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Experiment Report Template

This document provides guidelines for preparing a proposal or final report for an engineering course. It includes templates for typical report sections like the introduction, methodology, analysis and discussion, and conclusion. The document explains how to format figures, tables, equations, and references. Key sections that should be included are the abstract, introduction, problem statement, objectives, methodology, results or findings, and conclusion. The methodology section should provide details on how the design or study was conducted and how the results will address the problem presented.

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Cleo Trinidad
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
62 views2 pages

Experiment Report Template

This document provides guidelines for preparing a proposal or final report for an engineering course. It includes templates for typical report sections like the introduction, methodology, analysis and discussion, and conclusion. The document explains how to format figures, tables, equations, and references. Key sections that should be included are the abstract, introduction, problem statement, objectives, methodology, results or findings, and conclusion. The methodology section should provide details on how the design or study was conducted and how the results will address the problem presented.

Uploaded by

Cleo Trinidad
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Title of the Study

First A. Author, Second B. Author, Jr., and Third C. Author*



VI. ANALYSIS & DISCUSSIONS
Abstract—(These instructions give you guidelines for This portion discusses the verification method you have
preparing your proposal report and final report for ELEN conducted to verify that your design will provide
3073. Use this document as a template if you are using
Microsoft Word 6.0 or later. Otherwise, use this document as
answer/solution to the problem you have presented. Include
an instruction set. Define all symbols used in the abstract. Do comprehensive data presentation in form of tables, graphs
not cite references in the abstract. Do not delete the blank line and other illustrations with matching explanatory
immediately above the abstract; it sets the footnote at the paragraphs. If it is possible, include statistical treatment of
bottom of this column.) your data to consider the significance of your data in
justifying further the veracity of your claims.
The Abstract portion generally gives a summary of your
paper.
VII. CONCLUSION
Index Terms — In alphabetical order, write the index terms Write the findings of the study with respect to the
or keywords that describes the important points of your paper. problem, objectives and scope of the study. The conclusion
List at most 4 keywords or key phrases. also elaborates on the importance of the work and the output
of the project. You should also include suggested
I. INTRODUCTION recommendations based on the criteria identified.

Give a short introduction that will relate your study to your APPENDIX
intended readers. As much as possible, you should try to
Appendixes, if needed, appear before the
link your study (technical in nature) to the practical
acknowledgment.
experiences of your readers.
Appendixes should include the data used for the model.
II.SIGNIFICANCE OF THE STUDY
ACKNOWLEDGMENT
Describe the rationale of the study that you are doing,
(The preferred spelling of the word “acknowledgment” in
whether the significance is theoretical or practical in nature.
American English is without an “e” after the “g.” Use the
III. THE PROBLEM singular heading even if you have many acknowledgments.
Avoid expressions such as “One of us (S.B.A.) would like to
Provide 1-2 sentences to state the problem. Your goal thank ... .” Instead, write “F. A. Author thanks ... .” Sponsor
should be to make the reader have a clear picture of the and financial support acknowledgments are placed in the
problem to be solved. (Tip: Ask a non-EE to read your unnumbered footnote on the first page.)
description. Check if he/she correctly understands the
problem that you are tackling.) REFERENCES
[1] G. O. Young, “Synthetic structure of industrial plastics (Book style
IV. SCOPE AND LIMITATIONS with paper title and editor),” in Plastics, 2nd ed. vol. 3, J. Peters, Ed.
Write the coverage of problem that you would like to New York: McGraw-Hill, 1964, pp. 15–64.
[2] W.-K. Chen, Linear Networks and Systems (Book style). Belmont,
tackle. CA: Wadsworth, 1993, pp. 123–135.
Write also the areas that you will not be including but [3] H. Poor, An Introduction to Signal Detection and Estimation. New
which your reader may expect from your study. York: Springer-Verlag, 1985, ch. 4.
[4] B. Smith, “An approach to graphs of linear forms (Unpublished work
style),” unpublished.
V. METHODOLOGY
Write the details of how you formulated the model/design HELPFUL HINTS
and execution of it for the study. You are free to add sub-
sections to describe thoroughly the procedures you followed A. Figures and Tables
to come up with the design of your project. Also, provide an Because the final formatting of your paper is limited in
idea how will you verify that your design will provide scale, you need to position figures and tables at the top and
answer/solution to the problem you have presented in bottom of each column. Large figures and tables may span
Section III. both columns. Place figure captions below the figures; place
table titles above the tables. If your figure has two parts,

