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Project Report Guidelines and Format

This document provides comprehensive guidelines for preparing B.Tech project reports in the Computer Science Engineering Department at COER University. It outlines the structure of the report, including required sections such as Introduction, Literature Review, Methodology, Results and Discussion, and References, along with formatting specifications for text, tables, figures, and binding. Students are instructed to adhere to these guidelines to ensure consistency and quality in their submissions.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
19 views19 pages

Project Report Guidelines and Format

This document provides comprehensive guidelines for preparing B.Tech project reports in the Computer Science Engineering Department at COER University. It outlines the structure of the report, including required sections such as Introduction, Literature Review, Methodology, Results and Discussion, and References, along with formatting specifications for text, tables, figures, and binding. Students are instructed to adhere to these guidelines to ensure consistency and quality in their submissions.

Uploaded by

Lòne Wølf
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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GUIDELINES FOR B.

TECH PROJECT
REPORT PREPARATION

COMPUTER SCIENCE ENGINEERING DEPARTMENT

COLLEGE OF SMART COMPUTING


COER UNIVERSITY, ROORKEE
UTTARAKHAND
Guidelines for preparation of Project Reports

Preamble
The aim of this document is to present the basic guidelines on how a report
should be constructed for B.Tech project. Any student must confer to the rules
and guidelines that have been laid out in the following sections while writing
their final report. It must also be kept in mind that the soft copy of the report that
any student prepares will also have to be submitted in the institute library for
future reference.

1.​Organization of the Project Report


This project report shall be presented in a number of chapters, starting with
Introduction and ending with Summary and Conclusions. Each of the other
chapters will have a precise title reflecting the contents of the chapter. A chapter
can be subdivided into sections, subsections and sub subsection so as to present
the content discretely and with due emphasis. When the work comprises two or
more mutually independent investigations, the project report may be divided into
two or more parts, each with an appropriate title. However, the numbering of
chapters will be continuous right through.
Project Report (Important)

1.​ Title Page


2.​ Certificate
3.​ Declaration
4.​ Acknowledgements
5.​ Table of Contents
6.​ List of Figures
7.​ List of Tables
8.​ Introduction
9.​ Literature Review
10.​Methodology
11.​ Results and Discussion
12.​Conclusion and Future Work
13.​References/Bibliography
14.​Appendices (if any)
15.​Abstract

1.1​Introduction
The title of Chapter 1 shall be Introduction. It shall justify and highlight the
problem posed, define the topic and explain the aim and scope of the work
presented in the project report. It may also highlight the significant contributions
from the investigation.
1.2​Review of Literature
This shall normally form Chapter 2 and shall present a critical appraisal of the
previous work published in the literature pertaining to the topic of the
investigation. The extent and emphasis of the chapter shall depend on the nature
of the investigation.

1.3​Methodology
The reporting on the investigation shall be presented in one or more chapters
with appropriate chapter titles.
●​ Due importance shall be given to experimental setups, procedures adopted,
techniques developed, methodologies developed and adopted.
●​ While important derivations/formulae should normally be presented in the
text of these chapters, extensive and long treatments, copious details and
tedious information, detailed results in tabular and graphical forms may be
presented in Appendices. Representative data in table and figures may,
however, be included in appropriate chapters.
●​ Figures and tables should be presented immediately following their first
mention in the text. Short tables and figures (say, less than half the writing
area of the page) should be presented within the text, while large table and
figures may be presented on separate pages.
●​ Equations should form separate lines with appropriate paragraph
separation above and below the equation line, with equation numbers
flushed to the right.

1.4​Results and Discussions


This shall form the penultimate chapter of the project report and shall include a
thorough evaluation of the investigation carried out and bring out the
contributions from the study. The discussion shall logically lead to inferences and
conclusions as well as scope for possible further future work.
1.5​Summary and Conclusions
This will be the final chapter of the project report. A brief report of the work
carried out shall form the first part of the Chapter. Conclusions derived from the
logical analysis presented in the Results and Discussions Chapter shall be
presented and clearly enumerated, each point stated separately. Scope for future
work should be stated lucidly in the last part of the chapter.

1.6​Appendix
Detailed information, lengthy derivations, raw experimental observations etc. are
to be presented in the separate appendices, which shall be numbered in Roman
Capitals (e.g. “Appendix IV”).

