English 3001: Final Report Guidelines
By now we have gone through many of the
typical steps involved in successfully producing long-term professional
research projects. You should have most of your observations and
interviews finished by this point, and you also should have collected the
writing samples you might report on, and revisited the theoretical pieces
that we have read (and those that you have found on your own). The
final major step is to complete a formal, polished, analytical report of
your findings and conclusions. The deadline for publishing the rough draft
of the final report is noon on December 2nd.
general requirements
content
Include concise, well-written description
and analysis of your research materials. Include an appropriate Introduction
and a Conclusion—other sections and subsections, and what to call them,
are up to you. Introduce your writer, the research setting, the work
that your writer does, and the relations with others that influence this
writing; then devote most of the report to insightful, substantive analysis
of whichever aspects of your materials have arisen as most interesting
and worthy of attention. Include whatever supporting materials will
help--appropriate quotations, summaries of relevant points or concepts
from outside sources, and any charts, tables, or other visual aids that
would clarify any of your analysis.
format
In most professional settings, acceptable formats for formal reports tend to differ from the standard structure for traditional college essays. First of all, while reports do tend to focus clearly and consistently on a particular topic, they don’t necessarily have a unified focus throughout all parts of the report on particular findings about that topic. In other words, reports, and the results they report, can often seem somewhat scattered in comparison to a unified college-level essay. Also, those who read a report might not read the entire report—another difference from a college-level essay. Accordingly, professional reports typically contain concise, well-labeled sections (and, where appropriate, sub-sections), and these sections are clearly labeled in a table of contents.
While Susan Kleimann’s article was published
in a book (and therefore follows some of the standard requirements of an
essay format), some of its structural features resemble those of a professional
report. For your final report, follow the basic structure of her
article, and label your first section (which might have subsections) “Introduction.”
Note that in Kleimann's essay, sections and subsections (and even sub-sub-sections!)
are clearly differentiated from each other by different font styles and
sizes. Include all sections and subsections in a table of contents,
and link each section and subsection in the table of contents to its section
in the report.
writing style
Although many of you will go into fields other than "business," the polished writing that you produce in your careers is more likely to follow McKeown's criteria for business writing than those he lists for literary writing--follow the general rules he gives for business writing, and also the tips we will discuss near the end of the semester on "Plain English." The writing in this report should be the best, most polished writing you've done in this class so far, and it should reflect the work you've done this semester to improve your own writing style. Give yourself plenty of time to edit and proofread your work, and consider asking trusted others to look for specific problem areas you still know about in your writing.
Otherwise, what you do with your report
is up to you; be creative, original, and amazingly insightful. And
see me if you have questions.