This document provides guidelines for writing an integrated science lab report, including formatting requirements and sections to include. The report should be typed in 12 point Times New Roman font, double spaced with 1" margins. It must include a heading with name, class, block and date. Key sections are: I) Problem Statement, II) Purpose, III) Hypothesis, IV) Variables, V) Materials, VI) Procedure, VII) Results, and VIII) Discussion. The Discussion section should be at least one page and cover observations, data explanation, conclusions, sources of error, and future experiments.
This document provides guidelines for writing an integrated science lab report, including formatting requirements and sections to include. The report should be typed in 12 point Times New Roman font, double spaced with 1" margins. It must include a heading with name, class, block and date. Key sections are: I) Problem Statement, II) Purpose, III) Hypothesis, IV) Variables, V) Materials, VI) Procedure, VII) Results, and VIII) Discussion. The Discussion section should be at least one page and cover observations, data explanation, conclusions, sources of error, and future experiments.
A
well-‐structured
lab
report
is
important
for
displaying
lab
information,
understanding
the
experiments
performed,
and
proving
that
proper
scientific
techniques
were
used.
Scientists
write
lab
reports
so
that
the
uninformed
reader
can
understand
the
entire
experiment.
There
are
many
ways
of
writing
up
a
scientific
lab
report,
but
I
require
the
format
below.
Use
this
as
a
guideline
for
all
formal
lab
reports.
Spelling
and
grammar
will
count
so
be
sure
to
proofread!!!
*The
report
should
be
TYPED
in
12
point
Times
New
Roman
font,
double
spaced
with
1”
margins.
It
should
also
include
a
clear
heading
with
your
name,
class
(Integrated
Science),
block,
and
date.
Label
your
sections
with
the
following
bold
headings:
I. Problem
Statement:
the
question
you
are
trying
to
answer
• This
should
be
one
sentence
long
and
stated
as
a
question.
II. Purpose:
this
should
be
2
paragraphs
in
length
and
should
describe
as
well
as
give
background
information
to
the
experiment.
Someone
reading
this
section
should
be
able
to
understand
your
experiment’s
background
and
objective
without
any
prior
knowledge
of
what
you
did.
The
purpose
should
include:
• The
purpose
of
the
experiment
(What
are
you
trying
to
find
out?)
• A
brief
overview
of
the
experiment
(What
are
you
going
to
do?)
• Scientific
concepts
essential
for
understanding
the
experiment.
• You
need
to
use
at
least
one
reputable
source
to
help
you
write
about
the
scientific
concepts.
This
source
should
be
cited
on
a
works
cited
page
at
the
end
of
the
report.
III. Hypothesis:
a
statement
of
your
educated
guess
as
to
the
results
of
the
experiment.
• This
must
be
one
“If…
then…
because”
statement.
• Provide
the
scientific
reasoning
for
the
hypothesis
(because…)
IV.
Variables:
• Independent
Variable:
Identify
the
variable
that
you
manipulated
or
changed.
• Dependent
Variable:
Identify
the
variable
that
you
measured.
• Control
Group:
Identify
the
group
that
you
used
as
a
basis
for
comparison.
• Factors
Held
Constant:
Items
that
you
held
constant
throughout
the
experiment
(Ex.,
sample
size,
amount
of
time
each
trial
was
run)
V. Materials:
an
item-‐by-‐item
list
of
ALL
equipment
used
in
the
experiment.
• This
should
be
a
simple
but
complete
list
• Make
sure
that
the
quantity
and
size
of
each
item
is
listed.
VI. Procedure:
step
by
step
instructions
to
explain
exactly
how
the
experiment
was
performed.
• The
key
here
is
to
make
sure
that
someone
with
no
idea
how
the
experiment
was
performed
could
replicate
it
exactly.
• This
should
be
numbered
step
by
step.
• This
should
be
written
in
complete
sentences
and
passive
voice.
(DO
NOT
say
he,
she,
I,
we,
they,
or
you!)
VII. Results:
this
is
where
you
show
the
results
of
your
experiment.
• There
should
be
at
least
one
table
and
one
graph,
unless
otherwise
stated.
• There
should
be
no
writing
in
this
section.
Data
presentation
only.
• Make
sure
all
tables
and
graphs
have
appropriate
titles,
labels,
and
units.
VIII. Discussion:
this
is
the
longest
section
of
your
report
(bare
minimum
of
one
page).
It
is
essential
that
this
portion
of
the
lab
is
well
organized,
flows
smoothly
and
sounds
persuasive.
It
should
cover
the
following:
• Pertinent
observations
while
performing
the
lab.
• A
full
explanation
of
the
data
and
results
section.
• The
conclusion
and
how
your
hypothesis
relates
to
the
conclusion.
• What
the
results/conclusion
tell
the
reader.
• Sources
of
error
and
how
the
experiment
could
have
been
performed
better.
• Other
experiments
that
could
be
performed
which
relate
to
your
experiment
for
further
insight
into
your
conclusions.
Might
you
test
a
different
variable
in
the
future?
Lab
Report
Rubric
Points
Points
Lab
Section
Comments
Possible
Earned
Problem
2
Statement
Purpose
12