Методические указания по составлению и оформлению научного доклада на профессиональную тему на английском языке. Малетина Л.В. - 13 стр.

UptoLike

Составители: 

13
It is also common to give an outlook on future work. The Conclusion of a research report is
usually a very short section that introduces no new ideas. It is also a place to raise questions that
remain unanswered and to discuss ambiguous data.
The Conclusions should relate to the aims of the work:
Example 1:
Aim .The aim of this project is to design a mobile phone tower.
Conclusions
In this report, a design for a mobile phone tower has been presented. The key features of
the tower are... It was found that...
Example 2:
Aim.The aim of this investigation is to analyse the bus delays at the intersection of the
bus loop and Wellington Road at Monash University.
Conclusions
In this report, bus delays were analysed. It was found that... Based on these findings, it is
recommended that...
2.8. Recommendations
In this section you have to provide suggestions based on the results and conclusions of your
work. Recommendations section indicates that you are completely versed in the importance and
implication of your research, as you give some piece of advice to your readers. This must be
supported by the analysis and conclusions section of the report.
2.9. References
The main objective of citing references is to give the readers an opportunity to follow up your
work. References show the readers that the materials and data you have used in your research are
credible. Don’t forget to include references that you directly cited in the text
Be sure to include enough references, because the reader may want to follow up your references
for further research on the topic, or simply to get to know more on the topic. You have to
incorporate the authors, year, edition, publisher's name and publisher's location for books that
you have used in your research; for articles in journals give the authors, year, and name of the
publication, volume and page numbers. Don’t include secondary sources that are slightly related
to your research, just to make a list of references longer.
Now remember: There are two parts to referencing: citations in the text of the report and a list
of references in the final section.
A citation shows that information comes from another source. The reference list gives the
details of these sources. You need to use in-text citations and provide details in the references
section when you incorporate information from other sources, e.g.:
factual material;
graphs and tables of data;
pictures and diagrams.
You quote word-for-word from another work (when you do this the page number must be given
in the in-text citation)