Steps for Writing Effective Report Abstracts
Writing Report
Abstracts
Purdue Online
Writing Lab
Summary: This handout discusses how to write good
abstracts for reports. It covers informational and descriptive abstracts and
gives pointers for success.
Contributors: Dana Lynn Driscoll
Types
of abstracts
There
are two types of abstracts: informational and descriptive.
Informational
abstracts
- Communicate contents of reports
- Include purpose, methods, scope, results,
conclusions, and recommendations
- Highlight essential points
- Are short—from a paragraph to a page or two,
depending upon the length of the report (10% or less of the report)
- Allow readers to decide whether they want to read the report
Descriptive
abstracts
- Tell what the report contains
- Include purpose, methods, scope, but NOT results,
conclusions, and recommendations
- Are always very short— usually under 100 words
- Introduce subject to readers, who must then read the
report to learn study results
Qualities
of a good abstract
An
effective abstract
- Uses one or more well-developed paragraphs, which
are unified, coherent, concise, and able to stand alone
- Uses an introduction-body-conclusion structure in
which the parts of the report are discussed in order: purpose, findings,
conclusions, recommendations
- Follows strictly the chronology of the report
- Provides logical connections between material
included
- Adds no new information but simply summarizes the
report
- Is intelligible to a wide audience
Steps
for writing effective report abstracts
To
write an effective report abstract, follow these four steps.
- Reread your report with the purpose of abstracting in mind. Look specifically for these main parts: purpose, methods, scope, results, conclusions, and recommendations.
- After you have finished
rereading your report, write a rough draft without looking back at your
report. Consider the main parts of the abstract listed in step #1. Do not
merely copy key sentences from your report. You will put in too much or
too little information. Do not summarize information in a new way.
- Revise your rough draft to
- Correct
weaknesses in organization and coherence,
- Drop
superfluous information,
- Add
important information originally left out,
- Eliminate
wordiness, and
- Correct
errors in grammar and mechanics.
- Carefully proofread your
final copy.
Source: https://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/656/1/
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