Seminar Report Format
Seminar Report Format
may be included. However, it is your own report and you have to structure it according to the flow of overall logic and organization. Font size of Chapter and Title of the Chapter should be 16(with Bold), main headings 14(with Bold), sub headings(with Bold) & contents 12 with line spacing 1.5 and figure name 10(with Bold) using Times New Roman. 1. Introduction: In this chapter you formulate the problem that you want to address, the statement of a problem and its relevance, the initial goals you had, etc. without going into details. Here you also describe the structure of the rest of your report, indicating which chapter will address which issue.
2. Literature Survey: It should be as exhaustive as possible but related to your work.
The discussion on the literature may be organized under a separate chapter & titled suitably. Summarize the literature that you have read. Rather than literally copying the texts that you have read, you should present your own interpretation of the theory. This will help you in developing your own thinking discipline and technical language. The last part of this section must contain a brief mention of the gaps in the literature and a justification for undertaking your study/project.
3. Other Chapters: These chapters should be related to your title. If you are ready to implement on that particular title, then how are you going to carry this work. These are all things you need to put up in these chapters. 4. Conclusion (Last Chapter): This is one of the most important chapters and should be
carefully written. Here you evaluate your study, state which of the initial goals was reached and which not, mention the strong and weak points of your work, etc. You may point out the issues recommended for future research. State these clearly, in point-wise form if necessary, with respect to the original objective. Do not disguise "descriptions" of specific aspects, covered in the work as conclusions.
5. References: Each entry in the reference has a label. All references cited in the text body should be there in the Reference list and vice versa. Established acronyms may be used. E.g. AC, DC, ASME, ASTM, IIT, Jnl, etc., provided there is no likelihood of any confusion. Labeling. One of the following systems can be used for labeling the cited entries. The font size of the references should be 10. A numeric label arranged in a order of citation in the main text. This label is used in square brackets or as superscript at the point of citation, e.g. [34]. The references should be arranged together in the order of this numeric label. If you have referred any Book / IEEE Paper / Journals, then Reference should be like: author names separated by ,(coma). For entries with multiple authors,
include the surnames of the first author followed by et al. Followed by Title of the paper / journal / Book(with bold italic) within the (double coots) followed by publisher and year of publication.
Ex: [18]. Osorio, J. and Bulchand, J. Moving towards 2020 : A Tentative Approach to ITEM. In A. Tatnall, O.C. Kereteletswe and A. Visscher, eds., ITEM 2010, IFIP AICT 348. Springer, Heidelberg, pp. 104-112, 2011.
If you have referred any urls, then References should be like: [1]. url: followed exact url(with Bold and hyper link). Ex: [1]. url: http://exyxz.com/information/security/attacks.html
6. The Appendices. Appendices are useful for those things that you consider important,
but that do not fit in the main presentation of your work and breaks the regular flow. There could be several reasons for using appendices: the material is too long and has too many details (e.g. the specifications of instruments or equipment), you have formulated a theorem, the proof of which is too long for the main text, you want to include a user manual for the software that you have come across (strongly recommended!), you want to present the schematics of a hardware design, experimental set-up, etc. Appendices tend to occupy many pages. Think carefully on what you want to include. For example, complete listings of the source code that you have written are seldom interesting. Instead, add a flow chart. Avoid describing the test set-up where a schematic can be easily used. Appendices are numbered as Appendix I, Appendix II, etc. or using capital English letters e.g. Appendix A, Appendix B, etc. If you have just one appendix, then it is not numbered.