Resources for oral presentations and written reports
Oral presentations
Written reports
- Simon Peyton Jones's Research skills (2011)
contains a brief and pleasant
section about how to write a good research paper; it is a companion to the
"How to give a good research talk" section cited above.
- Roy Levin and David D. Redell's
An
Evaluation of the Ninth SOSP Submissions –or– How (and
How Not) to Write a Good Systems Paper (1983) points out common
problems in technical papers, and gives suggestions for how to fix
them.
- The UNC Writing Center's Scientific
Reports (2011) describes how to write and organize a scientific research
report.
- David A. McMurrey's Online Technical
Writing (2006) contains many examples and much
discussion of technical writing. For example, it has a chapter on
recommendation and feasibility reports that contains several
sample reports.
- Barbara Gross Davis's Helping
Students Write Better in All Courses (1993) gives succinct
advice about how to teach writing. Invert the advice, and you can
learn a lot about how to write.
- William Strunk, Jr.'s The Elements of
Style (1918) is the classic style guide for American English
writing. It excels at showing how to omit needless
words.
- Proper citations are a hallmark of any solidly written report.
Citation
and Style Guides (2008) refers to several style guides; pick a
style suitable for your report and use it consistently. Especially
see its section "How to cite sources."
- For citations, please submit a working link to a freely-readable
copy if available, and also submit a working link to a URL based on
Digital Object Identifiers (DOIs) if available, as shown
in How
to find a DOI and create permanent links to online
articles. Here is an example
using Vancouver
system format (although you need not use this style, you should
be consistent about your citation style):
The citation's title hyperlinks to a freely-readable resource
<http://faculty.washington.edu/ajko/papers/Ko2011EndUserSoftwareEngineering.pdf>. Unfortunately,
these versions are often ephemeral or are preliminary versions, so
it's better to also include a DOI to the final, stable version even
if it's not freely readable.
The DOI reference in the above citation hyperlinks
to <http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/1922649.1922658>. If
your report uses an active format such as PDF or HTML, URLs should
be clickable.
- The Requirements for USENIX ATC '12 Authors provides templates for
computer science research papers. The USENIX
templates use a two-column format with 10-point font for most of
the text, on an 8½"×11" page. LaTeX
typically generates higher-quality output for technical papers,
but there are also templates for FrameMaker, groff, and Microsoft Word. An example of
the output format and an example
student paper are available.
- The Cabrillo Tidepool Study's Scientific
Report Rubric (1997) is the sort of thing we use when
evaluating your report.
© 2006–2012 Paul Eggert.
See copying rules.
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