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Engineering Applications Project - G2

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
12 views

Engineering Applications Project - G2

Uploaded by

jbzhou
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Engineering

Applications Project
Engineering Applications Project

• This module can be


considered as the initial
step to prepare students
via group activities for
the final year project.
Group meeting in class
• Planning and scheduling activities,
Gantt Chart, Assigning tasks to
group members
• Problem Statement and Research
Questions, Aim and Objectives
• Literature Review, Reading List
• Logbook Maintenance
The first stage
 Group Formation and Topic
Selection
classmates form groups

brainstorm potential research

topics within the Engineering


Management field.
The second stage
• Weekly Group Meetings
• Groups meet weekly during
scheduled class time with the
following agenda
–Planning and scheduling activities
–Reporting progress
–Assigning tasks to group members
Key Research Tasks
• Problem Statement and
Research Questions:
–Define a clear problem, aim,
objectives, and well-
formulated research
questions.
Key Research Tasks
• Literature Review:
–Conduct an initial
literature review to
understand existing
research.
Key Research Tasks
• Logbook Maintenance:
• Each group maintains a
logbook documenting key
points discussed in
weekly meetings.
Regular
Meetings with
your group
The research process
Choosing Project
• Make choice based on your
preference
• Possessing some background
knowledge on the topic
• Understanding the nature of topic
• Be able to participation of fulfilling
all of the project tasks
Project Plan
• What the project is about.
• What needs to be done?

• Why you should do it.

• How the project will be done.




• How much resources are likely


to be used.
5
Project Plan
• Who will be involved?
• What is timeline for tasks?

• What risks are involved and




how to mitigate them?


5
Gantt Chart
• From the early stages
and in agreement with
your group
• device a plan for all of
your project activities in
the form of Gantt Chart
LOG BOOK
• Record your meeting minutes
• Record all tasks discussed with
your group
• Record issues raised
• Make track record of any activity
LOG BOOK
• Source information
• Ordering tools, equipment,
materials, services, etc.
• Visiting sites, professionals,
commercial/government
Reading List
 Books
 Papers, articles, dissertations
 Journal, magazine, degree
 Credible weblinks
 Technical records, drawing,
reports
7
Reading List
• must cite and reference
theories, data, information, laws
in project report.
• should reference circa 60
credible references in your
report.
Aim and Objectives
• Set realistic and achievable
objectives for your project;
• Create a list of project
objectives at the very start
Aim and Objectives
• do not put a long list of
everything you do during the
project work
• reading about the problem of
project (literature survey) is
not an objective, it is an
“activity”.
Aim and Objectives
• solving design problem in a system
• improving the efficiency of the
system operation in terms of
energy consumption
• output, maintenance, safety,
reliability, etc. is an “objective”
Professional practice
• The responsibility of managing your
project lies with you not lecturer
• Much of the success of your project
will depend on how you manage it.
• introducing some good professional
practice into the requirements to
assist you in achieving good
outcomes
literature reviews
literature reviews
• Use the objective as the basis
• Identify questions you will be
focusing on in the research
• Use questions to map out
topics you need to cover and
sections of literature review
literature reviews
• Identify a list of key words you
can use for a literature search
• Identify the types of literature
and the journals
• Using databases, search for
suitable journal papers
literature reviews
• Using references and authors,
search for other papers
• Science Citations and Scopus
can assist in identifying papers
from specific authors and who
has cited them
literature reviews
• The library can assist in
obtaining papers which it does
not have
• theses, dissertations and
reports which pertain to study
literature reviews
• UN documents, government
policy, statistical databases,
Legislation are available on
the internet
literature reviews
• Scan through the abstracts to
identify papers which may be
pertinent
• Download articles which may
be useful
literature reviews
• Organise the material into the
sections you have identified for
your literature review
• DO NOT get sidetracked
• keep YOUR objectives in mind
tips of literature review
• setup your search terms
relevant to topic keywords
• Keep a good record of your
searched resources
tips of literature review
• use MS References Option
to manage your citation
and bibliography
tips of literature review
• Make good use of the
bibliography in the journal
articles or text books, this can
help you to increase the
breadth of your literature
review
tips of literature review
• Create a summary sheet to pin
down the key information and
argument from the references
• add your own points to this
summary for complementation
tips of literature review
• Setup a logical structure for
literature review and the way
you have approached it.
• The structure could be
chronological or thematic or
another form that is more
suitable for investigation
tips of literature review
• Think and reflect on how you
develop your views,
satisfaction from the literatures
and what evidence convinced
you.
tips of literature review
• Choose a selection from what
you have read
• check the relevance of the
selected sources to your topic
and research question
tips of literature review
• Make a summary of the key
elements of your review
• you will be referring to this
summary when carrying out
the research investigation
Preparing for Write Up
• Literature Review: about 3000
words
• This week, you should finish
half of the literature review, that
is to say, about 1500 words.

17

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