Describe the roles and contents and construct the prefatory parts of a long report.
A formal reports manuscript format
and impersonal tone convey an impression of professionalism A format report can
be either short (fewer than 10 pages) or long (10 pages or more). It is
informational or analytical, direct, or indirect. It may be targeted to readers
inside or outside the organization.
There are three basic divisions of a
formal report:
(i)
Prefatory Parts
(ii)
Text Parts
(iii)
Supplementary Parts
(i)
Prefatory Parts are:
(a)
Cover
(b)
Title fly
(c)
Letter of authorization
(d)
Letter of acceptance
(e)
Letter
of transmittal
(f)
Table
of contents
(g)
List
of illustrations
(h)
Synopsis
or executive summer
(a) Cover
Use a cover only for long reports.
Use a stud, plain, light cardboard with good page fasteners. With the cover on
the open pages should remain flat. Center the report title and your name four
or five inches from the upper edge.
Title Fly
It is a plain sheet of paper with the
title of the report on it.
Title Page
(i) the
title of the report
(ii)
the name, title and address of the person group that authorized the report
prepared for submitted to
(iii)
the name, title and address of the person group etc that prepared the report,
prepared by submitted by
(iv)
the date on which the report was submitted.
The title page signals the readers by
giving the report title, author's name, name of person or organization to
whom the report is addressed, and
date of submission. Choose title information but not long A Report of,
A Study of, or A Survey of
Your title promises what your report
will deliver by stating the
report's purpose and content. A title
in order to
be effective must be clear, accurate,
comprehensive, specific, concise and app ropriately phrases.
Place of Title Page Items
Do not number your title page, but
count it
as page (I) of your prefatory pages.
Centre the title horizontally on
the page, three to four inches below
the upper edge, using all capital letters. If
the title is longer than six or eight
words, centre it on two or more lines.
Letter of Authorization
and Letter of Acceptance
If you received written authorization
(a litter or memo) you may want to include It usually has direct request plan.
Letter of Acceptance (or memo of acceptance) acknowledges he assignment. It
follows good- news plan confirming time and money restriction and other
pertinent detail. This letter is rarely included in report.
Letter of Transmittal (or
memo of transmittal)
It conveys your report to the
audience. It says what you'd say if you were handing the report to the
person who authorized you. It has
less formal tone.
Depending on the situation, your
letter might:
·
Acknowledge those who helped with the
report
·
Refer readers to sections of special
interest
·
Discuss the need and approaches for
follow-up investigations
·
Suggest some special uses of the
information
·
Urge the reader to take immediate action
·
Use good news plan
Table of Contents
This table outlines the text and list
Prefatory Parts
(i) List
preliminary items (transmittal letter, abstract) in your table of contents,
numbering the pages with small roman numerals. (List items that appear at the
end of the report, such as glossary, appendix, notes and bibliography section;
number these pages with Arabic numerals, continuing the page sequence of the
report proper, where page no. list the first page of your report text.
(ii) Include
no heading in the table of contents not listed as headings or subheadings in
the report; your report text may, however, contain certain sub-headings.
(iii)
Use different types of styles and indentations to show the various levels of
heads.
List of Illustrations
For simplicity sake, some reports
prefer to include all visual aid as illustration or exhibits. Put the list of
figures and table on separate page if they won't fit on one page with the table
of content.
Synopsis or Executive
Summary
A synopsis is a brief overview (one
page or less) of report's most important point. It is also called abstract.
Executive summary is a fully developed mini version of the report and is
comprehensive.
(i)
Make your summary able to stand alone in meaning a mini-report
(ii) Make
it intelligible to the general reader. Readers of summaries will vary widely in
expertise, perhaps much more than those who read the report itself.
So translate ail technical data into
plain English
(iii)
Add no new information. Simply summarize the report
(iv)
Stick to the order of your report
(v)
Emphasize only major points
No comments
Dear Members, Thanks for Your Comments. We must be reply your comment answer as soon as possible. Please Stay with us.....