>>12831176No, that's the midwit "wanna pass and forget" approach.
If you want to learn how to write a lab report, just ask him where should you look for bullet points on how to write a lab report or if he can provide that.
Generally, you need an abstract, which is just a summary. Write it last.
Introduction that gives the background about this lab and set up.
Procedures, which is a repeatable step by step description on what you did. Including exact measurements. Even if the lab manual asked for 15ml, if you measured 14.9ml, put that in.
Results, which is where the tables. charts, and graphs go.
Analysis/discussion follows, which is the analysis of the results with whatever formula or equations he wants you to show, and whether they support the hypothesis or the topic of the lab.
Conclusion, which is a quick one/two sentence summary and whether the results support the hypothesis. This is also where "what you could do better next time" goes if you fucked up somewhere in the procedure.
The number of pages differs from lab to lab, but I'd expect generally 6-12 pages. Obviously, I am not your prof. I had profs demand I write no more than 3 pages, so ask him.