Versions Compared

Key

  • This line was added.
  • This line was removed.
  • Formatting was changed.

...

  • Abstract - Summarize the purpose, methods, results, and conclusions of your subteam. 100 words max.
  • Introduction - Explain how your completion of your challenge will affect AguaClara and our mission of providing safe drinking water (or sustainable wastewater treatment!). If this is a continuing team, how will your contribution build upon previous research? What needs to be further discovered or defined? If this is a new team, what prompted the inclusion of this team?
  • Literature Review - Discuss what is already known about your research area. Connect your objectives with what is already known and explain what additional contribution you intend to make.
  • Previous Work - Discuss what is already known about your research area based on the work of AguaClara subteams. Connect your objectives with what past teams discovered and explain what additional contribution you intend to make. Make sure to add APA formatted in text citations.
  • Methods - Explain the techniques you have used to acquire additional data and insights. The techniques should be described in sufficient detail so that another researcher could duplicate your work.
  • Experimental Apparatus - Explain your apparatus setup using enough detail such that future teams can recreate your apparatus.
  • Procedure - Discuss your experimental procedure to explain how you ran your experiment, what you were testing, and the values of relevant parameters.
  • Results and Analysis Discussion - Connect your work to fundamental physics/chemistry/statics/fluid mechanics or whatever field is appropriate. Analyze your results and compare with theoretical expectations or if you have not yet done the experiments, describe your expectations based on established knowledge. Include implications of your results. How will your results influence the design of AguaClara plants? If possible provide clear recommendations for design changes that should be adopted.
  • Conclusions - Explain what you have learned and how that influences your next steps. Make sure that you defend your conclusions. (this is conclusions, not opinions!)
  • Future work - Describe your plan of action for the next several weeks of research.
  • References - Cite all references your team used here. 
  • Task Map and Task ListYou should keep and update your detailed task list from the first assignment in each of your reports. Denote completed tasks and modify your deadlines to reflect your most recently completed progress and any delays.
  • Manual - Provide all of the guidance that would be necessary for future teams to pick your work up where you left off.

It is too easy to create a report that is full of opinions and unsubstantiated conclusions. Defend your conclusions using your engineering skills. If you have an opinion (hypothesis) that you wish to include, explain how you will test your hypothesis.

...

Research reports will be written in Overleaf. The final submission at the end of the semester will be a PDF of the report and a zip file of the Overleaf Project uploaded to the subteam wiki page.

Starting with Overleaf - Zip Files:Overleaf 

...

These links are identical to the zip files above, but if you'd just like a reference to the original files without re-downloading the zip, use the links below. These read-only links do not give you access to the figures and bibliographies that would be in the Projects menu.

The file name shall be "Report <team name> <semester> <year>". For example, the StaRS Filter Theory report name would be "Report StaRS Filter Theory Spring 2016"

If for some reason you need to switch to a new Overleaf document or the template changed significantly:

...

, copy and paste relevant source code from the old report to the new report (this keeps all comments)


All formatting should follow Grammar Guidelines for Reports.

...