Master Technical Report Writing

Dr. Salah Dafea โ€” H.I.T Academy | Complete oral exam prep with every single detail from your course material.

10
Writing Characteristics
7+
Report Types
37
MCQ Questions
28
Open Q&A
15
Writing Stages

๐Ÿ“– Study Material

All course content โ€” expand each card to review

๐Ÿ”น 1. TACTFUL Writing

Characteristic 1โ–ผ

Tactful writing does not insult the reader's intelligence. You can insult your reader by writing at too high or too low level. Tactful writing does not categorize the reader. Tactful writing is not sexist.

a) Use the word "person":
Sexist: When you schedule a meeting with a businessman, be aware of the importance of time.
Nonsexist: When you schedule a meeting with a businessperson, be aware of the importance of time.
Sexist: A good manager develops his subordinates.
Nonsexist: Good managers develop their subordinates.
b) Use plurals:
Sexist: An employee will be promoted based upon his ability and seniority.
Nonsexist: Employees will be promoted based upon their ability and seniority.
c) Use "you" or "your":
Sexist: An employee should punch his time card promptly each morning.
Nonsexist: Punch your time card promptly each morning.
Non-sexist word replacements:
  • "Businessperson" instead of "Businessman"
  • "Handmade" instead of "Manmade"
  • "Workers" instead of "Workmen"
  • "Supervisor" instead of "Forman"
  • "Spokesperson or representative" instead of "Spokesman"
Tactful writing is not offensive (no humor in bad taste or accusatory tone):
Offensive: "Why is the Damiattian person always so sad giving money for some persons else?". It is not a fact but just a bad humor.
Accusatory: Perhaps you didn't follow the instruction manual that accompanied your Expresso Coffeemaker.
Non-accusatory: Please recheck the instruction manual that accompanied our Expresso Coffeemaker.

๐Ÿ”น 2. PERSONAL Writing

Characteristic 2โ–ผ

The "you" attitude puts the reader first.

We/I vs You:
We've mailed a check. โ†’ You'll receive your check in the mail.
Our savings accounts pay 6% interest. โ†’ You will earn 6% interest from your saving account.
I want to express my appreciations. โ†’ Thank you for your help withโ€ฆ

If the "you" approach might offend the reader, use "we" and "I" instead:

We didn't receive a check. (instead of "You didn't send your check.")

๐Ÿ”น 3. POSITIVE Writing

Characteristic 3โ–ผ

A positive tone develops a positive relationship. Reversal words change the direction or tone of a message.

Negative: You failed to enclose a check with your order; therefore, it is impossible to send you the merchandise.
Positive: As soon as your check arrives, we'll send your order via parcel post.
Negative: There can be no exceptions to this policy.
Positive: The policy must apply equally and fairly to everyone.
Negative: The oven doesn't come with a 40-inch cook top.
Positive: We have many sizes else come with a 40-inch cook top.
Negative: We cannot meet until Monday morning.
Positive: On Monday morning, we could solve that problem easily.
Negative: We regret having forgotten to include your refund check.
Positive: Within two days only, you will receive your check.

๐Ÿ”น 4. ACTIVE Writing

Characteristic 4โ–ผ

Use active voice to make writing more direct and engaging. Active voice makes the subject perform the action.

๐Ÿ”น 5. UNIFIED Writing

Characteristic 5โ–ผ

Sentence unity: one idea per sentence. Paragraph unity: one central idea per paragraph.

Poor: Thank you for placing your order, and your new Beach craft Towels should reach you by July 15. (compound sentence)
Better: Thank you for placing your order. Your new Beach craft Towels should reach you by July 15. (Two simple sentences)
Poor: When you start the engine, adjust the motor speed immediately, and check your owner's manual if you have any further problems. (compound-complex)
Better: When you start the engine, adjust the motor speed immediately. If you have any further problems, please check your owner's manual. (compound sentences)

๐Ÿ”น 6. COHERENT Writing

Characteristic 6โ–ผ

Coherent sentences and paragraphs are understandable because they stick together.

Unclear: Your grass cutter electric mower will operate quickly, this will save your money.
Clear: Your grass cutter electric mower will operate quietly and quickly. Its speed will save your money.
Unclear: They rented furniture for their apartment that cost $100 per month.
Clear: For their apartment, they rented furniture that cost $100 per month.

