Beruflich Dokumente
Kultur Dokumente
INTRODUCTION
This introduction section introduces the project. It talks about the brief history and
recent trends related to the project work and other relevant data/trends. Introduction
chapter must have at least 2-3 pages in times new roman 12 font theme.
The introduction has two functions: to introduce the project (why you're doing it,
what part of your degree it takes (if you haven’t already said that in the preface), and
what the aims were), and to introduce the report (what is coming in the following
sections). After reading this, the readers should know what the project is about, why
you are doing it, whether they have the necessary background to read the rest of the
report, and know how to find whatever they want in the rest of the report.
Probably the most common fault with introductions is that they go into too much
detail, too fast, assume knowledge that the reader doesn’t have, and don’t put the
report in context. A useful vision image is that of a cone: the first paragraph of the
introduction should be very broad, giving the so that everyone can understand how the
subject of the report relates to something they are already familiar with. Then the
following paragraphs should narrow the focus, explaining what part of the previous
paragraph the report is concerned with, and explaining why it is an interesting part of
the wider problem. The last paragraph can then introduce the specific subject that the
rest of the report will consider.
1.1 Objective
The Scope of study covers the upper and lower limits of the area of project.
The Scope covers what, how, when and where the project to be done. What data's
were taken as inputs, what criteria were used for comparing the data, what was the
outcome of the comparison etc. The details of the scope depend upon the problem
statement selected.
These must include the description about what is the scope of particular chosen topic
in TNR 12 font.
1.3 Methodology
A methodology does not set out to provide solutions - a methodology offers the
theoretical underpinning for understanding which method, set of methods, or best
practices can be applied to specific case, for example, to calculate a specific result.
A literature review is a text of a project report, which includes the current knowledge
including substantive findings, as well as theoretical and methodological contributions
to a particular topic. Literature reviews are secondary sources, and do not report new
or original experimental work. Literature reviews are a basis for research in nearly
every academic field. A narrow-scope literature review may be included as part of a
peer-reviewed journal article presenting new research, to provide context for the
reader. In such a case, the review usually precedes the methodology and results
sections of the work.
Discuss the work done so far by researchers in the domain area and their significant
conclusions. No derivations, figures, tables, graphs are expected.
Author name [1] describes what this author suggested and what you are referring from
his paper in times new roman 12 point font.
Author name [2] follow the same pattern for all authors and all reference papers.
3.1 Concept
This section shall include the detail concept of the project on the basis of which the
whole project work is performed. The phenomenon and terminology of the concept
that is relevant to the project work should be discussed here.
3.2 Design/Synthesis
This section shall include design of the parts, its calculation in details including the
schematic or actual figures/diagrams.
5. REFERENCES
Flora Institute of Technology, Khopi, Pune, BE Mechanical
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References Books
[1] Author name, Referred paper title, year, edition, page no.
[2] Author name and follow the sequence as given above for all the references.