A research report is not an essay. It has a distinct structure that serves specific communicative purposes and reflects the conventions of academic research practice. Using an appropriate report structure is both a VCAA assessment requirement and a demonstration of research literacy.
Report structure:
- Guides readers through the research in a logical sequence
- Signals to readers where to find specific information
- Reflects the logic of the research process itself
- Demonstrates familiarity with academic conventions
Different disciplines use slightly different conventions, but the standard structure below applies broadly to empirical social science and humanities research.
Clear, specific, informative. Should communicate the key concepts and the nature of the investigation.
- Good: “The Relationship Between Screen Time and Sleep Duration in VCE Students: A Survey Study”
- Poor: “My Research About Phones”
A 150–250 word summary covering:
- Research question
- Methods
- Key findings
- Main conclusion
The abstract is written last but appears first.
KEY TAKEAWAY: The introduction should answer: “What is this investigation about, why does it matter, and what question does it address?” By the end of the introduction, the reader should understand the purpose of every subsequent section.
The literature review is an argument, not a catalogue. Each paragraph should develop a point about what the literature shows.
EXAM TIP: Common question: “What should a methods section include?” Answer with at least four elements: (1) research design, (2) sample description, (3) instruments/data collection procedures, (4) analysis approach, (5) ethical safeguards.
For qualitative or documentary research, structure may vary:
- “Results” may become “Analysis and Findings”
- Methodology may be woven into the introduction (for theoretical investigations)
- Some sections may be merged (e.g., Results and Discussion)
Consult VCAA guidelines and your teacher for the specific structure required for your investigation type.
APPLICATION: Create a section-by-section outline of your report before you begin drafting. For each section, write one sentence describing what argument or information it will convey. This ensures the overall report has a coherent logical flow before you invest in prose.
COMMON MISTAKE: Writing the literature review as though it is an independent essay rather than a building block for the research. The literature review must set up the research question — every paragraph should be moving toward the statement “therefore, this investigation addresses X.”