CESS-Nepal

Archives December 2019

Techno Civil Universe

It is needless to say that the overall and sustainable development of the nation is entirely based on the development of Science and Technology. And so, we are facing a deficiency in this type of research paper-based publication. Thus this journal aspires to be a launchpad for the engineer’s creative urges to blossom naturally.


We cordially invite all the concerned members to send to contribute research and review articles and report of models showcased in the 11th National Civil Engineering Exhibition cum Competition 2076.

GUIDELINES FOR PROJECT/MODEL REPORT WRITING 

The report must be analytical. An analytical report presents data with interpretation and analysis. You must analyze the fact of the case, problem, condition, or situation objectively and puts forward his/her conclusion, inferences, and recommendations.

The content of the report has to be organized in a logical way to help readers understand the message clearly.

The following sections must be included in the report.

  1. 1. Title
    • Topic/Title may be novel or original.
    • List out all the group members with a college name batch and the date prepared.

Example:

My Report Topic Here

December 2020

Submitted By:

Name1, 073BCE Pulchowk Campus

Name2, 074BCE Thapathali Campus

…  (Max. 6 Group members are allowed)

  1. 2. Acknowledgments
    • Two to three paragraphs.
    • Acknowledge any help, assistance, pr guidance received from different persons or organizations.
    • If you have the slightest doubt whether a person would feel embarrassed if his/her name mentioned in the acknowledgments, you should secure his/her permission.
  1. 3. Abstract/Summary
    • Only one paragraph.
    • You should state what the report is all about, what has been accomplished and the significance of the achievements.
    • The emphasis is on the presentation of the idea not on the explanation.
    • It does not include equations, tables, and figures. However, the graphical abstract can be presented.
  1. 4. Introduction
    • Should state the subject and purpose of the project.
    • Background, historical or technical as the case may be.
    • General objectives of your project/model.
    • Describes the basic procedures or methods followed for the collection of data and their sources.
    • Indicates the value or importance of the project
  1. 5. Discussion or Description
    • It should present the data that has been collected in an organized form.
    • The previous sections needed to be written in plain English, but this section can include technical terms.
    • It focuses on facts and findings of the report and may include an objective description and discussion of the problem, an analysis of the situation, and well-structured and clear headings and sub-headings.
  1. 6. Conclusion
    • It should emphasize the report’s most significant data and ideas.
    • It should give a sense of finality and completeness to the discussion or description.
    • Relate each conclusion to each data.
    • Don’t write conclusions about the material you have not discussed in the text.
    • Use concise and numbered conclusions.
  1. 7. Scope and Limitations
    • The term scope refers to the problem or issue that you want to study with the project.
    • The scope should identify the boundaries of the study in terms of subjects, objectives, facilities, area, time frame, and the issues to which the model/project is focused.
    • The limitations of your project are those characteristics of design or methodology that impacted or influenced the interpretation of the findings from your model/project.
  1. 8. Recommendations
    • This is where you discuss any actions that need to be taken.
    • In plain English, explain your recommendations, putting them in order of priority.
  1. 9. References and Bibliography
    • MLA or APA format

There are also some writing styles to consider:

  • Keep It Simple. Don’t try to impress; rather try to communicate. Keep sentences short and to the point. Do not go into a lot of details unless it is needed. Make sure every word needs to be there, that it contributes to the purpose of the report.
  • Use the Active Voice. An active voice makes the writing move smoothly and easily. It also uses fewer words than the passive voice and gives an impact to the writing by emphasizing the person or thing responsible for an action.
  • Mind Your Grammar. Read the report aloud and have someone proofread it for you.

Submit your soft copy of the report to: cess@pcampus.edu.np

REPORT SUBMISSION DEADLINE: 15TH OF CHAITRA 2076

For More details:

9867234206, Uttam Pal

9861158967, Prakash Bhandari

9867134269, Pawan Bhattarai