ENG-W 231 Lecture Notes - Lecture 14: Advanced Land Observation Satellite
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Informative tone, not as persuasive as proposal. Aim for the effect of a good rhetorical handshake. Provide a brief overview of: how you responded to the problem, the conclusions at which you arrived. Map out the contents of the report. Good method: if audience reads this (note, readers often skip overit), they should be eager to read solutions. Use language that is: factual, clinical, technical, matter of fact. Good idea: provide a short, prefatory blurb that asserts the criteria that you used to develop solutions. State that you are going to detail 3 solutions. Prepare your audience for the discussion sections. This section outlines the terrain that you"ll need to compare next. Note: the goal of this section is descriptive, not comparison or evaluation. Evaluate your solutions based on the criteria you"ve outlined, in order to convincingly argue for the solution that your group has determined is best.