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Outline: Peer Review

This report explores the relevance of research reports in various engineering domains, including solar cell technology, wind turbine design, and robot performance. It discusses the importance of writing reports that are informative, concise, and replicable. The report also highlights the key components of a report, such as the title page, summary, introduction, methods, results, conclusions, references, and appendix.

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Outline: Peer Review

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  1. Outline: Peer Review • Topic • Be prepared to discuss how topic is relevant to Emerging Adulthood domains • References • References related to topic and domains? • In APA format? • For Each Domain • Study cited? • Description of study subjects? • Results of study? • Your words on study relevance to topic in domain

  2. Tips for Writing Great Reports ENGR 10

  3. Technical Writing is Everywhere • Annual Report: 12-month summary and evaluation of finances and activities • Environmental Impact Report (EIR) • Feasibility Study: consequences of possible actions • Final Report: results of completed work

  4. Lab Report: results of experiments, procedures • Incident Report: description of injury or hazardous material spill • Justification Report: explanation for actions taken • Maintenance Report: product repair and service record for a given period • Meeting Minutes

  5. Personnel Report: evaluation of an employee's work • Preliminary Report: task analysis • Progress Report: work accomplished to date • Research Report: summary of research completed • Sales Report: sales figures for a given period • Trip Report: expenses and activities

  6. ENGR 10 Reports Solar Cell Laboratory Report Wind Turbine Design and Performance Robot Design and Performance

  7. Goal of your reports • Reader could replicate what you did without having to talk with you in person • Synthesize and summarize what you have learned • An important part of the learning process

  8. Getting Started Writing or Speaking • Determine your purpose What’s my purpose? • Determine your audience Who is my audience?

  9. What is my purpose? • Informative • Persuasive • Analysis • Instructional

  10. Who is my audience? • Business • Technical • General Public • Age Group • Gender • Culture

  11. Write to your Audience Write your report in this class toward a fellow engineering student. Provide enough detail so that an engineering student who hasn’t take ENGR 10 could replicate what you have done.

  12. Parts of a Report • Title Page • Summary • Table Of Contents • Introduction • Methods (Experimental Setup) • Results • Conclusions • References • Appendix

  13. Title Page • Title page lists at minimum: • Title of the project (descriptive and specific) • Entity • San José State University, Charles W. Davidson College of Engineering, E10 Introduction to Engineering • Names of the team members • E10 section number and team number • Name of Lab Instructor • Date of submission

  14. Parts of a Report • Title Page • Summary • Table Of Contents • Introduction • Experimental Setup • Results • Conclusions • References • Appendix

  15. Summary/Abstract • This section goes after the title page but before the table of contents • Designed for the busy person • Succinctly introduce project (what it is, what you did) • Summarize key results (performance data) • Summarize what you learned

  16. Which might be a good first sentence of your summary? • In the beginning we sat at a computer station and brainstormed ideas about the design of our turbine blades. • The purpose of the project was to construct and model a wind turbine by designing our own blade to harness the maximum wind power and a lightweight support structure, stiff enough to resist deflection. • First we used the glue to attach PVC pipe to the standard wood base that we were given.

  17. Parts of a Report • Title Page • Summary • Table Of Contents • Introduction • Experimental Setup • Results • Conclusions • References • Appendix

  18. Table of Contents • Comes after the Summary • Start Page 1 as the Introduction page • Title page has no number • Other pages before Introduction can be numbered i, ii, iii, etc. • It should include all the sections / subsections headings with the starting page number for each.

  19. Parts of a Report • Title Page • Summary • Table Of Contents • Introduction • Experimental Setup • Results • Conclusions • References • Appendix

  20. Introduction Describes relevant background information (1 to 2 pages). • What the project was about, first in general (main goal) • Then describe what you did to achieve that goal • Make sure that you include sufficient sketches, drawings, and/or photographs and verbiage • To clearly explain to someone unfamiliar with this project what it is all about. • You may use sketches from the Project Guidelines, but cite your source. • Refer to the Project Description regarding goals and specifications found on pages 1-2, Wind Turbine Design Project.

  21. Parts of a Report • Title Page • Summary • Table Of Contents • Introduction • Experimental Setup • Results • Conclusions • References • Appendix

  22. Experimental Setup • You are answering the question: HOW were the rotor and tower: designed, constructed and tested? • Use relevant sketches, drawings, pictures • Type, shape and dimensions (and possibly cost if known) of the materials used • Name/describe the major tools used during the design and construction (build) stages • Describethe type of tests performed on the project, the purpose of each test andits outcome • Name/describe the major tools/measuring equipment used during the testing stage.

  23. Use Headings and Subheadings 3. Design, Construction and Test Blah blahblah 3.1 Turbine Blade Design and Construction Blah blahblah 3.2 Support Structure Design and Construction Blah blahblah 3.3 Turbine and Structure Testing Blah blahblah

  24. State Your Reasoning • No clear reason • We decided to create a three blade rotor because we believed this would give us the best possible results. • Clear reason • We decided to create a three blade rotor because a three blade configuration is the most stable (Jones, 2008).

  25. Theories Describe briefly any theory(ies) that apply to your project, including any applicable formulas. Examples: Bernoulli, Betz’ Limit, Power Theorem,…

  26. Use Equations Instead of a sentence like this: The factors of the power include voltage (volts), which is equal to the current (amperes) multiplied by the resistance. Just write: Power (watts) is calculated using the following equation: P=VxI (Eq. 1) where V is voltage (volts) and I is current (amperes).

