Civil Engineering Lab Report Format Final
Civil Engineering Lab Report Format Final
Communication is the lifeblood of science. No matter how incredible or revolutionary your results or ideas, if
you cannot present them so that other people can understand them, it is as if you have discovered nothing. The
following format has been designed to clearly and succinctly communicate your findings. There may be other
ways to report this, there may be better ways. But in this class, this format is the way. If you do not follow the
format, points will be deducted. A good laboratory report does more than present data; it demonstrates the
writer's comprehension of the concepts behind the data and the significance of the results. Thus, no length is
set.
REPORT CONTENT
1. Title Page
Name of experiment, lab number and course information
Full typed names of lab partners
Submission date
2. Introduction
State the experimental objective and background.
Explain the relevance and importance of the experiment (including actual engineering examples and
applications). Why are you performing the experiment?
3. Technical Theory
Explain the scientific principles that apply to the experiment and are relevant to the analysis and
interpretation of results.
Explain relevant equations.
Equations should be on their own separate line (use the equation editor).
The equation reference number should be right-justified.
Each variable should be defined the first time it is used (do not define with just units).
Equations are referenced by number in the Results section when describing how a particular
quantity was determined.
Equation example:
𝜎 = 𝐸𝜀 [1]
Where 𝜎 is the stress
𝐸 is Young’s Modulus
𝜀 is the strain
Do not include the experimental procedure in this section.
Do not include equations specific to equipment.
8. References
Properly cite material/information from any outside sources (including the lab manual) used in the
report.
Include in-text citations that refer to the numbered citations in the References section.
Only include references that you actually cited in the report (i.e. material properties).
Wikipedia is NOT allowed as a reference.
9. Appendices
Raw data is required in the appendix.
Other appendices can include calculations or graphs/pictures/tables not included in the report itself.
Each kind of item should be in its own appendix, and each appendix should have a letter designation
(Appendix A, etc.).
Refer to each appendix at least once in the body of the report, and a brief mention of the contents
should be included.
REPORT FORMATTING
Be professional! All format guidelines are established to produce readable, visually appealing, and clearly
structured documents.
1. Formal English
No contractions
No personal pronouns – I, we, our, us, you, your, yours, he, her, theirs
No jargon, clichés, or colloquialisms
2. Verb tense
Use past tense when talking about the experiment (it is already finished).
Use present tense when talking about the theory and permanent equipment (they still exist).
3. Font
Calibri, Times New Roman, or Arial are acceptable.
Use 10- to 12-point text.
Use 1.5 spacing (double is not professional, and single does not leave room for written comments).
4. Headings
Headings should be bolded and in the same font as the document text.
Skip one line above and below headings.
5. Figures/Graphs/Tables
All figures/graphs/tables must have descriptive titles.
Example: “Figure 1. A peanut butter and jelly sandwich”
Figure titles should be below the figure.
Table titles should be above the table.
No hand plots are accepted – they must be computer generated.
All graph axes should have titles and dimensions.
6. Page Numbering
Pages should be numbered at the bottom of the page in the center.
7. General Notes
Always double-check for spelling errors!
It is a false stereotype that engineers are expected to be poor writers. Make sure your language
is clear and conveys your point accurately.
Watch for “orphans” and “widows” in the text.
An orphan is a section title (or something similar) that begins on one page, but the rest of that
section is on the following page.
A widow is a figure title or table row (or something similar) that ends on one page but was
started on the previous page.