End-of-term
Team Assignment
Overview
This is the end-of-term assignment for
students working on team projects for three credits.
For your end-of-term assignment your
team is asked to choose a specific design concept and fabricate/test a
functional prototype. The embodiment of your chosen design should be in the
form of detailed sketches, drawings, and a functional prototype. Your team will
present this design in class and submit a final comprehensive final project
report that encompasses your work for the entire quarter.
Contents
- Tasks
- End-of-term
Team Project Presentation
- End-of-term Team
Project Report
- End-of-term
Individual Reflection
- Grading
- Cardinal Course
Survey
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Tasks
-
Continue to meet as a team with
course instructor, the person who suggested the project, an individual with a
disability or older adult who would benefit from the project, and course
resource people.
-
Participate fully in the class
including attending lectures as required, listening actively, posing questions
to the guest speakers and the course instructor, engaging in class discussions,
verbalizing thoughts and analyses, reading and responding to emails from the
course instructor, and communicating team project progress.
-
Choose a specific design concept
from the ones your team has brainstormed and evaluated.
-
Fabricate a series of increasingly
functional prototypes, testing them with an individual with a disability or
older adult. Iterate the fabrication / testing / analysis cycle as time
permist.
-
Present your team's design in class
including prototype demonstration, PowerPoint slides, and short videos as
described below.
-
Submit a final comprehensive team
final project report that encompasses your team's work for the entire quarter
as described below.
-
Submit an Individual Reflection as
described below.
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Team
Project Presentations Tuesday, March
14th
Your team will describe your project
work in a seven-minute "podium-style" presentation using Powerpoint
slides in the classroom.
-
One way to meet your team project presentation time limit is to
enable PowerPoint's timed slide advance feature. (Each slide can have its own
timing.) This was reported to increase the quality of the
presentation.
Your presentation should include the
following elements:
- Introduction of team, its members,
and project
- Background: statement of problem,
its magnitude, and user population
- Interactions with project
suggestors and individuals who would benefit from a solution
- Identification and determination of
need
- Research of existing products and
discussion of their limitations
- Description and visualization of
design concepts considered and prototypes built
- Discussion of selected design:
technical and engineering elements, estimated cost, user acceptance
functionality, performance, safety considerations, tradeoffs, etc.
- Visualization of final prototype:
photographs and/or video of operation with a user
- Plans for the future: improvements
and challenges for continuing the project
Your team will be judged on the overall
quality of the presentation, the effectiveness of your design process, and your
design solution using the following metrics:
- Delivery: (How the team
presented) - professionalism, enthusiasm, conviction, confidence, energy,
volume
- Process: (How the team
addressed the problem) - problem information, background research, design
concepts brainstormed & prototyped, testing & evaluation
- Presentation: (What the team
presented) - clarity, organization, and completeness of the information
presented
- Design: (What the team
fabricated) - creativity, originality, functionality of the design concept and
the likelihood it will meet the user's needs
- Overall: (Overall score) -
combined impression of presentation and project
Final
Project Presentation Logistics and Suggestions
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Team
Project Report Due Monday - March 20th at
5pm
-
Your report should include all your
team's efforts for the quarter including background research, user interaction,
evolution of ideas, etc. Your team's report should be at least 10 pages in
length.
-
Provide a concise and accurate
overview of preliminary design concepts (at least 3) your team considered to
address the identified problem. Describe the general design objectives, the
rationale for the design concepts selected, how these concepts address a
specific project problem, and features / potential benefits of each of the
specific design concepts. Include a description of the prototypes you
fabricated, mechanical engineering analyses, calculations, drawings, and
sketches you have developed as well as any feedback from potential users and
coaches.
-
Describe the project
responsibilities and how they were divided among team members.
- Suggested format for your team's
Final Project Report:
- Cover page - include
course name & year, project title, team name, team member's names, and team
member's photos (do not include a page number on the cover page)
- Abstract - one paragraph
summary of objectives, approach taken, and results of the project
- Introduction - problem to
be addressed, problem background
- Objectives - project
goals and rationale
- Design criteria - project
background research, interviews with project suggestors and potential users,
project specifications
- Methods - what did your
team do and why - include prototyping, model building, preliminary testing,
analyses
- Results - discuss
specifics of your design solution such as features, benefits, aesthetics, cost,
safety, reliability, usability, test results, feedback from users,
etc.
- Discussion - include
challenges and suggestions to further develop and refine the
project
- Next steps - assuming
this project will be pursued in ME113 or as directed study, identify future
challenges and include a timetable of major tasks to produce and test a
functional prototype
- Additional - optionally
address issues relating to commercialization including technical feasibility,
engineering difficulties, safety considerations, potential manufacturing, cost
of materials, mass production, marketing, advertising, distribution, sales,
licensing, etc
- Images - embed
photographs, drawings, graphs, and sketches documenting your design process and
activities throughout the body of the document, not at the end
- References -
bibliographic and web citations
- Acknowledgements -
mention individuals and facilities who helped you
- Appendices - detailed
calculations, testing notes, relevant vendor information, etc. that are
referenced in the main body of the report
-
Please submit your report in Word
or PDF format by email. (The course instructor can print your final version on
a high quality color laser printer if you desire a printed
copy.)
-
This course has received a Cardinal Course Grant Award (2016) from
the Haas Center for Public Service and the Community Engaged Learning and
Research (CELR) Team. One condition of this support is that students' Final
Team Project Reports be shared with them.
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Individual Reflection Due Monday -
March 20th at 5pm
Reflect on your class and team
experiences. Each project team member will provide a discussion (two pages
minimum) of the design process, what you learned, and what was most valuable to
you individually. Here are some items to consider and address:
This course has received a
Cardinal Course Grant Award (2016) from the Haas Center for Public Service and
the Community Engaged Learning and Research (CELR) Team. One condition of this
support is that excerpts from students' Individual Reflections be shared with
them.
-
Review Learning through Structured
Reflection article
-
You have spent the past quarter
hearing from different professionals and users, interviewing community members,
brainstorming with your team, doing background research, looking at prior art,
fabricating and testing a prototype device, etc. Please comment on the relative
value of the different parts of this process toward your design.
-
How did the different interactions
in the class (with users, community members, speakers, professionals, etc.)
contribute to the results of your design? Was any particular interaction
especially rewarding or helpful? Why?
-
If you were to go through this
process again, what would you do differently? Was there support from the
teaching staff or course content that was helpful or that you felt was missing?
What advice would you give to future students?
-
Additional questions to be
considered for your reflection can be found here.
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Grading
|
Mid-term
Report and Presentation Final
Report Final Presentation Individual Reflection Participation
* |
20% 30% 30% 10% 10% |
- * Participation includes meeting
with instructor, actively listening, posing questions to the guest speakers and
the course instructor, engaging in class discussions, verbalizing thoughts and
analyses, and submitting Weekly Individual
Reports.
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Cardinal
Course Survey
This course has received a Cardinal
Course Grant Award (2016) from the Haas Center for Public Service and the
Community Engaged Learning and Research (CELR) Team. One condition of this
support is that students are required to complete the Cardinal Course
Survey.
|