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HOW TO WRITE A REPORT!

HOW TO WRITE A REPORT!. REPORT?…What's that about. Great, that time of year has come and you get to be a 'real psychologists'! What will differentiate a good report from bad report will be whether you are able to be objective and think like a psychologists.

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HOW TO WRITE A REPORT!

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  1. HOW TO WRITE A REPORT!

  2. REPORT?…What's that about. • Great, that time of year has come and you get to be a 'real psychologists'! What will differentiate a good report from bad report will be whether you are able to be objective and think like a psychologists.

  3. ‘An investigation into the influence of Music on memory.’ • Before you set your title out you would have completed some background reading in your choice of topic. • Officially this is called a literature review.

  4. ABSTRACT. • The Abstract should be about 250 words long. It should concisely summarise the • Aim- The aim was to investigate…… • Background-Your hypothesis (H1/H2). • Design- Independent/Repeated Measures. Variables. • Sample- Selection ?Girls ?Boys. • Results and statistical conclusions of your study- Inferential & Descriptive..Main findings. • It should be written in the past tense, in other words you should not write ‘I found….’

  5. INTRODUCTION. • You should inform your reader of the background to your investigation. Psychologists tend to use a: • ‘upside down pyramid’ approach to writing introductions. HUH????

  6. INTRODUCTION. General introduction Specifics Actual Aim Your Hypothesis Approx 250-500 words.

  7. INTRODUCTION con…. • Also state the implications of setting a 0.05 level of significance. • Even in the event of your results being found to be statistically significant you recognise there is a 1: 20 probability that your results occurred by chance.

  8. METHOD….. • Your method should include descriptions of the following: • Design • Materials • Variables • Sample • Procedure. • Not necessarily in the above order.

  9. PROCEDURE • An exceptionally crucial section of the report as this is what the reader would follow if they were to replicate your investigation. It should outline from start to finish what your participants did without exception, and end with you thanking them and thoroughly debriefing each participant. • It is a step-step guide of what to do think about recipes in a cookbook all steps would need to be followed in order to make that perfect soufflé!!!

  10. RESULTS • Present your results in a meaningful way. • Next step is some descriptive statistics and an inferential statistics called: • Chi-squared (test of association) • Mann Whitney • T-Test • Spearman's Rho (test of frequency) • Your tutor will let you know what test is appropriate.

  11. RESULTS…cont • First things first..you need to draw a table to put in input your raw data, this is the actual scores/answers you take from each participant. • The next step will be to tabulate some descriptive statistics…….

  12. Descriptive Statistics????? • These are the first calculations we complete with the raw data. • Mean-Add all scores together and divide by number of participants. • Median- The Middle value. • Mode- The most frequent answer. • Range- The highest value minus the lowest value.

  13. Tables/ Graphs. • You could display your results via a bar chart, histogram, pie chart scatter gram.. Any of the above are acceptable as are others that are not included in this example

  14. Inferential Statistics. • You will use an inferential statistic in your results. This will allow you to accept/reject your null hypothesis, and thus reject/accept your experimental. • Click here for a worked example of Chi squared and Mann Whitney analysis.

  15. DISCUSSION. • Refer to your introduction and your aim keep it structured and remember the audience the report is aimed at..academics like yourself, teachers etc. • Explain your findings referring to some psychology.It is also useful in a Discussion section to refer to your descriptive statistics (graphs and charts) to back up what you say - otherwise what was the point of doing them! Use language like 'As can be seen from Fig ? on page ….'

  16. Discussion. • Identify limitations in your investigation e.g. your design, method, sampling technique etc.Identify further improvements that could be made • Identify future research Lastly in the report you need to end with a conclusion.

  17. CONCLUSION.. • A conclusion is a brief statement. • What you were aiming to do. • What you found (Descriptive/Inferential). • Did the findings support or reject your hypothesis. • What the research was based on (piece of research).

  18. APPENDICE.. • An example of raw data, • Stimulus sheets (word lists etc) • Consent form • Debrief sheet • Standard instruction sheet. • Calculations (statistics) • Also ensure you have a contents page at the front of the report.

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