1.7​References
➢​Number all the references.
➢​Use a chronological bibliography.
➢​Each listed reference in the bibliography must be cited in the text of the
report.
➢​For a book give the name(s) of author(s), title of book, edition, chapter
number, and page numbers, publisher, location and year of publication.
Example:
[25] Jones, C.D., A.B. Smith, and E.F. Roberts, Efficient Real-Time Fine-
Grained Concurrency, 2nd Ed., Ch. 3, pp. 145-7, Tata McGraw-Hill, New Delhi,
1994.
➢​For a journal/conference paper, give the name(s) of authors, title of paper,
name of journal/ conference, volume and issue number (for journal), page
numbers, and month and year of publication. Example:
[23] Prasad, A.B., Kumar, C.D., Jones, E.F., and Frost, P.: “Cable Television
Broadband Architectures”, IEEE Comm. Magazine, vol. 39, pp. 134-141, June
1991.
➢​For a World Wide Web page, give the author or company's name and the
URL.
Sample References
1.​ Abraham, J., F.V. Bracco, and R.D. Reitz (1985) Comparison of Omputed and
Measured Premixed Charge Engine Combustion. Combustion and Flame, Vol. 60, 309 –
322.
2.​ Affes, H., N. Trigui., D. Smith, and V. Griaznov (1998) Shape Optimization of IC
Engine Ports and Chambers. SAE Paper No. 980127.
3.​ Anderson, J.D. (1995) Computational Fluid Dynamics. McGraw Hill, Singapore 1995.
4.​ Arcoumanis, C., A.F. Bicen, and J.H. Whitelaw (1993) Measurments in a Motored
Four Stroke Reciprocating Model Engine. Journal of Fluids Engineering, Vol. 104.
5.​ Arcoumanis, C., J.H. Whitelaw, W. Hentschel, K.P. Schindler (1994) Flow and
Combustion in a Transparent 1.9 Litre Direct Injection Diesel Engine. Proc. Instn.
Mech. Engrs., Vol. 208.
6.​ Arcoumanis, C., Z. Hu, and J.H. Whitelaw (1993) Steady Flow Characterization of
Tumble-Generating Four – Valve Cylinder Heads. Proc.Instn. Mech. Engrs. Vol 207.

1.7 Acknowledgements
The acknowledgments by the candidate shall follow the citation of literature,
signed by him/her, with date.
Statement of Thesis Preparation
1.​Thesis title
2.​Degree for which the thesis is submitted
3 Thesis Guide was referred to for preparing the thesis.
4.​Specifications regarding thesis format have been closely followed.
5.​The contents of the thesis have been organized based on the guidelines.
6.​The thesis has been prepared without resorting to plagiarism.
7.​All sources used have been cited appropriately.
8 The thesis has not been submitted elsewhere for a degree.

2​PROJECT REPORT FORMAT


2.1​Paper
2.1.1​Quality
The project report shall be printed on white bond paper, whiteness 95% or above,
weight 70 gram or more per square meter.

2.1.2​Size
The size of the paper shall be standard A 4; height 297 mm, width 210 mm.

2.1.3​Type Setting, Text Processing and Printing


The text shall be printed employing a LaserJet or Inkjet printer, the text having
been processed using a standard text processor. The standard font shall be Times
New Roman of 12 pts. with 1.5 line spacing.

2.1.4​Page Format
The Printed Sheets shall have the following written area and margins:
Top Margin 15 mm
Head Height 3 mm
Head Separation 12 mm
Bottom Margin 22 mm
Footer 3 mm
Foot Separation 10 mm
Text Height 245 mm
Text Width 160 mm
When header is not used the top margin shall be 30 mm.

Left and Right Margins


The candidates shall have the options of single or double sided printing
●​ ​Single sided/odd number page (in double sided printing)
Left Margin 30mm
Right Margin 20 mm
●​​Double sided/ even numbered page
Left Margin 20mm
Right Margin 30mm

