Class 7
Pick up Final Report Do’s and Don’ts
Class Agenda
Aggregating InformationRough Drafts Do’s and Don’ts Excel Training with Supervisor
Tuesday, March 35:30pm – Networking with etiquette instruction6:15pm – Dinner with etiquette instructionRSVP by FEb. 27 at the Office of Alumni Engagement
Robert A. Shutt, etiquette educator, will present a variety of tips to help navigate business scenarios from dining to networking with confidence.
Internship Opportunity
Booz Allen Hamilton internship focused in Health Market email Coplin
Looking to hire undergraduates with strong Excel skills
Dale Carnegie
• Sarah Schugel• Samantha • Sharon• Sarah Price
Aggregating Information
PAY ATTENTION TO THIS in order to decide if you will use averages in your findings. Even if you don’t get to do this in your rough draft, write a note saying you will.
Collapsing Graphs Collapse graphs wherever possible. How would you collapse the graphs below?
7%3% 3%
40%47%
0%5%
10%15%20%25%30%35%40%45%50%
Very Dissatisfied
Dissatisfied Neutral Satisfied Very SatisfiedPer
cen
t of
Res
pon
den
ts
Satisfaction
Respondents' Satisfaction with Home HeadQuarters' Ability to Keep Them Informed During the Lending Process
n=76
5% 3%7%
38%
47%
0%5%
10%15%20%25%30%35%40%45%50%
Very Dissatisfied
Dissatisfied Neutral Satisfied Very SatisfiedPer
cen
t of
Res
pon
den
ts
Satisfaction
Respondents' Satisfaction with the Amount of Time Between Completing the Application and Closing
n=76
5% 1% 4%
25%
64%
0%10%20%30%40%50%60%70%
Very Dissatisfied
Dissatisfied Neutral Satisfied Very SatisfiedPer
cen
t of
Res
pon
den
ts
Satisfaction
Respondent Satisfaction with the Affordability and Terms of Interest Rates and Loans
n=76
7%1% 4%
24%
61%
0%10%20%30%40%50%60%70%
Very Dissatisfied
Dissatisfied Neutral Satisfied Very SatisfiedPer
cen
t of
Res
pon
den
ts
Satisfaction
Respondents' Satisfaction with the Knowledge Level of the Lending Staff
n=74
Collapsing Graphs
Source: Data collected for Home HeadQuarters by Kathleen Ready, Community Link Report, Syracuse University, 2008.
Comment: Satisfaction ratings were on a scale from 1 to 5 with 1 being “Very Dissatisfied”, 2 being “Dissatisfied”, 3 being “Neutral”, 4 being “Satisfied”, and 5 being “Very Satisfied”. The above finding is based on survey questions 4-7. See Appendix II for frequencies. See Appendix III for original bar graphs.
1. Respondents said they were most satisfied with Home HeadQuarters’s affordability and terms of interest rates and loans (4.4).
Which do you use in your findings?
X% of respondents said they are satisfied with XYZ.
OR
X% of respondents were satisfied with XYZ.
When making your graphs…
Use a different worksheet for each graph you make (the tabs at the bottom of the Excel page).
When you need to go back and make changes to your graphs (and trust us, you will need to), it will be much easier.
DO’S and DON’T’S for 315 Final Reports
On the Exec. Summary: At the end of each finding you have the sample size. (n=?) In the findings section, the rest of the finding statement is identical but don’t put the sample size in the finding because it is under the title of the graph.
Difference between n and N: In your report you need to tell readers the sample size for each of your findings. You will use a lowercase n when you are using a survey to collect data and the respondents are a sample or part of the target population. An uppercase N is used when you are using records and the number of respondents equals the entire target population.
DO’S and DON’T’S for 315 Final Reports
Findings on Ex. Summary: Double space between findings which should be single spaced if more than one line. If single spacing between the findings will make the Ex. Summary fit on one page, do that.
