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How to Write a Lab Report

Learning to write effective laboratory reports is an important skill regardless of


what career path you choose to pursue. Writing these reports develops the
ability to organize ideas logically, think clearly, and express yourself accurately
and concisely.

Your lab report will be partitioned into five sections just like a journal article.
You will have an abstract, an introduction, methods, results, and a discussion.
Just because there are all those sections does not mean that it has to be very, very
long. It just needs to be complete. In addition, there are some overriding format
rules for you to follow. These rules are listed at the bottom of this page.

Here’s what needs to go into each major section of the report:

Abstract:
This may be hard to write first... if so, skip it, and start writing on the results
section. Come back to writing this last.

The abstract is an overall summary of what you did and why. It is short
(typically less than 250 words). It usually includes a sentence on each of the
other sections of the paper. Therefore, the basic format of an abstract is:

1. State the principle objectives and scope of the investigation.


2. Describe the methodology employed.
3. Summarize the results.
4. State the principle conclusions.

For example, in a study of crop pests, you might write something like...

"Over the past 5 years, farmers in Western Massachusetts have noticed an increase in damage
to specific crops, but have been unable to pinpoint the cause for this damage. In this study, a
detailed examination of those crops was carried out to determine the specific cause of the
damage. We found that the damage was due to a specific beetle, which kills the crops by eating
the leaves of the crop plants. We have proposed that the reason why this beetle is causing more
damage in Western Massachusetts than in other areas is because of the especially rainy seasons in
the past few years combined with the high altitude in the Berkshires."

Although this fake abstract is vague (because there’s no such beetle problem),
the general flow of an abstract, approximately one sentence summarizing each
section, should be clear. Some students and authors feel a desire not to give it all
away in the abstract, like saving a punch line for the end. However, it is
preferable for you tell it all because then your paper is more understandable.
This fake abstract is certainly long enough, and notice that it is primarily written
in past tense.

Introduction:
This section explains why you did what you did. It gives the reader an
understanding of the rationale for the study or experiment. In order to tell
someone why you’re doing something, it usually requires a bit of background
information. Finally, the end of the introduction usually also includes a very
brief statement about what the results of the study showed. The entire
introduction is not usually short-- it is rather meaty. Here is an example of what
an introduction is for, but not an entire introduction, because then it would be
long:

If you saw me with a wrench under a sink during lab, my telling you that I’m trying to fix sink
leaks would probably not be enough information. You’d want to know why I was doing it (and
not teaching), rather than someone who is a trained plumber. You’d also want to know what kind
of a leak it was, so that you could understand if it was an urgent repair. You’d even have to
already know what a sink was and what pipes and leaks were.

Therefore, the general rules for the introduction are:

1. It should present, with clarity, the nature and scope of the problem
investigated.
2. It should review the pertinent literature (sometimes, in our cases, just the
lab handout) to orient the reader to the subject and methods used.
3. It should state the principle results and conclusions of the investigation.

So when you go about trying to write an introduction for an experiment that


we did in lab, you will need to tell me why doing that experiment was important
(what was the goal?), some background about the type of work you were doing,
and what you found out.

Methods:
This section is where you write a thorough description of how you actually
performed the experiments of your investigation. It should be specific enough to
be followed by another researcher, but not too detailed; how to create a balance
between enough information but not too much is a tricky one to learn. This is a
good place to start writing your lab report... you don't even have to have all the results in
before you get started.

You will receive lab handouts for each lab that contain the methods and
materials we will use. Those are exceedingly detailed methods (as much detail as
I can stand to write!), with information specific to a beginner in that technique.
That is not what is expected in the methods section of your lab report. While it is
true that someone should be able to repeat your study based on reading your
methods section, that particular someone would be expected to know all the
basic, beginner information about the techniques—so although you are learning
that information in your lab, you do not have to write it all down. You just have
to figure out which information is pertinent (that's the tough part).

For example, you learned how to align your specimen in the paraffin block on the microtome
in order to cut it properly, but you certainly do not have to describe that in your methods
section... just saying that you sectioned your block on a microtome would explain all of that. You
would, however, need to give some details, like the thickness of the sections, so that your reader
could understand the data.

About the format for the methods section. There is no real way to write this
section so that it reads like prose. It won't sound beautiful or flow perfectly, but
it should still be written in paragraph form. Keep in mind that this section does
not need to be exceedingly long (and no separate materials list should be
included). Finally, if you were using multiple new techniques, you might find it
simplest to have subheadings within this section for each technique.

