Writing Reports
Writing Reports
Writing Reports
An evaluative report
This report structure is often used when you have to research theory and apply it to a practical or real situation. It may
contain all or some of the following sections and headings (and necessary and relevant subheadings) depending on the
length of the assessment and of course the instructions given in your assessment task.
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Options for presenting the body of evaluative reports
Option 1:
You can have three separate sections (and headings and subheadings) for:
• theory
• observation
• evaluation/interpretation.
Option 2:
You can have two separate sections (and headings and subheadings) for:
• theory
• observation and evaluation/interpretation.
Option 3:
Separate sections (with headings and subheadings) for each component of the theory, each comprising of:
Title
This is a succinct statement of the problem, question or content being investigated.
Table of contents
This is a list of headings, tables, figures and plans that have been used in the report. It should include the page number next
to each item. The Table of Contents is placed on a separate page.
Introduction
This section sets the scene for the reader and includes:
• the aims or objectives of the exercise, or the purpose of the report, or report proposal
• the scope of the report – what the report covers, how the information or report is limited/constrained, and it may
include any relevant background information if it is a short report (e.g. definitions, review of similar research). If it is a
more comprehensive research report (i.e. longer report) the review of the literature is often given in a separate
section under its own heading
• an outline of how the sections/information will be presented.
Results
This section presents the results obtained from interpreting the data you have gathered. Present the information clearly,
concisely and record only facts. No personal opinions are included. Include any relevant graphs, tables or plans to
summarise the findings.
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Discussion or interpretation of results
This section discusses the results. The results are interpreted and compared to those of relevant studies/theories referred
to earlier in the report.
Conclusions
This section summarises the main points or findings of the investigation and discusses what the findings actually
mean. Ensure that the conclusion is consistent with the information presented in the body section. Don’t include any
new information in the conclusion.
List of references
List all the references that have been cited in the report (e.g. readings, research, captions, tables, graphs, plans, diagrams or
appendices).
Check the SCU Learning Zone for more related Quick Guides.
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