  27. Use pictures/sketches • Here is the description from a report: We took a geometric view on the matter and decided to construct a 90 degree angle using simply two sets of wooden beams after measuring the angles of each beam. We set them parallel to one another to maximize the strength of our design. • Can you figure out what the structure looked like?

  28. Using Figures to Clarify As shown in Figure 1, the support structure consisted of a right triangle made of two wood pieces to provide stiffness in the direction of the wind. In addition, two small triangular elements were installed at the base in the perpendicular direction to resist potential loads from the side and minimize oscillation. Figure 1: Turbine support structure provides resistance to loads in two perpendicular directions. Note figure caption and its location

  29. Parts of a Report • Title Page • Summary • Table Of Contents • Introduction • Theory • Experimental Setup • Results • Conclusions • References • Appendix

  30. Results • Include tables of key data and graphs of key results • MUST include text to describe what is in each of the tables. • Data plots for the following parameters and briefly discuss the performance. • Turbine Stiffness • Voltage vs. Current • Power vs. Current • Compare the actual power generated versus the theoretical power, and calculate the efficiency. • Create a graph of your load and deflection data, and use Excel curve fitting techniques to determine the stiffness.

  31. A Table is NOT a Figure Table1: Displacement Data for Turbine Support Tower Note Title Location Figure 1: Displacement Data for Turbine Support Tower Incorrect

  32. What does this results graph represent? • I have no idea • Voltage vs. current • Voltage vs. power • Current vs. power • Power vs. blade speed

  33. Can you figure it out now? Figure 1: Turbine power generally decreased with increased voltage. The circled voltage readings are suspect.

  34. What is wrong with this stiffness graph? • Nothing • Load and displacement axes are reversed • Load is in kg • Scale on x-axis is not proportional to values • B, C, and D

  35. The same data plotted correctly Stiffness = 1.1N/mm

  36. Be Concise – Eliminate Unnecessary Words • Wordy: • In the graph that shows load against displacement (Figure 1) displays the stiffness of the structure where the displacement increases as the load increases. The stiffness that we got from our project is 6.08 N/mm. • Concise • The calculated stiffness was 6.08 N/mm, which is slope of the linear relationship between load and displacement in Figure 1.

  37. Write in the Third Person Instead of • We found • Our choice of … • When plotted, we see that • We used a 75 W lamp as the source • Our tasks were to… • In this lab we derived… Also Try • Results indicated • The choice of … • Plots of the data show • A 75 W lamp served as the source • Tasks included … • The purpose of this lab was to derive …

  38. Parts of a Report • Title Page • Summary • Table Of Contents • Introduction • Experimental Setup • Results • Conclusions • References • Appendix

  39. Conclusions • Summarize • The work done • What was learned • Explanation of any anomalies, errors • The outcomes of the project, • Such as how well it worked or didn't work • How did the efficiency of your turbine compare with the efficiency of typical turbines in use today?

  40. Recommendations • Could be a subheading under Conclusions • What would you do if you had more time • What would you do differently, given what you know now • Give specific recommendations

  41. Parts of a Report • Title Page • Summary • Table Of Contents • Introduction • Experimental Set Up • Results • Conclusions • References • Appendix

  42. Cite Reference in Text (APA Style) Author-date method of in-text citation • Author (Year) or (Author, Year) • Ex: Smith (2007) found that… • Or Title of article (Year) • According to Betz’ Law, only 59% of the kinetic energy in the wind can be converted to mechanical energy using a wind turbine (Betz’, 2003).

  43. Reference List (APA) • Alphabetize by author • If there is no author, use title to alphabetize Examples Betz’ Law. (2003). Retrieved October 28, 2008 from Danish Wind Industry Association website http://www.windpower.org/en/tour/wres/betz.html National Renewable Resource Laboratory (NREL). (2006). U.S. PV Cell Costs. Retrieved September 27, 2008 from Data360 Web site http://www.data360.org/dsg.aspx?Data_Set_Group_Id=605 Wind Energy FAQ. (2009). Retrieved January 27, 2009 from American Wind Energy Association Web Site http://www.awea.org/faq/rsdntqa.html

  44. Article from Online Journal Last Name, First Initial, Middle Initial (Year Published). Title of article. Title of Online Journal, Volume Number(issue number if available), pp. Pages, doi:# or Retrieved from URL Bernstein, M. (2002). 10 tips on writing the living web. A List Apart: For People Who Make Websites, p 149. Retrieved from http://www.alistapart.com/articles/writeliving

  45. Article from Journal in Print Last Name, First Initial, Middle Initial & Author, B. B. (Year Published). Title of article. Title of Online Journal, Volume Number(issue number if available), pp. Pages More examples in Emerging Adulthood Paper Guidelines

  46. Parts of a Report • Title Page • Summary/Abstract/ Executive Summary • Table Of Contents • Introduction (what and why) • Theory • Experimental Setup (how) • Results (what you found) • Conclusions (what it means) • References • Appendix

  47. Appendices Contains any other information that might help someone trying to do a similar project (data sheets, catalog pages, etc.). Required appendix elements Appendix A - Original data sheet used in the laboratory Appendix B - Evaluates teamwork by answering questions

  48. Pitfalls to Avoid • Extremely Long Paragraphs • A paragraph that is one page long is likely too long • Identify the main points you are trying to make • Use the main points as topic sentences • Use three or four sentences in paragraph to build on topic sentence. • One sentence paragraphs • You can not fully develop an idea in one sentence

  49. Spellcheck Your Report I have a spelling checker.It came with my PC.It plainly marks four my revuemistakes I cannot sea.I’ve run this poem threw it.I’m sure your please too no.Its letter perfect in its weigh—My checker tolled me sew.

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