Lab Report Instructions
Lab Report Instructions
Table of Contents
How to Write a Lab Report
I Before you Begin
A. A Lab Report is ...........................................................................................4
B. Define the Report Question .........................................................................4
C. Audience and Purpose..................................................................................4
D. Why Write Well? .........................................................................................4
E. Lab Report Elements....................................................................................5
F. Tense ............................................................................................................6
G. Why This Format? .......................................................................................6
This is a Reference
It is not intended to be read from beginning to end. Information has been organized to
provide succinct examples of writing engineering documents. Turn to the section you
need help with and look at the examples.
Lab Reports
A A Lab Report is
Explanation
Students do not understand how to sell their work/results. They have difficulty understanding
what needs to be explained to the audience and what does not. They assume the audience knows
what they know.
E Lab Report Elements
A report is created using these characteristics.
Self-Supporting Document
This document can stand on its own. You are presenting enough information for the
reader to understand the basis of your arguments. Other documents may be
referenced for further investigation by the reader, such as a lab manual or journal article.
This document requires Name, Title, Page Number, and Dates. These are essential
elements of formatting. Place your name or title with the page number in the header.
Standard Formatting
This document follows standard academic formatting guidelines. These include 12pt
Font, 1 margins, and headings which subdivide the information into manageable
sections, with one heading per page minimum. Your instructor may have more stringent
requirements.
Graphic Numbering
This document uses visuals. Each graphic, such as: figures, tables, pictures,
equations, etc, is labeled and numbered sequentially. Word will manage this task for
yousearch Help for Captions and Cross-references.
IMRD Format
This document follows the IMRD traditional report writing standard. It contains the
following sections in this order: Introduction, Methods, Results, and Discussion.
Introduction provides background and the question addressed, methods describes how that
question was answered, results show the resulting data from the experiment and discussion is the
authors interpretation of those results. Often results and discussion are combined.
Active Voice
This document encourages active voice. In active voice, the subject of a sentence is
doing the action, such as, I performed the experiment. This is different from the
passive voice where the subject is receiving the action, such as, the experiment was performed.
Active voice adds clarity. It is becoming widely used, but you should still check with your
instructor for their preference.
Persuasive
Past Tense
This document uses past tense. As a rule of thumb, past tense is used to describe
work you did over the course of the report timeline.
Present Tense
This report uses present tense. As a rule of thumb, present tense is used to describe
knowledge and facts that were known before you started.
Over the course of several hundred years, the standard IMRD format of the scientific paper was
adopted as a standard. By the 1970s, nearly all academic journals required this standard for
scientific experimental reporting. The basic outline is shown below.
The report revolves around the solving of a specific question, described in the introduction and
answered in the discussion.
II How to Write a Lab Report
Report Sections Explanation
A.1 Title Page
A.2 Abstract
A.3 Table of Contents
Background / Theory
In this section, you describe what you
Purpose are trying to find and why.
Background and motivation are used to
A.4 Introduction provide the reader with a reason to read
Governing Equations
the report.
Discovery Question
(DQ)
Experiment Overview
In this section, you explain how
question addressed is answered.
Apparatus
Clearly explain your work so it could
A.5 Methods be repeated.
Equipment Table
Procedures
Units!
Future Work
A.8 References
A.9 Appendices Raw Data, Sample Calcs, Lab Notebook, etc.
Color Coding
A.2 Abstract
The abstracts purpose is to summarize the information contained in the report for someone who
doesnt have the time or resources to read it. Its inclusion as a report section is slightly
misleading. In many ways, the abstract is a document all on its own; it includes all the same
parts of your report and its major findings.
Quantitative results and their uncertainties should be included when possible. It must contain
parts from each major section of your report. Many times this is the only thing anyone will read
about your report. It should be no more than 400 words. This is not a teaser.
State objective
Introduction of report
immediately
Methods
Word Count:
Results 110
Discussion
Show future
direction
Quantitative Discuss
Results Uncertainties
You might be tempted to write this first, as it is appears first chronologically in the report;
however, because the abstract is a summary of the entire report, you should write it last. This is
when you will be most familiar with the report and its major findings.
Background /
Theory
Provide
motivation for
people to read on
Governing
Equations
Equations are
numbered and
explained
Purpose
Discovery
Question (DQ)
Explicitly stating the report question in the text of the introduction will help you keep the report
in focus. As you continue writing, keep this question in mindthis is why you are making this
report.
At this point, also notice that you havent said anything about your experiment.
A.5 Methods
This section explains how the report question above was answered. After reading this section,
the reader should be able to completely reproduce the experiment to verify the results.
Experiment
Overview
A high level
description of the
experiment instantly
informs the audience
Apparatus
Sketch
Enable reader to
visualize the
experiment
Use Descriptive
Annotations
Figure Numbers
& Captions
Every equation,
table, or figure is
discussed in the text
Equipment
Table
Manufacturer, model
number, serial
number, uncertainties,
etc. here
Procedure
NO Bulleted
Statements
Step-by-Step cookbook
instructions
Notice the figure narration scheme so far. The report is a story of visuals linked together with
text.
A.6 Results
This section of the report show what you found. Your data is manipulated to be presented nicely
and explained.
Results
Narration
Immediately begin
stating results. Get
right to the point.
Tables &
Visuals
Units
Uncertainty
Balance tables in
white space. They
should look neat.
Equations in
Variable
Form
Confidence Levels
shown for
uncertainty work
Equations are
discussed after they
are presented
Supporting equations
and values can be
placed in prose
Narrate
(Like a story)
Figures
Figure has
descriptive title
showing findings
Plot background is
not distracting
Error Bars
(Uncertainty)
Every figure is
discussed
So far, you have only presented your data. You havent described what it means. That comes in
the next section.
A.7 Discussion
In this section, the results are interpreted. Describe the why you think the data turned out like it
did. Insert your scientific opinion in this section.
Narrate
Reference &
introduce visuals in
text
Use Equation
Editor
Headings and
Subheadings
organize the text
Explain with
Equations
List your
assumptions as you
make them
Narrate
(like a story)
Show constant
values, like density,
that you use in your
calculations
Confidence
Intervals
(Uncertainty)
Lines always
indicate a regression
was performed. Do
not show if you
didnt do one.
Confidence intervals
always accompany a
line of best fit
Explanation of
Anomalies
Show Units!
Indicate Final
Answer
Give concise,
meaningful statements
in Conclusion
Answer DQ
Future Ideas
A.8 References
The reference section shows where you got information that was not your own.
References
There are many citation styles you can use such as: ASME, CMS, APA, etc. Consult a citation
manual for assistance. A Pocket Style Manual by Diana Hacker is a good start.
Try RefWorks at the U of M library website. It will manage all your citations automatically.
A.9 Appendices
The appendix should contain information that is required, but would be distracting from the
normal flow of the report. This might be raw data, lab notebook pages, regression summaries, or
sample calculations.
C Assessment Criteria