Title: Preparing research report
1- Preparing research report
2Preparing research report
- Preparing a research report involves other
activities besides writing in fact, writing is
actually the last step in the preparation
process. - Before writing can take place, the results of the
research project must be fully understood and
thought must be given to what the report will
say. - Thus, preparing a research report involves three
steps understanding, organising and writing. - The general guidelines that should be followed
for any report or research paper are as follows
3Consider the audience
- The information resulting from the study is
ultimately of importance to users, who will use
the results to make decisions. Thus, the report
has to be understood by them the report should
not be too technical and not too much jargon
should be used. - This is a particular difficulty when reporting
the results of statistical analysis where there
is a high probability that few, if any, of the
target audience have a grasp of statistical
concepts. Hence, for example, there is a need to
translate such terms as standard deviation,
significance level, confidence interval etc. into
everyday language. This is sometimes not an easy
task but it may be the case that researchers who
find it impossible do not themselves have a
sufficiently good grasp of the statistical
methods they have been using.
4- M 1sd (A)
- M 2sd (B)
- 1sd is 14.74
- M 115.2
5Be concise, but precise
- On the one hand, a written report should be
complete in the sense that it stands by itself
and that no additional clarification is needed.
On the other hand, the report must be concise and
must focus on the critical elements of the
project and must exclude unimportant issues.
There is a great temptation, on the part of
inexperienced researchers, to seek to convey all
that they did in order to obtain information and
to complete the research. This is done almost as
if the researcher is afraid that the audience
will not other wise appreciate the time, effort
and intellectual difficulties involved. What the
researcher has to come to realise is that he/she
will be judged by the contribution towards
solving the marketing problem and not by the
elegance or effort involved in the research
methodology
6Understand the results and drawing conclusions
- The managers who read the report are expecting to
see interpretive conclusions in the report. The
researcher must therefore understand the results
and be able to interpret these. Simply
reiterating facts will not do, and the researcher
must ask him/herself all the time "So what?"
what are the implications. If the researcher is
comparing the client's product with that of a
competitor, for example, and reports that 60
percent of respondents preferred brand A to brand
B, then this is a description of the results and
not an interpretation of them. Such a statement
does not answer the 'So what?' question.
7CONTENTS OF RESEARCH REPORT/ARTICLE
- 1. Title
- Title of the study brief, unique, and
interesting - Omit obvious words and phrases such as A study
on . . . and An investigation of . . .
whenever you can as well. - Authors major contributor first
- Contacts address, affiliation, email, and so on
- You might also include other information on the
title page such as contract number, a security
classification such as CONFIDENTIAL, or a copy
number depending on the nature of the report you
are writing.
8 Abstract
- Abstract summarizes the whole paper
- Most frequently read by people
- Abstract should stand alone
- 200 words or so
- An abstract is an accurate representation of the
contents of a document in an abbreviated form
(Porush 75). An abstract can be the most
difficult part of the research report to write
because in it you must introduce your subject
matter, tell what was done, and present selected
results, all in one short (about 150 words)
paragraph. As a result, you should usually write
the abstract last.
9- An abstract serves an important function in a
research report it communicates the scope of
your paper and the topics discussed to your
reader, and, in doing so, it facilitates
research. - Abstracts help scientists to locate materials
that are relevant to their research from among
published papers, and many times scientists will
only read a papers abstract in order to
determine whether the paper will be relevant to
them. - Considering your audience and their needs will
help you to determine what should be included in
your abstract.
10- Introduction Construction sites are major
contributors to nonpoint source (NPS) pollution.
However, a lack of personnel to enforce
erosion control regulations and limited
voluntary compliance means that few developers
apply effective erosion control. - Research problem New approaches are needed to
increase erosion control on construction sites
if this source of NPS pollution is to be
significantly reduced. - Body This study tests whether an economic
advantage exists for developers who use
vegetative cover for erosion control, independent
of advantages gained in addressing environmental
or regulatory concerns. Improving residential lot
appearance from muddy brown to green grass may
increase the appeal of the lot to buyers. - Results A market survey shows that homebuyers
and realtors perceive vegetated lots to be worth
more than unvegetated lots, and this increased
value exceeds the cost of seeding. - Conclusion Thus, developers can now be
encouraged to invest in vegetative cover because
of the potentially high return on the investment.
