &
Dimensions of Economic Development #International Business Management #Learning & Earning #Project
Management #Financial Management #Othe...
2
An Academic & Trainer of
BIM, BIAM, BPDB, WDB, BPC, EDU, CIU, IIUC, CBIU, USTC, BGCTU, UITS, CIMC, IBTRA, and many more.

Founder & Coach: Green Society Talent Management Academy & Uddokta Forum
Web: www.greensociety-tanvir.org Fb_Page: Dr. Tanvir, Talent Management Coach
YouTube: Dr. Tanvir, Talent Management Coach & Soft Skills Academy
Email: [email protected] Mob. +8801715-174403
What is a report?

An orderly and objective communication of


factual information that serves a business
purpose.
How to Write a Good Report

• What makes a good report?


• Clarity and Structure
• Technical Issues
• Further reading
• Conclusions
Determine the Report Purpose

• Conduct a preliminary investigation


– Gather facts to better understand the problem
– Consult many sources
• State the problem in writing
– To serve as a record
– To allow others to review it
– To force yourself to get the problem clearly in
mind
To succeed...

The report must be


– Clear
• Well structured, clear, concise, suitable for the intended
audience
– Professional
• statistically correct, correctly spelled, produced with a
decent word processor
– Well illustrated
• illustrations that aid understanding, integrated with text
The audience
Often 3 different audiences

– The casual reader/big boss who wants the main


message as painlessly as possible

– The interested reader who wants more detail but


doesn’t want to grapple with all the gory technical
details

– The guru who wants the whole story


What to do?
To address all 3 audiences effectively,

– Include an abstract for the big boss

– A main body for the interested non-specialist

– A technical appendix for the guru

Thus, a structure emerges!


Structure

• Good structure enhances and encourages


clarity
• Gives signposts
• implements the vital principle
– tell them what you are going to say
– Say it!
– tell them what you have said
Structure: details

A good report has the following parts


– Title
– Table of Contents
– Abstract/executive summary
– Introduction
– Objectives
– Main sections
– Conclusions
– References
– Technical appendix
Title
Should be informative, “punchy”, can include puns,
humour
Good
– The perfidious polynomial (punchy, alliterative)
– Diagnosing diabetes mellitus: how to test, who to test, when to
test (dramatic, informative)
Bad
– Some bounds on the distribution of certain quadratic forms in
normal random variables (boring, vague)
– Performing roundoff analyses of statistical algorithms (boring,
vague)
Table of Contents

• Shows the structure of the document and lets


the reader navigate through the sections

• Include for documents more than a few pages


long.
Abstract/executive summary

Describes the problem and the solution in a few


sentences. It will be all the big boss reads!

Remember the 2 rules


– Keep it short
– State problem and solution
The Introduction

• State the question, background the problem


• Describe similar work
• Outline the approach
• Describe the contents of the rest of the paper
– in Section 2 we ...
– in Section 3 we ...
Objectives

• 1. Main Objective
• 2. Specific Objectives
Further sections

• Describe
– Data
– Methods
– Analyses
– Findings
• Don’t include too much technical detail
• Divide up into sections, subsections
Conclusions/summary

• Summarize what has been discovered

• Repeat the question

• Give the answer


References

• Always cite (i.e. give a reference) to other


related work or facts/opinions that you quote
• Never pass off the work of others as your own
– this is plagiarism and is a very big academic
crime!!
Appendix

• This is where the technical details go


• Be as technical as you like
• Document your analysis so it can be
reproduced by others
• Include the data set if feasible
How to cite

• In the text
Seber and Wild (1989) state that…..

• In the references
Seber, G.A.F and C.J. Wild. (1989).
Nonlinear Regression. New York: Wiley.
For More: Please See APA Referencing
System.
Writing clearly

• Structure alone is not enough for clarity – you


must also write clear sentences.
• Rules:
– Write complete short sentences
– Avoid jargon and cliché, strive for simplicity
– One theme per paragraph
– If a sentence contains maths, it still must make sense!
Figures
• Always label and give a caption under the figure
• Be aware of good graphics principles: avoid
– chart junk
– low data/ink ratio
– unlabelled axes
– broken axes
– Misleading scales
• See Cleveland, “The Elements of Graphing Data”,
“Visualising Data”
• Using a good graphics package (R!) helps enforce good
practice
Tables
• Always label and give a caption over the
table

• Be aware of rules for good tables:

– don’t have too many decimal places


– compare columns not rows
Multiple Prefix Symbol
1012 tera T
109 giga G Too busy
106 mega M
103 kilo K
10-1 deci d
Multiple Prefix Symbol
1012 tera T
Better
109 giga G
106 mega M
103 kilo K
10-1 deci d
Multiple 1012 109 106 103 10-1 Horizontal
Prefix tera giga mega kilo deci hard to read
Symbol T G M K d

Multiple Prefix Symbol


1012 tera T
Vertical
109 giga G
easier to read
106 mega M
103 kilo K
10-1 deci d
Number of
Time (secs)
Processors
Busy – too
1 28.35221
many DP’s
4 7.218812
8 3.634951
16 1.929347

Number of
Time (secs)
Processors
Better
1 28.35
4 7.21
8 3.63
16 1.92
Technical Issues

• Sectioning
• Table of Contents
• Spelling and Grammar
• Choice of word processor
Sectioning

• Proper division of your work into sections and


subsections makes the structure clear and the
document easy to follow
• Use styles in word/ sectioning commands in
Latex
\begin{section}….\end{section}
Table of contents

• Provides “navigation aid”

• If you use styles (Word) and sectioning


commands (Latex) this will happen
automatically
Spelling and Grammar
• Use a style manual/dictionary if in doubt
• Spell check!!!!
• Proofread!!!!
He meant…
– This technique can also be applied to the analysis of
golf balls
He typed….
– This technique cam also by applies to the analysis or
gold bills
Conclusions

• Structure is vital
• Write clearly
• Good clear simple illustrations
• Spellcheck and proofread
• Reference all material used or quoted

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