2.1.5​Pagination
Page numbering in the text of the project report shall be Hindu Arabic numerals
at the center of the footer. But when the candidate opts for header style the page
number shall appear at the right and left top corner for the odd and even number
pages, respectively. Page number “1” for the first page of the Introduction
chapter shall not appear in print; only the second page will bear the number “2”.
The subsequent chapters shall begin on a fresh page (fresh odd number page in
case of double sided printing). When header style is chosen the first page of each
chapter will not have the header and the page number shall be printed at the
center of the footer. Pagination for pages before the Introduction chapter shall be
in lower case Roman numerals, e.g., “ii”.
2.1.6​Header
When the header style is chosen, the header can have the Chapter number and
Section number (e.g., Chapter 2, Section 3) on even numbered page headers and
Chapter title or Section title on the odd numbered page header.
2.1.7​Paragraph format
Vertical space between paragraphs shall be about 2.5 line spacing. The first line
of each paragraph should normally be indented by five characters or 12mm. A
candidate may, however, choose not to indent if (s) he has provided sufficient
paragraph separation.
A paragraph should normally comprise more than one line. A single line of a
paragraph shall not be left at the top or bottom of a page (that is, no windows or
orphans should be left).
The word at the right end of the first line of a page or paragraph should, as far as
possible, not be hyphenated.

2.2​Chapter and Section Format


2.2.1​Chapter
Each chapter shall begin on a fresh page (odd number page in case of double
sided printing) with an additional top margin of about 75mm. Chapter number (in
Hindu Arabic)
and title shall be printed at the center of the line in 6mm font size (18pt) in bold
face using both upper and lower case (all capitals or small capitals shall not be
used). A vertical gap of about 25mm shall be left between the Chapter number
and Chapter title lines and between chapter title line and the first paragraph.

2.2.2​Sections and Subsections


A chapter can be divided into Sections, Subsections and Sub subsections so as to
present different concepts separately. Sections and subsections can be numbered
using decimal points, e.g. 2.2 for the second section in Chapter 2 and
2.3.4 for the fourth Subsection in third Section of Chapter 2. Chapters, Sections
and Subsections shall be included in the contents with page numbers flushed to
the right. Further subsections need not be numbered or included in the contents.
The Section and Sub Section titles along with their numbers in 5 and 4mm (16
and 14 pt.) fonts, respectively, in bold face shall be flushed to the left (not
centered) with 15 mm space above and below these lines. In further subdivisions
character size of 3 and 3.5 with bold face, small caps, all caps and italics may be
used for the titles flushed left or centered. These shall not feature in the contents.

2.2.3​Table / Figure Format


Small size table and figures (less than half of writing area of a page) should be
incorporated within the text, while larger ones may be presented on separate
pages. Table and figures shall be numbered chapter wise.
For example, the fourth figure in chapter 5 will bear the number Figure 5.4. Table
number and title will be placed above the table while the figure number and
caption will be located below the figure. Reference for Table and Figures
reproduced from elsewhere shall be cited in the last and separate line in the table
and figure caption, e.g. (after McGregor [12]).

3​Auxiliary Format
3.1​Binding
The evaluation copies of the project report may be spiral bound or soft bound.
The final hard bound copies to be submitted after the viva voce examination will
be accepted during the submission of project report

3.2​Front Covers
The front covers shall contain the following details:
●​ Full title of project report in 6 mm 22 point's size font properly centered
and positioned at the top.
●​ Full name of the candidate in 4.5 mm 15 point's size font properly centered
at the middle of the page.
●​ A 40 mm dia replica of the Institute emblem followed by the name of
department, name of the Institute and the year of submission, each in a
separate line and properly centered and located at the bottom of page.

3.2.1​Lettering
All lettering shall be embossed in gold.
3.2.2​Bound back
The degree, the name of the candidate and the year of submission shall also be
embossed on the bound (side) in gold.

3.3​Blank Sheets
In addition to the white sheets (binding requirement) two white sheets shall be
put at the beginning and the end of the project report

3.4​Title Sheet
This shall be the first printed page of the project report and shall contain the
submission statement: the Project Report submitted in partial fulfilment of the
requirements of the Degree B. Tech, the name and Roll No. of the candidate,
name of the Supervisor, Department, Institute and year of submission. Sample
copy of the 'Title Sheet' is appended (Specimen 'A')

3.5​Dedication Sheet
If the candidate so desires(s) he may dedicate his/her project report, which
statement shall follow the title page. If included, this shall form the page 1 of the
auxiliary sheets but shall not have a page number.

