In writing a report can you give to much information?
The key concept here (which the answers I've read don't mention) is RELEVANCE.
Your report needs some purpose or central question that you are addressing. So don't give extraneous information; keep it to the point, the purpose, the central question or problem.
This requires judgment, which is a toughy, and which isn't directly taught for (nor is 'relevance' more's the pity).
If I knew more about the report you're writing, I could give examples.
If you come across something that isn't relevant but is just so cool or interesting that you have to mention it, then OK, but do it as a parenthetical or footnote or digression.
Of each piece of information you put in, ask yourself, "How does this help understand the most important point or idea?" "Why mention this, does it really belong here?" "Does this really help explain anything?"
And make these connection clear to the reader.
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writing an information report
writing an information report
writing an information report
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