Report Writing: The Format Most Students Get Wrong
Reports in SPM English look different from other Directed Writing formats. They use numbered sections, formal language, and a structured layout. When this format appears, unprepared students lose 3-5 marks on format alone.
The Correct Report Format
REPORT ON [TOPIC IN CAPITALS]
Prepared by: [Your Name], [Your Position]
Date: [Date]
1.0 INTRODUCTION
This report is prepared to [purpose of the report]. [Brief context].
2.0 FINDINGS/OBSERVATIONS
2.1 [First content point with elaboration]
2.2 [Second content point with elaboration]
2.3 [Third content point with elaboration]
3.0 PROBLEMS/ISSUES (if applicable)
3.1 [First problem identified]
3.2 [Second problem identified]
4.0 RECOMMENDATIONS
4.1 [First recommendation]
4.2 [Second recommendation]
4.3 [Third recommendation]
5.0 CONCLUSION
In conclusion, [summarise key findings and recommendations].
It is hoped that [positive outcome].
Prepared by,
[YOUR NAME]
[Your Position]
Why Reports Need Numbered Sections
Reports are reference documents — readers need to find information quickly. Numbered sections make the report scannable.
This is different from letters (flowing paragraphs), articles (engaging narrative), or speeches (conversational tone). A report is factual, structured, and objective.
The Tone Difference
| Other Formats | Reports |
|---|---|
| ”I think we should…" | "It is recommended that…" |
| "Many students feel…" | "A survey revealed that…" |
| "This is a big problem" | "This issue has significant impact" |
| "We need to fix this" | "Corrective measures should be implemented” |
Notice the pattern: reports use passive voice and impersonal language. This is one of the few places in SPM English where passive voice is actually preferred.
Common Report Types in SPM
- Event report — what happened at a school event
- Survey report — results of a student/community survey
- Problem report — issues identified in school/neighbourhood
- Activity report — summary of club/society activities
Each type follows the same format — only the content changes.
How to Score Full Marks
Format (3-4 marks): Use numbered sections, include “Prepared by” line, formal title, and date.
Content (12-14 marks): Address every content point from the question. Each sub-section (2.1, 2.2, etc.) should cover one content point with 1-2 sentences of elaboration.
Language (15-17 marks): Formal register throughout. Avoid contractions (“don’t” → “do not”), personal opinions (“I think” → “it appears that”), and informal words (“awesome” → “commendable”).
Practice Prompt
Try this: “As the Head Prefect, write a report to the principal about the cleanliness issues in the school canteen. Include the problems observed, their causes, and recommendations for improvement.”
Write it in 35 minutes using the format above. Then check: Did you use numbered sections? Formal language? Did you cover problems AND recommendations?