"Future Work" v.s. "Recommendations" - a technical writing question
I am writing a technical report on a product that I designed. I have a section called "Future work" and another section called "Conclusions and Recommendations."
I am a little confused about the differences between "Future work" and "recommendations." Could anyone advise me?
I was advised by someone else that "Future work" means the work not completed, whereas "recommendations" are more like lessons learned, future development of the product, etc. However I am still confused with their differences.
I have also seen some articles only have a section called "Conclusions and Recommendations for Future Work." Should I follow this convention instead?
Thanks,
Tom
I am writing a technical report on a product that I designed. I have a section called "Future work" and another section called "Conclusions and Recommendations."
I am a little confused about the differences between "Future work" and "recommendations." Could anyone advise me?
I was advised by someone else that "Future work" means the work not completed, whereas "recommendations" are more like lessons learned, future development of the product, etc. However I am still confused with their differences.
I have also seen some articles only have a section called "Conclusions and Recommendations for Future Work." Should I follow this convention instead?
Thanks,
Tom