Laboratory Report
Laboratory Report
Introduction
Hypothesis and Rationale
Prediction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
The Cover Page should include a title and all members of the lab group. The title should be a concise,
informative description of what the lab report is about. All group members (first and last name) who
designed and/or participated in the experiment should be listed.
I.
INTRODUCTION
The Introduction has three purposes. It should identify what motivated the investigation, how the
investigation fits into the existing body of knowledge, and it should state the objectives of the
investigation.
The first and second paragraph of the introduction should be dedicated to explaining what motivated
the investigation and relating it to the existing body of knowledge on the topic. Inconsistencies,
unanswered questions, or new questions that arise from previous studies set the stage for the present
investigation. Often research must be conducted to collect relative background knowledge on
topics/concepts to the investigation.
Improving your research skills is essential to your development as a student and writer. There is an
abundance of information available in literature and on the Internet. Sources can be classified into two
categories: primary sources and secondary sources. Primary sources include journal articles,
dissertations, technical reports, or conference papers in which a scientist describes his or her original
work. These sources have been written purposely for the scientific community. From reading a primary
reference members of the scientific community can duplicate the research for their own purpose, check
the validity of the reported findings, or develop new hypotheses upon the reported finding. Secondary
sources are encyclopedias, textbooks, and articles in popular magazines. These sources are based on
primary references but include less technical reporting on methodology and data. Secondary sources are
written for the general audience who are not trained as scientists. As a young scientist secondary sources
are a good starting point from which to conduct research. Since secondary sources are based on primary
sources, examine the literatures reference section to identify the primary sources used.
Remember the first and second paragraph of the introduction should be dedicated to explaining what
motivated the investigation and relating it to the existing body of knowledge on the topic. For the
carbohydrate formal lab report, select ONE area of focus and conduct research. Use your research to
write the first two paragraphs of your report.
Research Focus Areas:
Nutrition and carbohydrates (diet perspective)
Photosynthesis and carbohydrates
Chemical indicators and carbohydrates (how do iodine and benedicts work)
Digestion and carbohydrates
The third paragraph of the introduction is a statement(s) of the purposes of the investigation. Reexamine the laboratory exercise you performed in class and determine what the goals of investigation
were. Through your writing you should demonstrate an understanding of laboratory goals and objectives.
II.
The Hypothesis section of the report should concisely state the testable explanation for the initial
problem or observation. In the carbohydrate report identify which food items you hypothesized were
monosaccharides, disaccharides, and polysaccharides. Then state your rationale for classifying the foods
as you did.
III.
PREDICTION
The Prediction section of the report should be written as an Ifthen statement. The if portion is
the stated hypothesis, and the then portion is what is predicted to occur if the hypothesis is true. In the
carbohydrate lab write your eight predictions in list form. For example:
1. If table sugar is a disaccharide, then a negative result will occur in the benedicts and iodine tests.
IV.
The Materials and Methods section describes what was done in the investigation. This is stated in full
sentences and well developed paragraph(s). Enough detail is used to allow the reader to replicate the
work. Generally known laboratory procedures do not need to be described however experimental
conditions involving volume, mass, concentration, pH, growth conditions, and temperature are items that
need to be included.
V.
RESULTS
The Results section of the laboratory report summarizes the findings of the experiment. The findings are
NOT explained in this section; they are only stated. The results section has two components: (Knisely,
p.21)
A text (written word) section which forms the body of the section that states the results.
A visual that illustrates the data that was recorded. This can include a data table or graph.
For the carbohydrate report, create in Word and embed Table 3 from the lab procedure
as your visual.
VI.
DISCUSSION
The Discussion section of the report analyzes and interprets the results. Possible explanations are
provided as well. The following are also included in the discussion section: (Knisely, p.21)
Statement on results that identifies if the hypotheses/predictions were supported, refuted, or not
conclusively shown. Avoid using the term prove.
For example,
VII.
REFERENCES
The Reference section should be a list of the primary and secondary sources that that were used to gather
background information or from which citations were taken. This should be typed using the proper APA
or MLA style.