advanced technical writing lecture 3 abstract writing

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Advanced Technical Writing Lecture 3 Abstract Writing

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Advanced Technical Writing

Lecture 3 Abstract Writing

Yasser

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Abstracts

Abstract summarized and highlight the major points of a longer piece of writing.

Abstract are written for many formal reports, journal articles, and most dissertations.

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Abstract primary purpose

To enable readers to decide whether to read the work in full.

They enable researches to review a great deal of literature in a short time.

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Abstract for reports and articles

Abstract must accurately but concisely describe the original work so that researchers in the field will not miss valuable information.

Abstract should contain no information not discussed in the original.

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When are abstracts used?

Ordinarily part of a research article in a journal For chapters in a book, especially if each chapter

has a different author Library reference tools, such as Biological

Abstracts For presentations at scientific meetings (often the

"published abstract" is the only written record of such a presentation)

Dissertations, some papers in the sciences and social sciences require abstracts

 

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Abstracts

An abstract is a short informative or descriptive summary of a longer report.

It is written after the report is completed, although it is intended to be read first.

In a technical report, the abstract appears on a separate page after the table of contents and list of illustrations

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Abstract Classification

Descriptive

Informative

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Descriptive Abstract Tell readers what information the report, article,

or paper contains Include the purpose, methods, and scope of the

report, article, or paper Do not provide results, conclusions, or

recommendations. Are always very short, usually under 100 words. Introduce the subject to readers, who must then

read the report, article, or paper to find out the author's results, conclusions, or recommendations

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Example Of Descriptive Abstract

Purpose This report describes the practices and

selected foreign countries for scope

providing engineering expertise on shift in nuclear power plants. The report discusses the extent to which engineering expertise is made available and the alternative models of providing such expertise. The implications of foreign practices for U.S. consideration are discussed, with particular reference to the shift

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Continue Example

technical advisor position and to a proposed shift engineer position.

The Methods relevant information for this study came used from the open literature, interviews with utility staff and officials, and governmental and nuclear utility

reports.

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Informative Abstracts Communicate specific information from the report,

article, or paper. Include the purpose, methods, and scope of the report,

article, or paper. Provide the report, article, or paper's results,

conclusions, and recommendations. Are short -- from a paragraph to a page or two,

depending upon the length of the original work being abstracted. Usually informative abstracts are 10% or less of the length of the original piece.

Allow readers to decide whether they want to read the report, article, or paper.

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Example of Informative Abstract Purpose This report describes the practices and

selected foreign countries for scope

providing engineering expertise on shift in nuclear power plants. The report discusses the extent to which engineering expertise is made available and the alternative models of providing such expertise. The implications of foreign practices for U.S. consideration are discussed, with particular reference to t he shift

technical advisor position and to a

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Continue Exampleproposed shift engineer position. The

Methods relevant information for this study came used from the open literature, interviews with

utility staff and officials, and governmental and nuclear utility reports.

The countries used two approaches to Finding provide engineering expertise on shift:(1)

employing a graduate engineer in a line management operations position and (2) creating a specific engineering position to provide expertise to the operations staff. The comparison of these two models did not

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Continue ExampleGeneral indicate that one system inherently functions Conclusion more effectively than does the other for safe operations. However, the alternative models are likely to affect crew relationships and performance; labor supply, recruitment, and retention and system implementation. Of Recomme- the two systems, the nonsupervisory dation engineering position seems more advantageous within the context of current recruitment and career-path practices.

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Where to find examples of abstracts:

The best source of example abstracts is journal articles. Go to the library and look at engineering journals, or look at electronic journals on the web.

Read the abstract; read the article. Pick the best

ones, the examples where the abstract makes the article easier to read, and figure out how they do it.

Not everyone writes good abstracts, even in refereed journals, but the more abstracts you read, the easier it is to spot the good ones.

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Which Type Should you Write?

The answer depends on the organization or publication for which you are writing.

Aim at the needs of the principal readers of your document.

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Length of Abstracts

A long abstract defeats the purpose of an abstract. For this reason abstracts usually no longer than 150 to 250 words.

Descriptive abstracts may be considerably shorter, of course.

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Abstract Should Includes

The subject of the study The scope of the study The purpose of the study The methods used The results obtained (informative abstract

only) The Recommendations made, if any

(informative abstract only)

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Abstract Should not Include

The background of study A detailed discussion or explanation of the

methods used Administrative details about how the study was

undertaken, who funded it, who worked on it. Figures, tables, charts, maps, and bibliographic

references Any information that does not appear in the

original.

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COMMON PROBLEMS Too long. If your abstract is too long, it may be rejected.

Abstracts are often too long because people forget to count their words

Too much detail. Abstracts that are too long often have unnecessary details. The abstract is not the place for detailed explanations of methodology or for details about the context of your research problem

Too short. Shorter is not necessarily better.  If your word limit is 200 but you only write 95 words, you probably have not written in sufficient detail.

Failure to include important information. You need to be careful to cover the points listed above.

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Are You Ready For Your 2nd Assignment ?

Write Abstract for your Formal

ReportDue next Tuesday at class

time Good Luck

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Quiz 1

How many Type of abstract are there, name them and what are the different between them ?