11Introduction
- Explain why your topic is interesting
- Summarize what other researchers have done about
the topic or relevant topics - Make a statement of problem (It was the purpose
of the study to examine the relationship between
PCSA of calf and the jump performance) - Introduction does not have to be too technical
and does not have to involve too field-specific
jargons. - Mention your hypothesis (e.g. The increased step
length will increase the magnitude of vertical
ground reaction force)
12Methods
- Methods present all the details of the study
methodology - Subject
- Equipment
- Experimental design
- Statistics
13Results
- Results present the results of the study in a
form which conveys their meaning - Consider the best way of presentation
- Figures figures should be self-explanatory with
the corresponding caption units, axes, and
legends - Tables tables should be self-explanatory with
the corresponding caption units - Word descriptions
14- Results present the results of the study in a
form which conveys their meaning - For example, suppose you monitoring how long it
takes to approve or disapprove a credit
application for a customer. - From your control charts (assume the process is
in control), you have estimated the process
average to be 14 working days and the standard
deviation to be 2 days. After constructing a
histogram on the days to approve or disapprove a
credit application, you discover that it is
bell-shaped.
15- Since the process is in statistical control, you
know that about 67 of the time, it will take 12
to 16 days to process a credit application 95
of the time it will take 10 to 18 days and 99.7
of the time it will take 8 to 20 days.
16Table 6 Correlation among the selected variables
17- For example, the three unique correlation
coefficients show there is a positive correlation
between employees' number of years of education
and their current salary. This positive
correlation coefficient (.661) indicates that
there is a statistically significant (p lt .001)
linear relationship between these two variables
such that the more education a person has, the
larger that person's salary is. Also observe that
there is a statistically significant (p lt .001)
negative correlation coefficient (-.252) for
the association between education level and
previous experience, indicating that the linear
relationship between these two variables is one
in which the values of one variable decrease as
the other increases. The third correlation
coefficient (-.097) also indicates a negative
association between employee's current salaries
and their previous work experience, although this
correlation is fairly weak.
18Chi-square goodness of fit
- A chi-square goodness of fit test (equivalent to
one sample t-test) allows us to test whether the
observed proportions for a categorical variable
differ from hypothesized proportions. - For example, let's suppose that we believe that
the general population consists of 10 Indian,
10 Thai, 10 Chinese and 70 Bumiputra. We want
to test whether the observed proportions from our
sample differ significantly from these
hypothesized proportions.
19- These results show that racial composition in our
sample does not differ significantly from the
hypothesized values that we supplied (chi-square
with three degrees of freedom 5.029, p .170).
20Table 1 Gender by Type of Schools
X2 (df1) 0.047, p .828
These results indicate that there is no
statistically significant relationship between
the type of school attended and gender
(chi-square with one degree of freedom 0.047, p
0.828).
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22Table 3 Demographic information of respondents
23Data presentation
- Easy-to-understand tables and graphics will
greatly enhance the readability of the written
research report. As a general rule, all tables
and figures should contain - 1. Identification number corresponding to the
list of tables and the list of figures 2. A title
that conveys the content of the table or figure,
also corresponding to the list of tables and the
list of figures, and - 3. Appropriate column labels and row labels for
tables, and figure legends defining specific
elements in the figure.
24Conclusion and Discussion
- Summarize the findings and implications of the
work - Do not present specific results which should be
mentioned in Results - Present what can be concluded from the results
- Discussion puts into context the results of the
study - Highlight the key findings
- Show the interaction with other research
- Implication of findings
- Possible future research arising
- Accept or reject hypotheses
25References
- Give credits to whom they are due." This is where
you cite formally all your sources of
information. It is your formal manner of saying
"Thank you." Moreover, "Fair is Fair." In
addition, enumerating your sources of information
offers your readers the opportunity to verify or
redo your study. - References is a list of all the work referred to
within the main body of the text - All referenced work should be listed
- Different journals specify different formats
- The reference format for a journal article is
usually different from one for a book
26Appendices
- These are your provisions for any "excess
baggage." Attached all relevant materials
(tables, graphs, computations, photos, CDs, etc.)
cited or used in the study- all those relevant
stuff that you did not include in the body of
your report for reasons that they would only
clutter your presentation
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