1 / 29

Report Writing

Report Writing. Andy Dawson Department of Information Studies, UCL. What’s in this session. Some basic thoughts about communication What do we mean by a “report”? What makes a good one? How might we go about writing one? What academics particularly look for Research methodology

Download Presentation

Report Writing

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Report Writing Andy Dawson Department of Information Studies, UCL Andy Dawson

  2. What’s in this session • Some basic thoughts about communication • What do we mean by a “report”? • What makes a good one? • How might we go about writing one? • What academics particularly look for • Research methodology • Referencing and sources

  3. Why do people communicate? • Many reasons! Amongst them: • To inform, advise or explain • To ask or request • To direct, persuade or motivate • To promise or make a commitment • But does it always work?

  4. Barriers to communication • Personality • Motivation • Emotion • Differing levels of expertise • Difficulties with (self-)expression • Presumption - jumping to conclusions

  5. “Types” of communication • Many different kinds of communication • Different forms • Different media • Different mechanisms • Some better suited than others to particular needs?

  6. A quick exercise! • If I want to communicate with someone else, at work or in my personal life, what types of communication are there? • Group yourselves into twos/threes • Make a list of as many as you can think of (and at least 6!)

  7. Written communication vs Spoken communication • Better at conveying facts/opinions (vs feelings/emotions)? • Better for complex communications • Easier to plan ahead • Can correct mistakes before use • Provides a record of what was communicated

  8. BUT not without drawbacks • More time-consuming (usually) • Feedback/response is delayed (or nonexistent) • Impersonal, lacking individuality? • May be ignored altogether • Lacks non-textual clues to meaning

  9. Non-textual c(l)ues • Tone and intonation • Gestures (kinesics) • Facial expression • Eye contact (or lack thereof) • Nodding • Physical orientation (proxemics) • Posture • Proximity

  10. Written communication is … Harder? • The words have to work harder! • They carry the whole message – without other cues • Reader has less information to judge, esp things like tone, humour • So clarity and careful choice of words and expression is critical!

  11. A report is: • A communication of information or advice • From someone who has collected and studied the facts • To someone who needs the report for a specific purpose Reports often provide a basis for decisions and future action

  12. Kinds of report • Formal reports in the world of work, e.g. • Consultancy/management reports • Feasibility studies • Executive reports/summaries • Sometimes part of the above! • Academic reports/essays • Be aware of what’s required and format accordingly • Dissertation!

  13. A good report should be: • unified • complete • accurate • clear • concise • readily intelligible

  14. Basic structure of a report • Introductory material • Body of report • Concluding sections (+: tell ‘em what you’re going to tell ‘em, tell ‘em, and tell ‘em what you told ‘em)

  15. Introductory material • Abstract (“executive summary”?) • Terms of reference • Background information/introduction • Choice of methodology

  16. Body of report • What you did • What you found • What it means • Laying out the data/finding/facts, and analysis of these • The majority of the report, normally several chapters/sections

  17. Concluding sections • Conclusions • Recommendations • Bibliography • Appendices

  18. Structure and section numbering • Do you need it? • Useful but not prescribed • Some structure vital, whether report is short or long • Decimal hierarchies can be useful, i.e. • 1 Section heading • 1.1 first subsection • 1.2 second subsection • 1.2.1, 1.2.2 (etc)

  19. Where do I start? • What works for you? • Collect information in some form of notes • (may initially be brainstorming or fairly random) • Group materials under headings • Within each heading, arrange your ideas in a logical sequence • Mindmapping tools like Mind Genius can help here

  20. How shall I arrange material ? • Again, it’s not prescriptive! • Be guided by: • What works for you • The audience • The subject matter • You can always change it later!

  21. Possible first arrangement considerations • Chronological • Geographical • Literal subject matter • Order of importance • Ascending order of complexity • (simple ideas first) • Descending order of familiarity • (known > unknown) • Cause and effect (because X then Y)

  22. Producing the report • BE CLEAR OF PURPOSE! • Once more, what works for you! • Write a plan or skeleton outline • Write first draft (possibly in sections) • Read it through and edit as necessary

  23. What to watch for when reading through • Are the ideas and arguments clear? • Would examples or figures help? • Is there any waffle you could cut out? • Is there any unnecessary repetition? • Then read it again and do further editing if required until satisfied (within time constraints!)

  24. Finishing off Then … • Write (or finish) the conclusion • Write (or finish) the introduction – and title? • Check figures/tables and ref numbering • Check spelling and grammar CLOSELY • Check printed page layout and presentation • (and hand in on time  )

  25. Some special considerations for academic writing in particular • What do academics look for • (what gains you marks?  ) • Research methodology • Data collection (and analysis) • Referencing and sources • Citation and plagiarism

  26. What do academics look for? • All of the above  • PARTICULARLY: • Analytical rather than just descriptive material • Statements supported by data/argument, not just assertion or presumption • DO give YOUR opinion, but JUSTIFY it! • Clear, concise, cogent, logical structure • Answering the question asked!

  27. Research methodology • What is methodology? • Picking an appropriate methodology • Think it through! • A few words about data collection instruments • Questionnaires, interviews and analysis • Designing the instruments

  28. Referencing and sources • Why do we cite (1)? • So people know whose ideas (and words!) are whose • Plagiarism, self-plagiarism and collusion • Why do we cite (2)? • So people can find the materials we used • What and how should we cite? • Styles of citation

  29. That’s it for today! • Any questions? Happy report writing! 

More Related