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 your citations to scholarly sources, please
   submit a working link to a URL based on Digital Object Identifiers (DOIs), as
   shown
   in How
   to find a DOI and create permanent links to online
   articles. Here is an example:
   
    - Ko AJ, Abraham R, Beckwith L et al. The state of the art
     in end-user software engineering. ACM Comput Surv.
     2011;43(3):21:1–21:44. doi:10.1145/1922649.1922658.
 
   
   The DOI reference in the above citation hyperlinks
   to <http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/1922649.1922658>.
   For non-scholarly sources, use a URL that is as stable as possible. 
  - 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.
 
 
 © 2006–2011 Paul Eggert.
 See copying rules.
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