Title: Capstone Preview
1Capstone Preview
2Capstone Preview Exercise
- Split up into Groups with your neighbours
- What do you regard as being the elements required
/ demonstrated to award a capstone a HD. - What do you regard as being the elements required
/ demonstrated to award a capstone a Pass.
3Facultys Motivation
- Capstone standard needs to improve
- Standardise expectations and grades between
staff, and between staff students - Improved monitoring and feedback mechanisms
- Assessment should drive student effort
4Competency Gap
- Reported competency gap between skills required
by employers and those developed by students
during their undergraduate courses. - University courses should develop
learning-oriented assessments that will encourage
development of skills and a commitment to ongoing
development after graduation.
5Response
- Universities Australia and internationally
introduced attributes / competencies which
graduating students should have developed during
their degree. - Required by professional organisations to obtain
degree program accreditation or for their members
to obtain professional accreditation. - For example Engineers Australia Competency
Standards. - Capstone should demonstrate these attributes.
6Engineers AustraliaStage 1 Competency
Assessments
- A Stage 1 Professional Engineer expected to
demonstrate competence across a broad field of
engineering practice or discipline, and to have a
good understanding of interfaces with other
engineering disciplines. - An accredited engineering degree program must
develop breadth of understanding and outlook,
ability to engage with a wide range of
technologies and applications, with sufficient
depth in one or more specific areas of practice
to develop competence in handling technically
advanced and complex problems. - Candidates not expected to have demonstrated
every detail of the knowledge, competencies and
attributes that follow but they must demonstrate
at least the substance of each element.
Assessment will be made in a holistic way.
7IntroducingEngineers Australia Stage 1
Competency Standardsinto Capstone Project
Subjects
Engineers Australia - Australian Engineering
Competency Standards Appendix B to the Guide to
Assessment of Eligibility for Membership (Stage 1
Competency) for Candidates not holding an
Accredited or Recognised Qualification
83 Required Elements
- PE1 KNOWLEDGE BASE
- PE2 ENGINEERING ABILITY
- PE3 PROFESSIONAL ATTRIBUTES
9Previous Students asked to self assess their
Capstone against list of Competencies
- 0 not applicable (or demonstrated)
- 1 less than 20 of project
- 2 between 20 and 40
- 3 40 and 60
- 4 60 and 80
- 5 competency was applicable (or demonstrated
in) more than 80 of your project.
10Previous Results(Student self assessment)
11Previous Results(Student self assessment)
- Many students scored a large number of the
indicator as 0 (not applicable in their
project) - Projects need to be
- Broader
- More in depth
- Demonstrate Engineering
- Knowledge
- Ability
- Analysis
- Judgement
- And
- Professional Skills
12How will it be implemented?
A07 benchmarking
S07 supported introduction(staff development)
133 Required Elements
- PE1 KNOWLEDGE BASE
- PE2 ENGINEERING ABILITY
- PE3 PROFESSIONAL ATTRIBUTES
14Units Elements - Indicators
15Units Elements - Indicators
16Units Elements - Indicators
17Exercise 1
- Review your proposed capstone project against the
indicators according to be specified criteria - Does proposed capstone project meet these
guidelines? - If not discuss with your group how to modify your
existing project so that it does.
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19Appendix B Assessment Form
Additional assessment comments
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21Proposal Submission
PROPOSAL
BLUE FORM
APPENDIX B
22Progress Report Submission
PROGRESS REPORT
GREEN FORM
APPENDIX B
23Final Capstone Report Submission
FINAL PROJECT REPORT
GOLD FORM
APPENDIX B
24Facilitate
- Regular feedback
- Uses feedback to develop skills, behaviours and
attitudes - Moving from novice to expert
- Improving students judgement
- Development of professional skills
- Articulate explanations
- Contributes to the resolution of problems
- Manages conflict and differences
- Contribute ideas and information
25What Does It All Mean
26What do we mean by
Sound knowledge of mathematics to the level
required for fluency in the techniques of
analysis and synthesis that are relevant to the
broad field of engineering, and to potentially
related fields
What should we be looking for so we can gauge
if this indicator is a 0,1,2,3,4 or 5?
27Indicator Score
- For progress report and final report assessment
purposes, the evaluations of 0 1 2 3 4 5 align
with
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29Capstone Project EvaluationWhat is required for
Z,P,C,D,H
- Content
- Does the candidate clearly identify a question to
be answered or problem to be solved? - Does the candidate present the results of the
project in a succinct and cogent form, with
suitable illustration where appropriate? - Does the candidate demonstrate significant
Engineering Judgement at a level that would be
reasonably expected from a recent engineering
graduate? - Is the content sufficiently substantial and broad
ranging to allow coverage of the chosen
assessment indicators? - Does the thesis contain sufficient material
suitable for publication? - HD Peer Reviewed Conference Paper
- D Editor Reviewed Conference Paper (IEEE
standard) - C Engineering Paper / Seminar for graduate
audience - P Engineering application note (provide graduate
engineers with information that will help them to
learn about / gain an appreciation of subject
material.
30Capstone Project EvaluationWhat is required for
Z,P,C,D,H
- Knowledge / Ability
- Does the candidate exhibit sufficient knowledge
of the research topic and familiarity with the
discipline it embraces for a thesis at this
level? - Does the candidate demonstrate a capacity for
clear thinking? - Does the candidate demonstrate significant
techniques of analysis and/or evaluation as
outlined in the chosen assessment indicators? - Has the candidate demonstrated an understanding
of project management techniques and applied them
effectively in their capstone project? - Has the candidate demonstrated an ability to
manage their own time and processes effectively,
prioritising competing demands to achieve the
required goals and objectives?
31Capstone Project EvaluationWhat is required for
Z,P,C,D,H
- Presentation
- Does the work represent a well planned approach
to the subject matter? - Is the thesis structured appropriately?
- Does the candidate appropriately orient the
reader to the ground to be covered and the
arguments made? - Is the presentation of the thesis, in matters of
grammar, spelling, punctuation, referencing and
general appearance, adequate?
32Capstone Project Evaluation Guidelines
33Required to Submit a report with Capstone
- Max 5 pages
- Identifying chosen indicators
- Self-assessment with grades 0 to 5
- Provide an explanation of how you achieved these
outcomes at your assessed grade. - Two copies to be submitted to supervisor with
capstone document - D and HD candidates require assessor
- Final mark combination of both assessor and
supervises mark.
34Exercise 2
- Assess your proposed capstone project by
grading indicators according to be specified
criteria (1,2,3 etc) - What potential grade could you receive for your
proposed capstone? - If your potential grade is too low (fail or not
at the level of your desired grade) discuss with
your group how to modify your existing project so
increase your grade.
35Other Issues
- If your project does not meet these requirements
it usually indicates scope and/or depth not
sufficient - Discuss with supervisor
- Decide to modify or abandon project
- Page limit 100 appendices
- Not an opportunity to report everything you have
done - Write for reader not for yourself
36Any More Questions