Results:
Here’s where you tell the reader what you saw, but not what you think about
what you saw. It should include figures and/or tables of data. These figures
and tables should be numbered and titled. In the text of the results section you
will simply clarify your quantitative or diagrammatic data in words for the
reader to understand. Be sure to refer to your figures and/or tables in the text of
this section. If I continue the crop pest example,

"37% of all plants showed evidence of beetle damage. Because beetle damage ranged from
barely detectable in some plants to extreme in others, we came up with a classification system for
it. If beetle damage killed the plant, we categorized it as "severe." When it was found on more
than 50% of the leaves we categorized it as "extensive," while if it was found on more than 20%
but less than 50% of the leaves we called it "moderate." Finally, if it was on under 20% of the
leaves, we categorized it as "minimal." Table #1 shows the percentage of damaged plants in each
category. It should be noted that the greatest number of damaged plants were at the extremes,
either severe or minimal."

You would then have to resist the urge to explain why severe and minimal
damage were seen the most, because that is an interpretation of your results—
save that for the discussion section.

Please note that when describing your data, it is essential to first remind the
reader what the experiment was. So, an overall description of each experiment
should be included for each section of data-- but do not repeat the experimental
details provided in Materials and Methods.

A few word of wisdom from others:

"The great tragedy of science-- the slaying of a beautiful hypothesis


by an ugly fact." T.H. Huxley
"The fool collects fact, the wise man selects them." John Wesley
Powell
"If you are out to describe the truth, leave elegance to the tailor."
Albert Einstein

Discussion:
This section is where you can give the reader your opinions based on the
evidence (but keep in mind that opinions that go beyond the evidence are NOT
welcome here... we need to remain scientific, not philosophical).

This section (in a lab report) should include the following components:

1. The principles, relationships and generalizations shown by the results.


Basically, turn the individual results into a whole story.
2. Point out any exceptions or any lack of correlation with expected results.
Never try to fudge data that doesn't quite fit.
3. Conclusions based on results should be written as clearly as possible,
summarizing your evidence for each conclusion.
4. Don't be shy; discuss any practical applications of your results or
methods.
5. Identification of the next step of your investigation or what you would do
differently if you could repeat your experiments. For example, what
study might you do based on what you figured out, or that you might
increase the amount of substrate you used if you could do it again.

Back to the crop pest example:

Based on the data which showed that plants seemed to either be eaten up entirely or ignored, it
seems as if once a beetle stops at a plant, it stays there until it is done with the plant rather than
jumping around from plant to plant. Observation of beetle behavior would be necessary to
investigate this particular possibility further.

One last comment about the discussion section that might help you as you
write your report: Your verb tense will swing back and forth between present
and past tense. Your own results should be reported in the past tense. Ideas
about the meaning of these results would be reported in the present tense.
Formatting Details:

type your report


write it in the third person
be sure to use the correct tense for each section (past for methods and results,
appropriate tense for introduction and discussion)
run a spell check
don't worry if you say the same thing over in different sections-- it is typical
and usual to do that
the abstract, methods, and results sections will read very dryly. It is only in
the introduction and discussion sections where your own thoughts will really
come in.

Hint:

Sometimes it is easiest to write the report in the following order (but put them
in the right order to turn it in): methods, results, introduction, discussion,
abstract.

Guide was written by Dawn Tamarkin, Ph.D for Bio 351 at STCC.

Used with permission


Rubric For Lab Report

Weight
Supplementary Information to guide
Report Feature (out of 20
you on each feature
points)
Your report contains all the Abstract, Introduction, Methods,
3
sections expected Results, and Discussion are all included
Example of appropriate information:
your results are in the Results section,
while your impressions of the results
Each section of your report
are in the Discussion section.
contains the appropriate
4
information and is written in
Example of appropriate style: The
the appropriate style
Abstract should be a brief synopsis, the
Methods should be pretty dry but
explanatory.
Rather than just mentioning what you
Your report contains all
saw, have a diagram of it... and when
appropriate tables and 3
you have a lot of quantitative results,
figures
put them in a table.
Although your figures and tables seem
obvious to you, a reader needs to be
Figures and tables are all taken through them. Be sure to explain
numbered with a legend, 3 your information in a legend that
and referenced in the text. accompanies the figure, and tell us
when we should look at this figure in
your text.
A quick explanation in a legend is not
enough for a reader to really
understand your figures. For example,
if you obtain data on molecular weight
Figures and tables are all and show it in a figure, you need to
described in the body of the 1 explain the trend seen in your figure
text. within the body of the text. The data is
in the figure, and you understand the
trend, but a reader who is new to this
information needs this trend pointed
out clearly.
What were you doing? Why? What
The main point of the lab is
4 knowledge or experience did you get
clearly explained
out of it?
Clarity 1 Rambling is not good in a lab report.
Avoid zillions of spelling mistakes and
Lack of errors (type-Os and
1 type-Os. Make sure your report is
spelling)
typewritten.
Lab report guidelines -Adapted from Lisa Rapp’s Biotechnology Program at STCC.

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