Guidelines For Preparing A Formal Laboratory Report
Guidelines For Preparing A Formal Laboratory Report
Title
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Data and Results
Discussion
Conclusions and Summary
Acknowledgements
References
Abstract
• Should be brief
• Describe the topic, the scope, findings, and conclusions
• Must be written last
• Seldom exceed 200 words
Introduction
• Should describe the background information on the problem and the objectives of the current
project.
Discussion
• What do the results mean?
• Discuss sources of errors and propose remedies, if appropriate.
Conclusions
• Directions for future work are suitably expressed here.
Acknowledgements
• No specific rule about this and can be placed after the title page.
References
• Should be arranged alphabetically.
• Sources for stated facts, paragraphs, tables, and figures should be cited properly.
• Use the (Author, Year) format for in-text citation.
Attachments
• You are required to submit photocopies of your data.
CHEM 123.1: SPECTROSCOPIC METHODS OF ANALYSIS
Experimental Procedures. The procedures for the experiments will be released as needed.
Experimental Plans. Before conducting your experiments always consult and show your plan to the
instructor. There is no strict format for a “to-do-list” – a timeline, a narrative, a flowchart, etc.
Data and Notes. Prepare for table/s for the data that you anticipate during the lab.