Under quality of data in the methods section: Discuss representativeness and accuracy in at least two different paragraphs. Remember: representativeness is how well your sample represents the target population. Accuracy is the degree to which the information is “truthful.” There can many reasons for raising suspicious about truthfulness of data including unclear questions, lying, sloppy record-keeping. Do not be afraid to talk about the poor quality of data collected. Do not use conclusive statements.
Representativeness deals with whether your sample reflects the target populationAccuracy deals with truth
DO’S and DON’T’S for 315 Final Reports
Footers-Begin footers on the introduction page. To do this, insert a section break. (At the end of the exec. summary, go to insert, break, and select next page under section break types) Then make your footer on the introduction page. At the end of the footer type the word “Page”, and then click insert page number on the footer toolbar.Footers in the appendix-Should be the same as the rest of the paper, but the page numbers in the appendix should be the roman numeral of the appendix, and then the page number within that appendix. If appendix II is data frequencies, and I am on the third page of data frequencies, the footer should end with “Appendix II-3”
DO’S and DON’T’S for 315 Final ReportsPercentages in findings--Don't use decimals in percents. If it would round to zero, say <1%. Additionally, if the %s on the bars do not add to 100% due to rounding, include that as a comment. When you are working with a scale under 10, use one decimal.
Single space within paragraphs and double space between each paragraph. Don’t indent. Do not write in the first person anywhere in your report.
Utilize: Don’t use that word for the rest of your life.
Don’t use first person
Don’t use assess or evaluate
DO’S and DON’T’S for 315 Final Reports
To Rank or Not to Rank in Bar Graphs-If the category on the x-axis of a graph is nominal, such as race or gender, the bars should be descending in height. If the variable is ordinal, such as age or how much the respondent agrees with something, they should stay in order of the variable (very dissatisfied at one end, very satisfied at the other end). One exception is yes/no which should appear in that order.
Writing finding statements for ordinal bar graphs-If you combine categories in an ordinal bar graph to have your finding over 50%, the categories should be in the same order as on your graph.
65% of people say they are very dissatisfied or dissatisfied. 65% of people say they are satisfied or very satisfied
DO’S and DON’T’S for 315 Final Reports
DO’S and DON’T’S for 315 Final ReportsGraphing guidelines:
Always make column graphs.
If there are more than 5 bars, use the horizontal bar graph. No pie charts. No color, no gridlines, no legends.
Put data values at the top of each column.
Pay attention to labeling. The bar’s percentages should equal 100% unless the respondent had the choice of circling more than one answer (also in that case, be sure to not include in the sample the respondents that did not choose any answer).
Do not include “Don’t Know, NA, Other” in the graphs and sample number unless they provide meaningful information in the graph. Include those numbers in the comment section along with open ended answers.
DO’S and DON’T’S for 315 Final ReportsGraphing guidelines continued: The y-axis in your charts should always start at 0. Bars or column graphs that do not begin at 0 or have inconsistent intervals can be misleading.
RemindersDue next week:
Rough DraftWrite on the top if you will pick up your paper by 4:30 on Friday. If not, you can pick them after spring break.
Graphing Exercise In Your Group of Four
Working in groups you will:Complete each question in the exercise.THE ANSWERS MUST BE PERFECTLY FORMATTED FINDINGSGet approval from Coplin, Mat, Melanie, Maggie, or Zack before moving on to the next questionFollow sample finding format in guide
Everyone will work in MaxPalOne group member must log onto a computer in MAXPAL (preferably the one with money on their printing quota)
Groups for ExerciseGROUP 1 GROUP 2 GROUP 3 GROUP 4 GROUP 5
SheronNateHollis Julian
Emma MonikaMichael Sharon
Wyatt JoelLeah Jenna
Victoria Samantha Arianna Lindsay
Dilsia Lauren JoyceAvery
GROUP 6 GROUP 7
Colleen Erica AnqiPatty
Sarah PriceClarissa Sarah SchugelEmilie