CENG 3264 Lab Report Instruction

Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 2

Instructions for Preparing Laboratory Reports

1. Your lab report should consist of the following:

a) Cover Sheet
b) Abstract
c) Report Write-up/Discussion
d) References (if requested)
e) Appendices (lengthy code, multipage timing diagrams, etc.)

2. Cover Sheet: The cover sheet should follow the format of the sample cover sheet that is attached.
3. Abstract: The abstract is a brief (50-150 words) summary of your report. The project goals, major
results, and/or conclusions should be stated in the abstract.
4. Report Write-up/Discussion: The report should begin with an INTRODUCTION and end with a
CONCLUSIONS section. The remainder of the report should be divided into several named
sections as appropriate. You should have sections titled according to what is described in that
section.
5. References: As appropriate, include a list of reference material used in preparing your report.
References should be listed in the order they were cited in the report and should be in standard
IEEE format (see the IEEE Information for Authors document on the course website). The
Preparation of Papers for IEEE TRANSACTIONS and JOURNALS document on the course website
also provides good examples. The references should occupy a one or more separate pages with
the centered title "REFERENCES". References that do not follow these conventions will be
graded as completely incorrect.
6. Appendices: Diagrams, programs, tabular data, etc. may be included as appendices or may be
contained within the body of the report. Any data that spans more than one page should be
included in an appendix. Construct multiple, titled and lettered appendices as appropriate.
7. Figures: Figures should be legible and have an appropriate figure number and caption. Logic
diagrams and timing diagrams may be screen captured and imported as figures where appropriate.
Logic and/or timing diagrams may appear in landscape mode to enhance readability. All information
in logic diagrams and timing diagrams should be labeled appropriately. The IEEE Information for
Authors document on the course website is the source for describing proper formatting and
referencing of figures. Figures that do not follow these conventions or are unreadable will be
graded as completely incorrect.
8. Source Code: All source code must follow coding conventions presented in class. Code that does
not follow these conventions will be graded as completely incorrect.
9. Timing diagrams: Remember, timing diagrams are meant to convey information to your reader about
the functionality of a given design. Related signals should be grouped together to enhance
readability. For example, clock and clock related signals should be grouped together and placed
at the top of the timing diagram. Controls signals should also be grouped together with the data
signals they control. Timing diagrams should be sized so that it is easy to read appropriate
information from the timing diagram. Long timing diagrams should be split into multiple figures as
appropriate. Timing diagrams that do not follow these conventions or are unreadable will be
graded as completely incorrect.
10. All pages are to be numbered with the exception of the cover sheet and abstract page.
11. All reports should be free of grammatical and typographical errors. Use an appropriate word
processor with spell and grammar check capabilities.
12. All reports are to be double-spaced with appropriate margins (one inch on all sides).
Title

First Laboratory Report for CENG 3264

Submitted by

Name
Student number

Computer Engineering
University of Houston – Clear Lake
Houston, Texas 77058

Date

You might also like