Resources for written reports and oral presentations
Crediting others
Proper citations are a hallmark of any solidly written report,
and are often useful in other forms of publications.
Citation
and Style Guides (2014) refers to several style guides; pick a
suitable style and use it consistently. Especially
see its section "How to cite sources."
For citations, 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. Here is an example citation
using Vancouver
system format:
George Gopen and Judith Swan's
The
Science of Scientific Writing (1990) briefly summarizes some of
the science behind writing clear writing for scientific audiences.
The Cabrillo Tidepool Study's Scientific
Report Rubric (1997) is the sort of thing we use when
evaluating your report.
Oral presentations
Simon Peyton Jones's Research skills (2014)
has a section "How to give a good research talk"
almost makes it look easy and covers the essentials.
He's brave enough to point you to a video of himself, giving the talk.
The Science
and Engineering Library (SEL) has a learning center
with equipment with which you can rehearse your
presentation. Reserve a time slot by visiting the circulation
desk in Boelter 8270.
Caroline McCullen's Student
Presentation Rubric (1997) is the sort of thing we use
when evaluating your presentation.