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How to write a lab report:
How to write a lab report
Title, Introduction and Purpose (10 points)
- Your lab report should have a title that describes what it is about.
- You should list your name as well as your lab partners’ names – including their last names.
- Your introduction should summarize:
- what questions you were trying to answer
- what observations you were making
- what measurements you were taking
- what new quantities you calculated
- what were the general circumstances of the experiment.
Materials List and Set-up Diagram (10 points)
- a list of all materials used including how many and what amount of each
- a well labeled diagram showing how those materials were used during the experiment
- Do not include common items such as calculators, notebooks, and lab partners
- Do not draw an item in the set up diagram if you are not showing how it is used.
Procedure (10 points)
- should include a numbered, step by step description of what you did
- should be detailed enough that someone in a different version of the same class could use it to repeat your experiment
- should describe what graphs were made (if any)
- should mention what quantities were calculated (if any)
- should mention how you analyzed your data after they were collected
- should be written in the past tense
- should include any additional steps needed in the analysis questions
Data and calculations * (10 - 20 points depending on amount of each needed)<
- should list qualitative observations
- should list or put into a table quantitative measurements and calculated values
- All numbers should have labeled units
- Key steps in all calculations should be shown using algebraic symbols
- One sample calculation of each type, using numbers, should be shown
Graphs * (10 pts per necessary graph)
- Should have well labeled axes including both quantities and units
- if a line graph, should have a trendline drawn through the data and an equation of best fit.
- should have a brief caption explaining the circumstances under which the data were collected.
Analysis questions * (point value varies – usually 3-5 per question)
- Specific questions asked in the lab instructions should be answered
Analysis and Conclusion (15 points)
- should summarize your results and explain how you arrived at them
- should answer any question posed in your introduction and should support that answer with numbers from your data
- should
suggest at least two possible sources of error that could not easily be
corrected by doing the lab more carefully with the same equipment.
Points are totaled and re-scaled to a 50 point scale for a formal lab or a 25 point scale for a mini-lab.
*Required elements for mini-labs.
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