Assessment
of Project Completion for Capstone Design Projects
Abstract
The Capstone Design project has become a
significant educational experience for the student in the reparation of their
professional skills and the application of their growing technical Expertise. The typical Design process
experience includes Problem Definition, Concept Generation, Preliminary Design,
Detail Design, and Communication of Results. However, the end result of this
process is ultimately Solution of the Problem which often receives little
attention in the academic setting.
A successful Capstone Design program including
companion design courses has been developed that has become an integral and important
component of the Mechanical Engineering curriculum at the University of
California, Santa Barbara. A variety of challenging projects are created each
year to appeal to varied student academic and career interests. Students work
in teams with the assistance of a faculty advisor to tackle a Significant
Mechanical Engineering Capstone Design project. The design experience and
course experience includes defining the problems to be addressed with formal
Design Requirements and identifying how the problems will be solved with a
formal Project Plan. As the design and the project evolve, the course
experience includes a Design Review and an Engineering Report. For those
students that have not had the benefit of professional work experience or
internships, these course deliverables provide an initiation and foundation for
their professional engineering careers.
Objective assessment of the course deliverables
is difficult for Capstone Design projects and courses. There is excellent
published literature that provides guidance based upon learning outcomes and
the design process. The design process within the Capstone course may be
conducted in three assessments including Problem Scoping, Concept Generation
and Solution Realization. There is some published literature regarding scoring
rubrics that are helpful for assessing communication skills as demonstrated in
a report or presentation for course grading purposes. However, there is a noted
absence regarding the expectations and assessments regarding the final outcome
of the design project, Solution of the Defined Problems (or Solution Assets).
Little
attention has been given by instructors and as a result little guidance has
been provided to the students regarding the expectations and assessment of
Project Completion within the context of Solution Realization for Capstone
projects. The Capstone project provides a unique experience regarding problem
solving for the student. The students and teams should be held accountable in
providing a formal definition of expected Project Completion outcomes and
should provide objective evidence of problems solution and project completion.
This paper will address the course deliverables and experiences of the
demonstration and assessment of Project Completion as it has evolved. The
evolution of the course deliverables now more clearly addresses Project
Completion and Problem Solution. Students and teams have demonstrated the
ability to define the problems that need to be solved and now must clearly
provide objective evidence of solving the problems that have been defined. This
assessment is conducted separate from the quality of communication skills
typically assessed by a final report or design review.Download hereee Assessment pdf






0 comments:
Post a Comment