3.6​Approval Sheet
In the absence of a dedication sheet this will form the first page and in that case
shall not have a page number. Otherwise, this will bear the number two in Roman
lower case “ii” at the centre of the footer.
The top line shall be:

Report Approval for B. Tech Projects


The Approval Sheets are to be included only in the hard bound copies which
are submitted after the successful viva voce examination.
A sample copy of the Approval Sheet is appended (Specimen `D')

3.7​Abstract
The 500 word abstract shall highlight the important features of the project report
and shall correspond to the electronic version to be submitted to the Library for
inclusion in the website. The Abstract in the project report, however, shall have
two more parts, namely, the layout of the project report giving a brief chapter
wise description of the work and the key words.

3.8​Contents
The contents shall follow the Abstract and shall enlist the titles of the chapters,
section and subsection using decimal notation, as in the text, with corresponding
page number against them, flushed to the right.

3.8.1​List of Figures and Tables


Two separate lists of Figure captions and Table titles along with their numbers
and corresponding page numbers against them shall follow the Contents.

3.9​Abbreviation Notation and Nomenclature


A complete and comprehensive list of all abbreviations, notations and
nomenclature including Greek alphabets with subscripts and superscripts shall
be provided after the list of tables and figures. (As far as possible, generally
accepted symbols and notation should be used). Auxiliary page from dedication
(if any) to abbreviations shall be numbered using Roman numerals in lower case,
while the text starting from the Introduction shall be in Hindu Arabic.
(The first pages in the both the cases shall not bear a page number).

3.10​A Declaration of Academic Honesty and Integrity


A declaration of Academic honesty and integrity is required to be included along
with every project report after the approval sheet. The format of this declaration
is given in Specimen `C' attached.

*****************************
Specimen 'A': Title Sheet

(TITLE OF THE PROJECT)


Project report submitted
in partial fulfillment of the requirement for the degree of

Bachelor of Technology
Computer Science and Engineering

By

Name of the student


(Roll No.)

SUPERVISOR (12pt.)
WXYZ ZXI (14pt. Bold)

DEPARTMENT OF COMPUTER SCIENCE & ENGINEERING


COLLEGE OF SMART COMPUTING, COER UNIVERSITY
ROORKEE, UTTARAKHAND (16pt. bold)
(Sample Title Page)

PROJECT TITLE (24pt. bold)

PROJECT SYNOPSIS (14pt. bold)

BACHELOR OF TECHNOLOGY (14 Pt. bold)


Computer Science and Engineering (16pt.)

SUBMITTED BY (12pt.)

XYZ ABC (Roll No)(14pt Bold)


Feb 2024 (12pt.)

SUPERVISOR (12pt.)
WXYZ ZXI (14pt. Bold)

DEPARTMENT OF COMPUTER SCIENCE & ENGINEERING


COLLEGE OF SMART COMPUTING, COER UNIVERSITY
ROORKEE, UTTARAKHAND (16pt. bold)
Specimen `B' CERTIFICATE

It is certified that the work contained in the project report titled “Title of
the Project Report,” by “Name of the Student,” has been carried out
under my/our supervision and that this work has not been submitted
elsewhere for a degree

Signature of Supervisor(s)
Name(s)
CSE DEPARTMENT
COER UNIVERSITY
Month, Year
Specimen `C' – Declaration

I declare that this written submission represents my ideas in my own words and
where others' ideas or words have been included, I have adequately cited and
referenced the original sources. I also declare that I have adhered to all principles
of academic honesty and integrity and have not misrepresented or fabricated or
falsified any idea/data/fact/source in my submission. I understand that any
violation of the above will be cause for disciplinary action by the Institute and
can also evoke penal action from the sources which have thus not been properly
cited or from whom proper permission has not been taken when needed.

(Signature)

(Name of the student)

(Roll No.)
Date: ​
Project Presentation

1.​ Slide Deck (PowerPoint/Google Slides)


2.​ Introduction Slide
3.​ Problem Statement Slide
4.​ Objectives Slide
5.​ Methodology Slide
6.​ Results and Discussion Slide
7.​ Conclusion Slide
8.​ Future Work Slide
9.​ References Slide

Project Report (Important)

1.​ Title Page


2.​ Certificate
3.​ Declaration
4.​ Acknowledgements
5.​ Table of Contents
6.​ List of Figures
7.​ List of Tables
8.​ Chapter 1 Introduction
9.​ Chapter 2 Literature Review
10.​Chapter 3 Methodology
11.​Chapter 4 Results and Discussion
12.​Chapter 5 Conclusion and Future Work
13.​References/Bibliography
14.​Appendices (if any)
15.​Abstract

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