Terrel L. Shields
Elite Member
- Joined
- May 2, 2002
- Professional Status
- Certified General Appraiser
- State
- Arkansas
I do not advocate pointless verbiage. And like ASFMRA instructor, John Widdoss said, "I don't know what a self-contained report is or where it ends." But... I read the first below easier than the last.are you saying you think all reports should be written in self-contained format
It's like windows. I want to see the DETAILS when in Explorer... Icons mean little to me - I am distracted by the icon.Example #1:
The first level of the home has a foyer, kitchen, dining room, living room, family room, library, three bedrooms, two bathrooms, and a laundry area.
Example #2:
The first level of the home has the following rooms:
- Foyer
- Kitchen
- Dining Room
- Living Room
- Family Room
- Library
- Three Bedrooms
- Two Bathrooms
- Laundry Area
Secondly, lists create "white space". I don't like white space. I see too many 100 page reports that could be condensed to 40. Save the trees. I used to read graduate thesis' for research and perhaps got used to pages of text like I read a book. Can you imagine reading a Tom Clancy novel with bullet lists?
My photos and maps go to the rear in an addendum. I see a lot of reports where the photo and location map is in the front...which is stylistically fine, but what does a typical non-fiction book do? Table of Contents, Foreward and Introduction, body of writing, afterward, glossary and/or index, and addendum. The old books with photos were bound in the middle with the photos there because that was easier to bind slick photo kaolinite paper with coarser text paper.

