Desah — Tante

I’ve included the usual sections (executive summary, background, methodology, findings, conclusions, etc.) and suggestions for the type of content each might contain. Feel free to adjust the headings, depth, and tone to match your audience (e.g., internal stakeholders, external partners, academic reviewers, etc.).

Draft Report Title: Tante Desah – [Brief Descriptive Subtitle] Prepared for: [Organization / Department / Client] Prepared by: [Your Name / Team] Date: [Month Day Year]

1. Executive Summary (≈ ½ page)

Purpose: Summarize the core objective of the report (e.g., assess the feasibility of the “Tante Desah” initiative, evaluate its impact, present research findings, etc.). Key Findings: Bullet‑point the most important results or insights. Recommendations: Highlight the top 2‑3 actions you propose. tante desah

2. Introduction (≈ 1 page)

Background: Explain what “Tante Desah” is—e.g., a program, product, cultural concept, research project, etc. Include any relevant history or context. Scope & Objectives: Clearly state the questions the report aims to answer. Audience: Identify who will read the report and why it matters to them.

3. Methodology (≈ ½ – 1 page) Executive Summary (≈ ½ page) Purpose: Summarize the

Research Design: Qualitative, quantitative, mixed methods? Data Sources: Interviews, surveys, archival documents, field observations, secondary literature, etc. Sampling / Participants: Size, selection criteria, demographics (if applicable). Analytical Techniques: Thematic analysis, statistical testing, cost‑benefit analysis, etc.

4. Findings / Results (≈ 2–4 pages) Organize this section into logical subsections that reflect the main themes you uncovered. 4.1. [Theme 1]

Summary of key data points. Visuals (tables, charts, maps) that illustrate the point. 4.2. [Theme 2] …

4.2. [Theme 2]