Help Needed: Surviving Year-Long Placement with Mid-Semester Report

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SUMMARY

The discussion centers on an undergraduate student struggling with a mid-semester report during a year-long placement involving Hubble and Chandra data. The report, worth 10% of their overall degree, requires a structured approach including an introduction, methodology, and future plans. Participants recommend seeking examples of well-received past papers as templates and emphasize the importance of citations. The consensus is that the report does not need to meet Ph.D. quality standards, but rather serves as a test of research and organizational skills.

PREREQUISITES
  • Understanding of scientific report structure, including introduction, methodology, and conclusions.
  • Familiarity with Hubble and Chandra data analysis.
  • Basic knowledge of academic citation formats.
  • Research skills to locate and analyze past academic papers.
NEXT STEPS
  • Research how to structure a scientific report effectively.
  • Learn about data analysis techniques specific to Hubble and Chandra data.
  • Explore citation management tools like Zotero or EndNote.
  • Find and review examples of successful undergraduate research papers in astrophysics.
USEFUL FOR

Undergraduate students in scientific fields, particularly those involved in research placements, and anyone seeking guidance on writing academic reports.

The_shadow
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Hi guys,

I'm an undergraduate studying at uni currently on a year long "placement". I say "placement", more like "do meaningless tasks that benefit my advisor and his research" - but ultimately nothing to do with my thesis. Anyway since my advisor puts in no effort and the university have completely abandoned me (This is what I get for being the top student - lesson for you folks, don't bother). Anyway I have a mid semester report due and its worth about 10% of my overall degree. All I have been given in the way of advice is the data and time at which its due. Great. So my question is this - what do I need to include?? I assume the structure is say:

Introduction - observations, data reduction ect??
method? how much detail do I go into?
What I will do - yeah like I have any freaking idea

Its a 2000 word limit. I'm working with Hubble and Chandra data. I really need advice - its ridiculous I'm a third year under grad and expected to produce Ph.D. quality research with nothing more that a library card and thesis title! Have had no training in thesis writing dissertation or anything - I've been sat in a class room for the last two years studying - This is way to much pressure!

Any and all coments welcome. Thanks guys!
 
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Find examples of well received past papers. They will serve as a template to follow. I would imagine your advisor is willing to help upon request. This is more a test of your research and organizational skills. I doubt anyone is expecting a thesis quality paper with this exercise. Arxix is another resource you can consult for examples of how ]and sometimes how not] to organize a paper. Whatever you do, do not forget to give citations!
 

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