๐Ÿ”น 7. CLEAR Writing

Characteristic 7โ–ผ

a) Avoid technical jargon:

"All the fish died!" โ†’ better than "The biota exhibited 100% mortality response."

b) Avoid unfamiliar words โ€” use simpler alternatives:

  • "Prior to" โ†’ use Before
  • "Subsequent to" โ†’ use After
  • "Accomplish" โ†’ use Do
  • "Transmit" โ†’ use Send
  • "Facilitate" โ†’ use Help
  • "Locality" โ†’ use Place

๐Ÿ”น 8. CONCISE Writing

Characteristic 8โ–ผ
  • "A long time of period toโ€ฆ" โ†’ "Three weeks still toโ€ฆ"
  • "In the event that" โ†’ "If"
  • "In many cases" โ†’ "Often"
  • "In some cases" โ†’ "Sometimes"
  • "During the month of November" โ†’ "During November"

๐Ÿ”น 9. CONSISTENCY

Characteristic 9โ–ผ

Be consistent in the use of either British or US-English spelling. Never switch inside any given document.

  • British: Colour / Co-operation / Customisation
  • US: Color / Cooperation / Customization

Once you choose a given technical term to mean one thing, use it only in that one sense. Do not redefine!

๐Ÿ”น 10. MECHANICALLY SOUND + Readable

Characteristic 10โ–ผ

One central idea per paragraph. Ensure paragraph unity for readability.

๐Ÿ“‹ Types of Technical Reports

7+ Typesโ–ผ
1. Technical-background report

Provides background on a topic โ€” e.g., solar energy, global warming, CD-ROM technology, a medical problem, or U.S. recycling activity.

2. Instructions

The most familiar type. Students often write backup procedures for jobs. Others write short user manuals for an appliance, equipment, or program.

3. Feasibility, Recommendation & Evaluation Reports

A feasibility report tells whether a project is "feasible" โ€” practical and technologically possible. A recommendation report compares two or more alternatives and recommends one (or none).

4. Primary Research Report

Refers to actual work in a laboratory or field โ€” experiments and surveys. You present data, draw conclusions, explain methodology, describe equipment/facilities, and give background on the problem.

5. Technical Specifications

Discusses a new product design in terms of its construction, materials, functions, features, operation, and market potential.

6. Proposal

Can be monster documents of hundreds or thousands of pages. Elements from other reports get imported โ€” feasibility discussion, review of literature, qualifications.

7. Business Prospectus

A plan or proposal to start a new business or expand an existing one. Aimed primarily at potential investors. Describes the proposed business, explores the marketplace and competition, projects revenues.

8. Progress / Status Report

Updates stakeholders on the current status of an ongoing project.

9. Annual Report

Comprehensive overview of an organization's activities and financial performance over the past year.

10. Executive Summary

Short document summarizing key findings and recommendations for policymakers.

11. Laboratory Report

Documents an experiment following Introduction, Methodology, Results, and Discussion structure.

๐Ÿ—๏ธ Construction / Structure of a Technical Report

Layoutโ–ผ
FRONT MATTER:
  • Front Cover โ€” used if report is over 10 pages; provides physical protection
  • Label โ€” on cover: report title/subtitle, author's name, publisher, date
  • Title Page โ€” descriptive info used by libraries; duplicates cover info
  • Acknowledgments
  • Abstract โ€” no more than 200 words; "in a nutshell" description; no undefined symbols/abbreviations/acronyms; no reference by number to references or illustrative material. Includes: Purpose (issue/need/reason), Scope (main points, extent, limits), Findings (condensed conclusions/recommendations)
  • Summary โ€” scope of report, main results and conclusions; must be intelligible without rest of report. Purpose: short version & guide. Length: 100-300 words. Content: provide information, not just description.
  • Table of Contents โ€” lists title and beginning page number of each major section (excluding title page and TOC itself)
  • List of Figures and Tables โ€” helps locate illustrations, drawings, photographs, graphs, charts. Figure number/title appears BELOW image. Table number/title appears ABOVE table.
  • Nomenclature (List of Symbols, Abbreviations, Acronyms) โ€” if more than 5 symbols/abbreviations/acronyms are used
BODY OF REPORT:
  • Introduction
  • Methods, Assumptions, and Procedures
  • Results and Discussion
  • Conclusion
BACK MATTER:
  • References
  • Appendixes
  • Arabic Summary (ู…ู„ุฎุต ุงู„ุฑุณุงู„ุฉ ุจุงู„ู„ุบุฉ ุงู„ุนุฑุจูŠุฉ)
  • Back Cover