*F. A. Author is a Third Year student of the Department of Electrical include the labels “(a)” and “(b)” as part of the artwork.
Engineering, Polytechnic University of the Philippines Santa Mesa, Manila
Philippines 1016 (e-mail: author@ boulder.nist.gov).
Please verify that the figures and tables you mention in the
S. B. Author, Jr., is a Third Year student of the Department of Electrical text actually exist. Do not put borders around the outside
Engineering, Polytechnic University of the Philippines Santa Manila, of your figures. Use the abbreviation “Fig.” even at the
Manila Philippines 1016 (e-mail: author@lamar. colostate.edu). beginning of a sentence. Do not abbreviate “Table.” Tables
T. C. Author is is a Third Year student of the Department of Electrical
Engineering, Polytechnic University of the Philippines Santa Mesa, Manila are numbered with Roman numerals.
Philippines 1016 (e-mail: author@nrim.go.jp).
B. References
Number citations consecutively in square brackets [1].
The sentence punctuation follows the brackets [2]. Multiple
references [2], [3] are each numbered with separate brackets
[1]–[3]. When citing a section in a book, please give the
relevant page numbers [2]. In sentences, refer simply to the
reference number, as in [3]. Do not use “Ref. [3]” or
“reference [3]” except at the beginning of a sentence:
“Reference [3] shows ... .”
Please note that the references at the end of this document
are in the preferred referencing style. Give all authors’
names; do not use “et al.” unless there are six authors or
more. Use a space after authors' initials. Papers that have not
been published should be cited as “unpublished” [4]. Papers
that have been submitted for publication should be cited as
“submitted for publication” [5]. Papers that have been
accepted for publication, but not yet specified for an issue
should be cited as “to be published” [6]. Please give
affiliations and addresses for private communications [7].
Capitalize only the first word in a paper title, except for
proper nouns and element symbols. For papers published in
translation journals, please give the English citation first,
followed by the original foreign-language citation [8].
C. Abbreviations and Acronyms
Define abbreviations and acronyms the first time they are
used in the text, even after they have already been defined in
the abstract. Abbreviations such as SI, ac, and dc do not
have to be defined. Abbreviations that incorporate periods
should not have spaces: write “C.N.R.S.,” not “C. N. R. S.”
Do not use abbreviations in the title unless they are
unavoidable (for example, “IMECS 2006” in the title of this
article).
D. Equations
Number equations consecutively with equation numbers
in parentheses flush with the right margin, as in (1). First use
the equation editor to create the equation. Then select the
“Equation” markup style. Press the tab key and write the
equation number in parentheses. To make your equations
more compact, you may use the solidus ( / ), the exp
function, or appropriate exponents. Use parentheses to avoid
ambiguities in denominators. Punctuate equations when they
are part of a sentence, as in

r2
∫0 F(r , ϕ ) dr dϕ=[ σr 2 ¿ (2 μ 0 )]

⋅∫ 0 exp (−λ|z j− zi| ) λ−1 J 1 ( λ r 2 ) J 0 ( λ r i ) dλ .
(1)

Be sure that the symbols in your equation have been


defined before the equation appears or immediately
following. Italicize symbols (T might refer to temperature,
but T is the unit tesla). Refer to “(1),” not “Eq. (1)” or
“equation (1),” except at the beginning of a sentence:
“Equation (1) is ... .”

*** End of Guidelines ***

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