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Your abstract/overview should be one paragraph

Venue Evaluation Report

EVM301 Venue and Facility Management

Assessment 2

Student Name

 

Abstract/Overview

Your abstract/overview should be one paragraph and should not exceed 120 words. It is a summary of the most important elements of your report. All numbers in the abstract/overview, except those beginning a sentence, should be typed as digits rather than words. To count the number of words in this paragraph, select the paragraph, and on the Tools menu click Word Count.

Introduction

Begin your report with the introduction. The active voice, rather than passive voice, should be used in your writing.

This template is formatted according to APA Style guidelines, with one inch top, bottom, left, and right margins; Times New Roman font in 12 point; double-spaced; aligned flush left; and paragraphs indented 5-7 spaces. The page number appears one inch from the right edge on the first line of each page, excluding the Figures page.

Aims and objectives

Use headings and subheadings to organise the aims and objectives of your report. The first heading level is formatted with initial caps and is centered on the page. Do not start a new page for each heading.

Name, Location and History of Venue/ Facility

Use headings and subheadings to organise the Name, Location and History of Venue/ Facility for your report. The first heading level is formatted with initial caps and is centered on the page. Do not start a new page for each heading.

 

Facility/ Venue Mission and Vision Statement

Use headings and subheadings to organise the Facility/ Venue Mission and Vision Statement for your report. The first heading level is formatted with initial caps and is centered on the page. Do not start a new page for each heading.

 

Facility/ Venue SWOT Analysis

Use headings and subheadings to organise the Facility/ Venue SWOT Analysis findings for your report. The first heading level is formatted with initial caps and is centered on the page. Do not start a new page for each heading.

Facility/ Venue Management Structure

Use headings and subheadings to organise the Facility/ Venue Management Structure for your report. The first heading level is formatted with initial caps and is centered on the page. Do not start a new page for each heading.

 

Facility/ Venue Maintenance Practices

Use headings and subheadings to organise the Facility/ Venue Maintenance Practices for your report. The first heading level is formatted with initial caps and is centered on the page. Do not start a new page for each heading.

 

Facility/ Venue Projected Changes and their Impact

Use headings and subheadings to organise the Facility/ Venue Projected Changes and their Impact for your report. The first heading level is formatted with initial caps and is centered on the page. Do not start a new page for each heading.

Discussion and Analysis of Findings

Use headings and subheadings to organise, identify and analyse the findings of your report. The first heading level is formatted with initial caps and is centered on the page. Do not start a new page for each heading.

Subheading

Subheadings are formatted with italics and are aligned flush left.

Conclusion

Use headings and subheadings to organise, identify and explain the findings of your report. The first heading level is formatted with initial caps and is centered on the page. Do not start a new page for each heading.

Subheading

Subheadings are formatted with italics and are aligned flush left.

Recommendations

Use the recommendations section to organise, identify and explain your decisions and proposed actions. These recommendations should be based upon the report ‘s conclusions and the submission requirements and criteria set out in the assessment criteria.

Citations

Source material must be documented in the body of the report by citing the authors and dates of the sources. The full source citation will appear in the list of references that follows the body of the report. When the names of the authors of a source are part of the formal structure of the sentence, the year of the publication appears in parenthesis following the identification of the authors, for example, Smith (2001). When the authors of a source are not part of the formal structure of the sentence, both the authors and years of publication appear in parentheses, separated by semicolons, for example (Smith and Jones, 2001; Anderson, Charles, & Johnson, 2003). When a source that has three, four, or five authors is cited, all authors are included the first time the source is cited. When that source is cited again, the first author’s surname and “et al.” are used. See the example in the following paragraph.

Use of this standard APA style “will result in a favorable impression on your instructor” (Smith, 2001). This was affirmed again in 2003 by Professor Anderson (Anderson, Charles & Johnson, 2003).

When a source that has two authors is cited, both authors are cited every time. If there are six or more authors to be cited, use the first author’s surname and “et al.” the first and each subsequent time it is cited. When a direct quotation is used, always include the author, year, and page number as part of the citation. A quotation of fewer than 40 words should be enclosed in double quotation marks and should be incorporated into the formal structure of the sentence. A longer quote of 40 or more words should appear (without quotes) in block format with each line indented five spaces from the left margin.1

References

Anderson, Charles & Johnson (2003). The impressive psychology report. Chicago: Lucerne Publishing.

Smith, M. (2001). Writing a successful report. The Trey Research Monthly, 53, 149-150.

Entries are organised alphabetically by surnames of first authors and are formatted with a hanging indent. Most reference entries have three components:

  1. Authors: Authors are listed in the same order as specified in the source, using surnames and initials. Commas separate all authors. When there are seven or more authors, list the first six and then use “et al.” for remaining authors. If no author is identified, the title of the document begins the reference.

  2. Year of Publication: In parenthesis following authors, with a period following the closing parenthesis. If no publication date is identified, use “n.d.” in parenthesis following the authors.

  3. Source Reference: Includes title, journal, volume, pages (for journal article) or title, city of publication, publisher (for book).

Appendix

Each Appendix appears on its own page.

Footnotes

1Complete APA style formatting information may be found in the Publication Manual.

Table 1

Type the table text here in italics; start a new page for each table

[Insert table here]

Figure Captions

Figure 1. Caption of figure



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