Themes
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Report-writing factors
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Things to look out for:
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Formality
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Formal punctuation
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- Avoid contractions
- Avoid exclamation marks
- Use of commas to separate clauses
- Use of colons to introduce lists and certain quotations
- Use of semi-colons to separate lists of clauses / join two independent clauses
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Conciseness
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- Avoid wordiness
- Say things in the shortest way possible
- Swap phrasal verbs (e.g. ‘live up to) for single-word verbs (e.g. ‘achieve’)
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Specificity
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- Re-use keywords from the task regularly
- Avoid unnecessary use of big words
- Avoid generalisations
- Swap figurative language for literal language
- One idea per main body paragraph
- No ideas spread over multiple paragraphs
- No paragraphs with multiple ideas
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Person / voice
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- Use the third person voice
- Use declarative statements
- Appropriate use of active and passive voice
- Avoid informal words (adjectives / verbs)
- Avoid subjective / emotive language
- Avoid personal pronouns
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Academic caution
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- Avoid definite words (e.g. ‘must’ / ‘all’)
- Use cautious language (e.g. ‘can’ / ‘some’)
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Language
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Generalisation
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- Avoid inaccurate generalisation
- Use generalisation to remove unneeded information
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Signposting language
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- Language that indicates what is to follow
- Language that recognises what has already been said
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Linking words
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- Use of linking words to join clauses / sentences
- Use of linking words to join paragraphs
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Referencing words
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- Use of referencing words in place of nouns that have already been introduced
- Appropriate use of keywords in place of reference words to maintain focus (e.g. one use of keyword per paragraph)
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Report structuring
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Section ordering
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Reports should include the following elements in this order:
- Title page
- Executive summary
- Contents page
- Introduction
- Findings section (the main body)
- Conclusion
- Recommendations section
- Reference list
- Appendices
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Paragraph structuring
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Main body paragraph structuring
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Approximately 150-200 words each:
- Topic sentence
- Evidence
- Interpretation
- Explanation
- Concluding sentence
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Executive summary structuring
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Approximately 10% of the total report word count:
- The purpose of the work (key problems and objectives)
- Methods used for research
- Main conclusions reached
- Recommendations
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Introductory paragraph structuring
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Approximately 150 words:
- Introductory sentence
- Background sentences
- Thesis statement (same order of ideas as included in main body paragraphs)
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Concluding paragraph structuring
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Approximately 150 words:
- Introductory sentence
- Thesis statement (same order of ideas as included in main body paragraphs)
- Background sentences
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Recommendations
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- Approximately 250 words in total
- Approximately 30-50 words per recommendation
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Appendices
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- One appendix per main body paragraph
- Appendices presented in same order as in main body paragraphs
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Evidence
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Quotation punctuation and formatting
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- Use of quotation marks
- Use of citations
- Avoid use of inverted commas in place of quotation marks
- Use colons (:) to introduce quotes that are 1+ sentence in length
- Use square brackets ([]) to paraphrase a word / phrase within a quote
- Use ellipsis (…) to remove parts of quotes that aren’t relevant
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Paraphrasing
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Summarisation
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- Use of citations where appropriate
- Introduce summaries of sentences / independent clauses with colons
- Introduce summaries of dependent clauses without colons
- Use of semi-colons to separate summaries of sentences / independent clauses
- Use of commas to separate summaries of short phrases
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Document formatting
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Separating paragraphs
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- Use of line breaks to separate paragraphs
- OR, use of indentation to separate paragraphs
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Headers
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Page numbers
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Subheadings
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- Use of subheadings for each report section
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Spellchecker
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- Removal of spelling errors
- Removal of grammatical errors
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