So if you used 5.5g of NaOH then why did you plug in m = 205.5g?
Because I would guess it was in 200 mL of water.
You are calculating delta H for everything, the water and the NaOH...and?
What else is in the solution besides the water and NaOH? What exactly is the experiment? Is it neutralizing an acid?
Also next time look at your results when doing them, those are quite different, you should have done another one and gotten two sets of data more consistent.
I am guessing this was "coffee-cup calorimeter". Remember when you are assuming no heat is lost or gained by the solution then:
q
rxn + q
solution = 0.
What you are doing is calculating q
sol, not q
rxn.
q
rxn = -q
sol in this case (if that is what you are doing?).
I use q (heat) and not H because you are making them the same with your assumptions, but they are not.
I have some other problems with your data. Your change in temperatures you typed do not math what you said the initial and final where for trial one.
If it was a typical acid-base neutralization then the temperature would increase, so I am guessing it was not that?
Note, your change in temperature says it was an endothermic reaction, yet your H is for exothermic (see q+q=0).