New Course Proposal: IAT 400-3 Graduation Project
Monique Silverman
13 January 2005
Course Number: IAT 400-3
Course Title: Graduation Project
Credit Hours: 3
Vector:
Course Description:
Students work in teams or individually to develop and evaluate a
artistic or product based design addressing a complex problem. The
actual design problems addressed vary from year to year and relate to
current social and technological issues in society as well as
students interests and affinities. The course covers the entire
spectrum of the production process as it relates to the fine arts and
design from problem definition to prototype and a broad range of
perspectives including market feasibility, manufacturing, life-cycle
implications, usability and social reception.
Prerequisite: 90 credits of prior coursework.
Recommended: None.
Corequisite: None.
Special Instructions: None.
Course(s) to be dropped if this course is approved: None
This course offers design and development of a major project that integrates the skills and concepts learned within a particular stream and prepare students for working in the real world context.
Will this be a required or elective course in the curriculum; probable enrolment when offered?
This will be one of a choice of several required courses for Upper Division NME; enrolment estimated at 60 per year.
Indicate Semester and Year this course would be first offered and planned frequency of offering thereafter.
2006-3, 2007-1 and annually thereafter.
Which of your present CFL faculty have the expertise to offer this course? Will the course be taught by sessional or limited term faculty?
Dulic, Di Paola, Silverman, Newby, Bizzocchi
Are there any proposed student fees associated with this course other than tuition fees?
No.
Is this course considered a `duplicate' of any current or prior course under the University's duplicate course policy? Specify, as appropriate.
No.
Note: Senate has approved (S.93-11) that no new course should be approved by Senate until funding has been committed for necessary library materials. Each new course proposal must be accompanied by a library report and, if appropriate, confirmation that funding arrangements have been addressed.
Provide details on how existing instructional resources will be redistributed to accommodate this new course. For instance, will another course be eliminated or will the frequency of offering of other courses be reduced; are there changes in pedagogical style or class sizes that allow for this additional course offering.
This course does not utilize library resources.
Does the course require specialized space or equipment not readily available in the department or university, and if so, how will these resources be provided?
This course uses pre-existing equipment available at SIAT.
Does this course require computing resources (e.g. hardware, software, network wiring, use of computer laboratory space) and if so, describe how they will be provided.
This course utilizes computers, software and lab space already available at SIAT.
Courses Objectives:
In this course students will:
2005-3
Rank the project ideas based on project constraints (time & budget), market potential and technical feasibility and formulate a workable project concept
Generate, prepare and produce a detailed project plan including resource allocation, timeline and milestones.
Create user scenarios that address contextual issues for the identified audience.
Prepare a strategy and gather data on prospective users and market opportunities through literature search and interviews with prospective users
Present and defend the details of the project plan.
Develop design detail, visualize and model a project concept using both mechanical and advanced digital modeling and animation techniques.
Test a concept, conduct user evaluations and solicit feedback.
2006-1
Evaluate and assess both positive and negative features of the current product idea from the user feedback
Revise product development strategy and plan of action for prototyping and field testing including to include: Performance concerns; Technical issues; Ergonomic and human factors issues; Budget; Manpower and expertise allocation; Additional resources
Plan and produce a proof of concept prototype for both hardware and software elements.
Plan, organize and coordinate and run user trials for the new product
Develop a comprehensive presentation to communicate the breadth and depth of the project
Course Description:
Students work in teams or individually to develop and evaluate a artistic or product based design addressing a complex, freely defined problem. The graduating project course focuses on development of project plan, definition, design and production of an integrated prototype. The actual design problems addressed vary from year to year and relate to current social and technological issues in society as well as students interests and affinities. The course covers the entire spectrum of the production process as it relates to the fine arts and design from problem definition to prototype and a broad range of perspectives including market feasibility, manufacturing, life-cycle implications, usability and social reception. Students create workable innovative project ideas and produce a detailed project plan; research and refine ideas leading to a substantive product concept; storyboard a user scenario and produce an integrated prototype, which clearly identifies and demonstrates the features and operation of both the hardware and software components of the product concept.
Delivery Method: Studio Lab (SL)
Mixed Collaborative (MC). In this course delivery model, collaborative students engage in face-to-face class one week and asynchronous conferencing the next week.
Web Presentation: 1.0 hr.
Online Conferencing: 1.0 hr.
Offline Reading: 1.5 hrs.
Face-to-Face: 1.5 hrs.
Assignments & Project: 3.0 hrs
Total Student Hours: 8.0 hrs
Evaluation:
Participation: 20%
Assignments: 20%
Presentation: 20%
Documentation 20%
Portfolio Project 20%
Computer lab, Sensors, Digital Cameras
Platform Requirements: None
NOTE: these outlines are drafts and are subject to change. Official textbook list should be consulted.