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GROUP E Chapter 22. Rueben Beltrandelrio, Michael Durling, Lisa Hairston, Sarah McKinley and Eva Olivas. MICHAEL DURLING. Basic Features of Activity Reports. BASIC FEATURES OF ACTIVITY REPORTS. Common Components: Introduction Summary of activities Results of activities or research
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GROUP E Chapter 22 Rueben Beltrandelrio, Michael Durling, Lisa Hairston, Sarah McKinley and Eva Olivas
MICHAEL DURLING Basic Features of Activity Reports
BASIC FEATURES OF ACTIVITY REPORTS • Common Components: • Introduction • Summary of activities • Results of activities or research • Future activities or research • Incurred or future expenses • Graphics • Conclusion • Format not concrete; can/should be modified to suit needs of report
PRIMARY GOAL OF ACTIVITY REPORTS • To inform intended audience about: • What happened • What is currently occurring • What will occur in the future
DIFFERENT TYPES OF ACTIVITY REPORTS • Progress Reports • Briefings and White Papers • Incident Reports • Laboratory Reports
PROGRESS REPORTS • Also called status reports • Purpose: to inform superiors or peers about progress or status of a project • Frequency: at regular intervals, ideally weekly, biweekly, or monthly • Common components: • Summary of finished activities • Discussion of current activities • Forecast of future activities
PROGRESS REPORT TEMPLATE Visual Example
BRIEFINGS AND WHITE PAPERS • Purpose: to inform management or clients about an important issue • Briefings: provided verbally • White Papers: provided in print • Both include: • Summary of the facts • Discussion of the importance of the facts • Forecast about the future • Should be straightforward and objective • Do not select a side or course of action
INCIDENT REPORTS • Description of event, usually an accident or unfortunate occurrence • Present facts objectively • Answers the following questions: • What occurred? • Why did it occur? • How was the situation handled? • How will problem be avoided in the future? • Example
LABORATORY REPORTS • Purpose: to describe experiments, tests, or inspections • Should include: • Summary of experiment (methods) • Presentation of results • Discussion of results
SARAH MCKINLEY Determining the Rhetorical Situation of an Activity Report
PLANNING AND RESEARCHING ACTIVITY REPORTS • Minimal planning and research • Keep activity journal/work log • Lotus Notes, Microsoft Outlook, or PDAs • Keeps you on task • Saves time
ANALYZING THE RHETORICAL SITUATION • Begin by asking: • Who? • What? • Where? • When? • Why? • How?
ANALYZING THE RHETORICAL SITUATION • Think about the rhetorical situation to outline the activity report • Subject • Recent activities • Need-to-know information • Purpose • What happened and what will happen • State purpose directly in the introduction • Use action verbs
ANALYZING THE RHETORICAL SITUATION • Think about the rhetorical situation to outline the activity report • Readers • Supervisors, clients, testimony • Compose report to suit every readers needs • Context of Use • Statements should reflect actions and results • Needs to be accurate
REUBEN BELTRANDELRIO Organizing and Drafting Activity Reports
ORGANIZING AND DRAFTING ACTIVITY REPORTS • Activity reports should be brief, i.e., should not be longer than one page • If you are spending more than one hour developing an activity report, you are spending too much time
WRITING THE INTRODUCTION • Stick to the facts Jack • A brief framework explaining the facts should be provided to the reader, i.e., concisely define your SUBJECT, PURPOSE, and MAIN POINT
WRITING THE BODY • Should include a “Summary of Activities” • Summarize in chronological order the projects two to five major events since the last report • Be sure to highlight any advances or setbacks since the last activity report
WHAT ARE YOUR RESULTS? • List two to five significant results or outcomes of the project since the last report • Future activities or research • Tell the reader what you plan to do during the next work cycle
EXPENSES • You should be able to state the costs incurred over the previous week or month and if these costs are deviating from the projects budget
WRITING THE CONCLUSION • Again, be as brief as possible • Restate the main point • Restate the purpose • Restate your outlook for the project’s future
EVA OLIVAS Designing and Formatting Activity Reports
WHAT ARE ACTIVITY REPORTS? “Activity reports are used to objectively present ideas or information within a company”.
DIFFERENT KINDS OF ACTIVITY REPORTS • Progress Reports: • Informs management about the progress or status of a project • Briefings and White Papers • Informs management or clients about an important issue • Incident Reports • Describe an event, or accident, and identify what corrective actions have been taken • Laboratory Reports • Describe experiments, tests, or inspections
HOW MIGHT THEY BE USED • Electrical Engineer • Scientist • Chemist • Technician
USING STYLE ACTIVITY REPORTS • Sentences: • Subject should be the “doer” of most sentences • Verb should express the action in most sentences • Paragraphs: • Topic sentence • Tone: • No sarcasm or humor • Professional tone • Negative information stated candidly with no apologies
REMEMBER, ACTIVITY REPORTS ARE MOSTLY INFORMATIVE, NOT OVERLY PERSUASIVE So try to keep them straightforward
USING DESIGN AND GRAPHICS • Also straightforward • Governed by a standard format • Company will specify format for activity reports • Visuals should be centered and placed after being mentioned • Label graphic and refer by number in the text • Oral presentation • Photos help audience visualize • Graphs show trends in the data
LISA HAIRSTON The Importance of Editing and Proofreading Activity Reports.
PULLING IT ALL TOGETHER • Basic features • Determining the rhetoric • Organized and draft • Strategy for style • Designing and formatting
WHY PROOF? • Informal • Disposable • Discarded • Buried
ETHOS AND ERRORS Reputation Reciprocity • Quality of Work • Professionalism • Dedication • Considerate • Respect • Management • Co-Workers • Team Work • Promotions
REVISING AND PROOFREADING Revising Proofreading • Subject • Purpose • Readers • Content • Carefully • Spell Check • Print Out • Send • Electronically • Physical
QUESTIONS? 2 minutes per answer.