Title: Universal Laboratory Rules
 1Universal Laboratory Rules
- No eating or drinking in the laboratory - 
strictly-speaking, food or drink should not even 
be kept in your bags even.  - No running. 
 - Lab coats worn at all times. 
 - Shoes, boots, or trainers - nothing open-toed. 
 - Trousers 
 - Safety glasses worn as necessary. 
 - Long hair to be tied back. 
 - Dont carry items further than you need. 
 - Be vigilant / considerate of others. 
 - If in doubt about safety or anothers conduct, ASK
 
  2Deadlines
- Lab notebook is marked at the end of every 
session - and you take it away with you.  - Technical Letter (individual) typed up (drawings 
and graphs by hand are fine) and submitted as 
follows  - Tuesday exps - 9.15am following Friday 
 - Thursday exps - 9.15am following Monday 
 - Full Report (group) typed up (drawings and 
graphs by hand are fine) and submitted as 
follows  - Tuesday exps - 9.15am following Monday 
 - Thursday exps - 9.15am following Wednesday
 
  3The Marking Scheme
8 - 10 Excellent all calculations and 
discussions clear, fluent and concise prose 
properly presented / labeled diagrams, 
graphs, calculations and tables 6 - 8 Good all 
sections essentially correct and/or well argued 
presentation generally of a high standard 5 - 
6 Adequate all sections acceptable (at least 50 
correct) and/or reasonably well argued 4 - 
5 Passable some sections fall below an 
acceptable standard, some errors untidy 
presentation 0 - 4 Fail generally inadequate in 
most or all sections 
 4Bonuses and Penalties
Lab Practice -1 Poor lab. practice (e.g. late 
arrival, lack of attention to safety, poor 
teamwork) 0 No problems 1 Good performance / 
technique Treatment of Equipment -1 Mistreatment 
of equipment, bench surfaces etc. (e.g. leaving 
the lab in a messy or untidy state, not 
 returning equipment borrowed equipment) 0 No 
problems 1 Good use of facilities 
 5Keeping a Lab Book 1
- Lab book  experimental lifeline 
 - write down everything instrument settings, data, 
observations, questions, calculations, etc  - lab books are not to be written up later - never 
rely on your memory  - whilst it must legible, it does not need to be in 
best copy  - never use scraps of paper, if there are extra 
bits, they must be glued in straight away  - always use a pen (never a pencil) 
 
  6Keeping a Lab Book 2
- NEVER use tippex, what you measure is what 
happened. Never try to second guess Mother 
Nature! If an experiment needs to be repeated, 
just make a note in your book why, and record the 
new data as usual  - seriously consider making a photocopy backup of 
your lab book  - get used to doing calculations as you go along 
 - plot graphs as the experiment is going on - never 
wait until the experiment has finished - this 
means that you must estimate the limits of the 
equipment  - at the same time, keep a table of results