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Use the menu below to find out how to write each part of a scientific
report.
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The Introduction
The table below offers guidelines for effective
scientific report introductions..
| Questions
to address: |
How
to address them: |
| What
is the problem? |
-
Describe
the problem investigated.
-
Summarize
relevant research to provide context, key terms, and concepts
so your reader can understand the experiment.
|
| Why
is it important? |
-
Review
relevant
research to provide rationale. (What conflict or unanswered
question, untested population, untried method in existing research
does your experiment address? What findings of others are you
challenging or extending?)
|
| What
solution (or step toward a solution) do you propose? |
|
Additional
tips:
-
Move from general to specific: problem in real world/research
literature --> your experiment.
-
Engage your reader: answer the questions, "What did you
do?" "Why should I care?"
-
Make clear the links between problem and solution, question
asked and research design, prior research and your experiment.
-
Be selective, not exhaustive, in choosing studies to cite
and amount of detail to include. (In general, the more relevant an
article is to your study, the more space it deserves and the later
in the Introduction it appears.)
-
Ask your instructor whether to summarize results and/or conclusions
in the Introduction.
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