โœ๏ธ Universal Writing Rules

Guidelinesโ–ผ
  • Focus on a single idea
  • Write a good topic statement
  • Develop a clear pattern of organization: Chronological Description, Cause and effect analysis, Comparison and contrast, General to particular ordering of details

๐Ÿ“ Guide: Stages of Technical Report Writing (15 Steps)

Processโ–ผ
Tips for Writing:
  • Create an outline before you write
  • Write the body first, then front and back matter
  • Have someone proofread your report
  • Begin writing with the main text, not the introduction
  • Follow your outline for headings/subheadings; let ideas flow
  • If stuck, go back to outline and make more detailed notes
Five Major Stages of Report Preparation:
  • (1) Gathering the data (or developing the theory)
  • (2) Analyzing and sorting the results
  • (3) Outlining the report
  • (4) Writing the rough draft
  • (5) Revising the rough draft
1) Planning โ€” Collect Information:

Sources: laboratory handouts, lecture notes, University Library, reference books and journals. Keep accurate record of all published references:

Journal article: author(s), title, journal name (italic/underlined), year, volume (bold), issue number (brackets), page numbers.
Book: author(s), title (italic/underlined), edition, publisher, year.

2) Creative Phase of Planning:
  • Write down topics/ideas in random order
  • Arrange into logical groups
  • Keep note of topics that don't fit
  • Put groups into logical sequence
3) Structuring the Report:

Using your logical sequence, write a rough outline with headings and subheadings.

5) Writing the First Draft:

Consider: Who is going to read the report? (fellow students, faculty, managers, clients). Make rough sketches of diagrams/graphs. Keep numbered list of references. Put quoted material in quotation marks. Do NOT write the Summary at this stage.

6) Revising the First Draft:

The essence of a successful technical report lies in how accurately and concisely it conveys the intended information. Ask: Does it say what I want? Can anything be removed without affecting information?

7) Diagrams, Graphs, Tables, Mathematics:
  • Diagrams: Keep simple; draw specifically for the report; place close to text reference
  • Graphs: Choose scales carefully; label axes; portrait-style preferred
  • Tables: Consider if a table is best (vs graphs/charts). Dependent (small) tables within text; independent (larger) tables separated with numbers/captions; complicated tables in appendix
  • Mathematics: Use only when most efficient. Number equations: F(dB) = 10*log10(F) (3.6)
8) Report Layout:

Use standard 12pt font (Times New Roman). Use bold, italic, underline where appropriate but not to excess.

9) Headings:

Use headings and sub-headings to break up text. Example numbering: 3 โ†’ 3.1 โ†’ 3.2 โ†’ 3.2.1 โ†’ 3.2.2

10) References to Diagrams, Graphs, Tables, Equations:
  • Always refer to any diagram/graph/table in main text
  • Label diagrams/graphs: "Figure 1.2 Graph of energy output..."
  • Label tables: "Table 3.1 Performance specifications..."
  • Number equations: "F(dB) = 10*log10(F) (3.6)" โ†’ referred as "eqn (3.6)"
11) Originality and Plagiarism:

Indicate use of others' facts/ideas with a reference number. If not referenced, it is assumed plagiarised โ€” a serious offence.

12) Finalising:

Report should have introduction, main text, conclusions, references, bibliography, appendices. Add page numbers, contents, title pages, and write the summary.

13) The Summary:

With the title, should indicate scope and give main results/conclusions. Must be intelligible without the rest of the report. Purpose: short version and guide. Length: 100-300 words. Content: provide information, not just description.

14) Proofreading:

Not possible to proofread accurately yourself โ€” too familiar with what you've written. Check carefully, then give to someone else (e.g., fellow student). Record their name in acknowledgements.

15) Word Processing / Desktop Publishing:

Great scope for endless revision. Two tips: Don't bother with style/formatting until final draft. Don't finalize graphics until text content is complete.

