Posted: December 2nd, 2013

Analysis of Phenylketonuria

Project description
type of work is course work at a degree level
please have a look at the attachment.really important and i have included result table
to write a practical report in the form of a short scientific communication with a maximum word count of 1250 words. practical report will contain the following sections:
1. Abstract (no more than 200 words)
This is the front window for your report. It enables the reader to make an informed decision about whether they want to read the whole report. The length is usually a paragraph or two and always less than a page. One way to write an abstract is ask and then address a number of questions concerning your experiments such as:
What is the purpose of the work?
What methods did you use for your research?
What were the main findings and conclusions reached as a result of your research?
Did your work lead you to make any recommendations for future actions?
No references or figures should be included in the abstract
2. Introduction
This section should provide relevant background information on the project, with appropriate use of references to published literature. In other words, it should take the form of a short literature review. However, as the word count limit for this report is only 1000 words, you should keep this section as concise as possible whilst covering the relevant information that readers will need to know in order to make sense of your experiments.
At the end of the introduction, you should state the aim of your project.
3. Materials and Methods
This section described the materials (e.g. chemicals and equipment) and methods you used in the laboratory to perform your experiments. it should be written in the past tense and also in the third person.
(for example, “0.5ml of Phenylalanine Hydroxylase was added to sample tubes 1b and 2b and incubated for 15mins in a water bath set to 37C”, not: “ I added 0.5ml Phenylalanine Hydroxylase… or “0.5ml Phenylalanine Hydroxylase is added to….”)
The materials section should never be written out like a shopping list, and do not use bullet points or numbers when describing the methods (this would then be called a protocol, not a method description). The methods should be written out fully in normal prose structure (i.e. sentences and paragraphs) in sufficient detail for another researcher to repeat your experiment based solely on the information provided within this section. Remember to include all volumes, concentrations and incubation times used in your experiments.
4. Results
In this section, you describe your results with inclusion of figures and accompanying text. Remember to include figure numbers and descriptive legends for all your figures, and refer to all figures in the text.
5. Discussion
The discussion is exactly what it claims to be. Normally most students falter at this final hurdle and
lose most marks since a significant amount of marks is proportioned to this section. The discussion is normally written as one piece of fluent text, but can be divided into paragraphs.

Referencing Requirements:
6. References
References should be provided at the end in a numbered alphabetical list according to the Harvard referencing style. In additi
on, all in-text references should be provided within closed brackets as author surname et al (if more than two authors, followed by the publication date (e.g. (Kennedy et al, 2008); if only one author, then just (Kennedy, 2008); if two authors, then (Kennedy and Smith, 2008).

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