1. PROJECT REPORT GUIDE
Presentation
• One copy of the report is to be
presented or as will be determined
by the examiner.
•The report must have a front and
back cover and be properly bound.
2. • All reports must be typed or
word-processed.
• Good presentation standards
include sound English grammar,
punctuation and spelling.
PROJECT REPORT GUIDE
3. You will not achieve extra marks
because you:
• use colour
• use a variety of ‘fancy’ fonts
• place chapter headings in a very
large font on a blank page
PROJECT REPORT GUIDE
4. Page Formatting
• margins 1” all round
• new chapter 2” top margin
• headers and footers none
• footnotes none
5. Page Numbering
• bottom center of page
• Arabic numerals (1,2,3…) for
–all chapters
–appendices
–references
–bibliography
6. • small Roman numerals (i, ii, iii,
iv …) start and are printed on
pages covering:
–Acknowledgement
–contents
–list of tables
–list of figures
–N.B. The page number is not
shown on the title page
Page Numbering
7. Text Formatting
• font style Times New Roman
• font size 12-point
• justification full
• line spacing 1
• emphasis bold or italics
(avoid UPPERCASE or
underline)
10. Figures, Diagrams, Tables and
Charts
• position close to the text where they are
discussed
• duplicate a figure, table or diagram if it is
referred to from a different chapter
• chose size carefully
• be consistent in the style of labels and
captions used
• position these at the bottom of figure
12. Other points
• New chapters begin on a new
page
• Printed pages must be single-
sided
• Paper must be A4 white and
standard thickness
13. References in Projects
• All items referred to on the main body of
your report must be included in a list of
references called a Bibliography.
• the basic rule about reference is to give
the following information:
–who it is by
–what it is called
–how, when and where it was
published
14. Book References
MOORE, N., How to Write a Report. 2nd ed. London, Library Association, 1987.
Author Title Edition Publisher Year
15. Structure of the Project Report
• Title Page
• Preface/Acknowledgement
• Table of Contents
–[List of table]
–[List of Figures]
• Body of Report (Chapter 1-n)
• Bibliography
• Appendices
16. Title Page
Title of Project
Author
Name of School
Course Name
Index No.
Year
17. Acknowledgement
• Observations that you wish to
make which are not part of the
report, e.g.
• introductory & explanatory
remarks
• -practical constraints
• -acknowledgements
18. Table of Contents
• The contents page consists of
• title – ‘ Table of Contents’
• list of numbered chapter and
section headings
• N.B.
–a table of content can be
automatically generated by a
word processor
19. List of Tables/List of Figures
• adopt a common numbering
system, e.g.
• either sequential throughout the
report, viz:
• Table 1, Table 2, ………..Table n
• Or numbering within chapters, viz:
• Table 1.1, Table 1.2,…. Table 4.1
20. Chapter One
• INTRODUCTION
• The purpose of the introduction is, quite
naturally, to introduce the project to the
reader. It should therefore describe briefly
what the project is about
• It should include:
–the scope of the project
–A summary of the project
–a ‘roadmap’ of the problem area e.g.
Chapter 2 explains …. Chapter 3
discusses
21. Chapter Two
• PROBLEM DEFINITION &
ANALYSIS
• a description of the problem area
• a description to the solution of the
problem
• Limitations of the current system
• Advantages of the proposed
system
• Feasibility studies
23. • Include System Flow Chart
• Show the Entity Relationship
Diagram (ERD) for the database
• Draw the
–Table designs
–Form designs
–Output designs (Queries and
Reports)
Chapter Three
DESIGN
24. • Describe the structure and quantity of
input data required and the output from the
system
• Show the design of forms, reports and
queries that might be used in the
system.
• Explain if validation and verification of
data are required/used in the solution.
• Design a comprehensive test strategy for
the system
Chapter Three
DESIGN
25. Chapter Four
USER MANUAL
• Your program and report should
have a user manual that entails:
–instructions
–error correction and handling
–description and function of each
menu item
–how to feed data
26. Chapter Five
RECOMMENDATION
• Do a self assessment of your
system
• Highlight any weaknesses it might
have
• Indicate how the faults might be
overcome.
• NB. No detail is necessary
27. Chapter Six
CONCLUSION
• This flows naturally from the
results. Indeed it should be
possible to support every
conclusion with direct evidence
gathered during the project.
29. SAMPLE MARKS SCHEME
NO
.
ITEM MARKS
1. Title Page 3
2. Table of contents
List of contents
Correct page references 2
3. Report structure
Fully typed text
Sequencing of contents
Binding 7
4. Acknowledgement or dedication 1
30. SAMPLE MARKS SCHEME
5. Introduction
Existence and Relevance 2
6. Analysis 16
Problem definition
Overview of the current system using
Limitations of the current system (At
least 3)
Benefits of the proposed system (At
31. SAMPLE MARKS SCHEME
7 Design
a)System Flow Chart/ERD
Correct use of symbols
Correct logic
a) Table/File design (at least 8
tables)
Overall ERD
a)Input design
b)Output design
28
32. SAMPLE MARKS SCHEME
8. Demonstration
Welcome screen/main menu
Data Capture
Forms
Command/switch button on
forms
Ability to capture data i.e. data
entry and retrieval
Input validation
Data maintenance
Delete, Append, Edit
33. SAMPLE MARKS SCHEME
9.
User Manual
How to feed and Obtain data
How to deal with errors
2
10.
a)Recommendation
b)Conclusion
c)Appendices
d) Bibliography
4
TOTAL 100