๐Ÿ“ Applications & Formal Writing Examples

Practiceโ–ผ
Ex1: More formal alternative to "cannot":
We cannot send it this week.
โ†’ You will receive it by next Saturday.
Ex2: More formal alternative to "a lot":
The new company will give you a lot of money than you receive now.
โ†’ The new company will give you three times of your recent salary.
Rewriting practice โ€” informal to formal:
Everyone in our class asked to improve the classroom as it was in a bad state. Some of the fans are not working and we suggest that they be replaced. Students have contributed to buying some paint, but they can't fix the doors and request that a new one should be bought. Many glass sheets in the windows are destroyed, and we suggest that they be repaired.
Most of us, in our class asked to improve the classroom as it was in inappropriate state. Four fans are not working and need to be repaired. Furthermore, students have contributed to buy some paint, but they can't fix the doors and request that a new one should be bought. As for class windows, three windows have broken glass and should be replaced.

๐Ÿ“Š Figures vs Tables โ€” Placement Rules

Key Ruleโ–ผ
  • A figure is any drawing, photograph, graph, or chart. Figure number and title appear BELOW the image.
  • A table is an arrangement of detailed facts/statistics in row-and-column format. Table number and title appear ABOVE the table.
  • Always refer to a figure or table within the text, and place the image close to the reference.

๐Ÿ“š Front Matter Components Detailed

Glossary/Index/Abstractโ–ผ
Glossary:

Provides an alphabetical list of specialized terms with their definitions. Usually at the end of the document.

List of Symbols (Nomenclature):

Lists the symbols, units, and abbreviations used in equations and formulas, often with their meanings. Usually near the beginning or before the first chapter.

Table of Contents:

Shows the structure of the document and lists section headings with their page numbers.

Index:

Lists specific topics, names, and keywords alphabetically with page numbers for easy reference. Different from TOC because it's more granular.

Abstract:

A brief summary of the entire research paper, including the purpose, methods, results, and conclusion, usually found at the beginning.

