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Thursday, July 07, 2011

How to write Virtual university Internship Reports

Practice report


If you are registered for the internship, which are required to submit a report on the proposed practices to your supervisor the power to the end of the semester. The report consists of two parts: (a) the organization and (b) the portion of the project. The organization carries some 25% of the weight of your degree, while the project takes 75% of the weight. The report should be written in a professional manner. Must be double-spaced and written in a good quality paper. It has to be bound by a hard cover with your name and identification number on the cover. There is no minimum or maximum length of the report. However, the typical size of a lab report is 50 pages. You should keep a copy of your report for your own use, because the report to your instructor will not be returned within a year.



Internship Proposal

Before starting work on the project must obtain approval of the proposed project supervisor of the faculty. The project proposal is an outline of its action plan for the proposed practices. Usually, the theme of the project is assigned by the organization. However, if the organization does not give a research topic or ask you to do some work that have nothing to do with research, you have to choose their own topic for research in consultation with their faculty supervisor. Please remember that a proposed practice is necessary for the project only and must include the following:



1. Introduction: Describe briefly what your project is practical



2. Objectives: Describe the goals you would like to accomplish through his research. Do not write goals to practices. Enter the objectives of what the study. You must explain why they carried out this project and what results you can expect from your study. The objectives should focus on the things you would like to study and text collection and data analysis.



3. Significance of the Study: Explain why the topic you have chosen is very important. Explain their importance to employers, employees, management professionals, other stakeholders and society in general.



4. Methodology: This section should describe the data (primary / secondary) and variables (dependent / independent, continuous / categorical), methods of data collection (telephone interview, personal interview, mailed questionnaire, structured / formal questionnaire, published statistics), data analysis techniques (graphing, frequency, percentage, cross-tabs, chi-square analysis, ANOVA correlation, regression, etc), presentation skills and format of the report.

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