โœ… MCQ Quiz

37 Multiple Choice Questions โ€” click an option to check your answer

Score: 0 / 37

๐Ÿ’ฌ Oral Exam Q&A

28 open-ended questions โ€” practice speaking your answers, then reveal to check

Q1.What is the purpose of an Abstract in a technical report, and what are its main rules?Reveal
An Abstract provides a short summary (no more than 200 words) that gives an "in a nutshell" description of the report without underlying details. Rules: contains no undefined symbols, abbreviations, or acronyms; makes no reference by number to references or illustrative material. It includes: Purpose (issue/need/reason), Scope (main points, extent, limits), and Findings (condensed conclusions and recommendations).
Q2.What are the key components found in the "Front Matter" of a technical report?Reveal
Front Cover, Label, Title Page, Acknowledgments, Abstract, Summary, Table of Contents, List of Figures and Tables, and Nomenclature (List of Symbols, Abbreviations, and Acronyms).
Q3.What are four key characteristics of effective written communication?Reveal
The 10 characteristics are: 1-Tactful, 2-Personal, 3-Positive, 4-Active, 5-Unified, 6-Coherent, 7-Clear, 8-Concise, 9-Readable/Consistent, 10-Mechanically sound. (Any four from this list are acceptable.)
Q4.How should tables and figures be formatted and referenced in a technical report?Reveal
Figure number and title appear BELOW the image. Table number and title appear ABOVE the table. Always refer to a figure or table within the text, and place the image as close as possible to the text reference. Label diagrams/graphs as "Figure 1.2..." and tables as "Table 3.1..."
Q5.What are three specific strategies the document suggests for making technical writing non-sexist?Reveal
a) Use the word "person" (e.g., "businessperson" instead of "businessman"). b) Use plurals (e.g., "Employees will be promoted based upon their ability" instead of "An employee...his ability"). c) Use "you" or "your" (e.g., "Punch your time card" instead of "An employee should punch his time card").
Q6.Write the main items of a Technical Report, in its correct sequence?Reveal
Front Cover โ†’ Title Page โ†’ Acknowledgments โ†’ Abstract โ†’ Summary โ†’ Contents โ†’ List of Figures โ†’ List of Tables โ†’ Nomenclature โ†’ Introduction โ†’ Methods, Assumptions, and Procedures โ†’ Results and Discussion โ†’ Conclusion โ†’ References โ†’ Appendixes โ†’ Arabic Summary (ู…ู„ุฎุต ุงู„ุฑุณุงู„ุฉ ุจุงู„ู„ุบุฉ ุงู„ุนุฑุจูŠุฉ) โ†’ Back Cover.
Q7.What is the main difference between a Feasibility report and a Recommendation report?Reveal
A Feasibility report tells whether a project is "feasible" โ€” that is, whether it is practical and technologically possible. A Recommendation report compares two or more alternatives and recommends one (or, if necessary, none).
Q8.Explain the rule of one central idea per paragraph and why it is important for paragraph unity.Reveal
Paragraph unity means each paragraph should focus on one central idea. This is important because it makes writing clearer, more organized, and easier for the reader to follow. When a paragraph contains multiple unrelated ideas, it becomes confusing and loses coherence.
Q9.What are the main elements typically described in a Primary research report?Reveal
In a primary research report, you present your data and draw conclusions about it, explain your methodology, describe the equipment and facilities you used, and give some background on the problem.
Q10.Which report is used to update stakeholders on the current status of an ongoing project?Reveal
A Progress (or Status) Report.
Q11.What type of report analyzes a problem, evaluates multiple solutions, and recommends the best one?Reveal
A Feasibility Report or a Recommendation Report.
Q12.Which report is a persuasive document written to gain approval or funding for a project?Reveal
A Proposal.
Q13.What is the name of the detailed document that follows the structure (Introduction, Methodology, Results, and Discussion) to document an experiment?Reveal
A Laboratory Report (or Experimental Report).
Q14.What is the formal legal document a company issues to describe a stock or bond offering to potential investors?Reveal
A Prospectus (in a business context).
Q15.Which report provides a comprehensive overview of an organization's activities and financial performance over the past year?Reveal
An Annual Report.
Q16.What is the name for a report, often used interchangeably with a Feasibility Report, that assesses the practicality of a proposed project before it begins?Reveal
A Feasibility Study Report (or Visibility Study Report).
Q17.Which type of document provides step-by-step guidance on how to operate a machine or complete a task?Reveal
An Instruction Manual (or User Guide).
Q18.What is the comprehensive "all-purpose" document that details the complete process and findings of a technical research project?Reveal
A Technical Report or a Research Report.
Q19.What is the very first step you should take before writing a single word of a technical report?Reveal
Define the purpose and scope of the report. (Understand why you are writing it, who will read it, and what you want to achieve.)
Q20.What should be created to organize your thoughts and structure the report logically before drafting?Reveal
An outline or a table of contents. (This acts as a road map for the entire writing process.)
Q21.What is the "ABC" rule for the main content of a technical report?Reveal
Abstract, Body, Conclusion. (It ensures a clear beginning, middle, and end.)
Q22.During the drafting phase, what is the most important thing to focus on?Reveal
Getting your ideas down on paper. (Don't worry about perfect grammar or formatting yet; focus on the flow of information.)
Q23.Why is it important to use clear, short sentences and avoid jargon in the draft?Reveal
To ensure clarity and make the report accessible to the target audience. (The goal is to communicate, not to impress with complex language.)
Q24.What is the purpose of the "revision" or "re-drafting" stage?Reveal
To check the logical flow, accuracy of data, and overall structure. (This is where you move paragraphs, add missing links, and refine your arguments.)
Q25.What is the difference between "revision" and "proofreading"?Reveal
Revision checks the content and structure; proofreading checks for grammar, spelling, punctuation, and formatting errors.
Q26.Why is it recommended to have someone else proofread your final draft?Reveal
A fresh pair of eyes can catch errors and inconsistencies that the original writer may overlook because they are too familiar with the text.
Q27.What does the "Final Issue" or "Final Submission" stage involve?Reveal
Incorporating all final corrections, ensuring the formatting is consistent (fonts, margins, numbering), and submitting the report in the required format (PDF, print, etc.).
Q28.What is one final check you should always do before issuing the report?Reveal
Verify all cross-references, page numbers in the table of contents, and the accuracy of the list of figures and tables. (Ensure everything mentioned actually exists on the specified page.)