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Using Rubrics For The Assessment Of Senior Design Projects

John K. Estell, Juliet Hurtig

202041 citationsDOI

Abstract

Abstract NOTE: The first page of text has been automatically extracted and included below in lieu of an abstract Using Rubrics for the Assessment of Senior Design Projects Abstract The process of evaluating senior design projects typically involves assessing reports and presentations, then assigning relatively broad performance categories to the work. Unfortunately, the use of professional judgment in this process varies from faculty member to faculty member; as a consequence, one person's "excellent" can be another person's "very good." The lack of standard definitions for such terms act as an impedance toward fair and impartial grading of student performance. At its 2002 Faculty Retreat, the Electrical & Computer Engineering and Computer Science (ECCS) Department at Ohio Northern University examined the effectiveness of the senior design evaluation process. Senior design at this school is a year-long endeavor, with multiple teams of faculty grading several capstone projects each at the end of each quarter. The differences between the individual graders and between each team of graders were readily apparent, making it difficult to negotiate to a final fair course letter grade for the students. Accordingly, standard definitions were developed in the form of rubrics for each one of the four communication formats utilized in our senior design sequence. These rubrics are distributed at the beginning of each term to both students and faulty. The written report evaluation is conducted through the use of three separate rubrics: writing style, technical design, and consideration factors for addressing the coverage of multiple realistic design constraints as called for in the ABET Criteria. Each student team is required to make two oral presentations throughout the capstone process; a rubric specific to oral presentations guides these evaluations. External evaluators are invited to campus to judge the senior design poster competition, and these individuals follow a rubric specific to the poster format. A final rubric focuses on web site design, where students provide an overview of their project and the results obtained. Since the inclusion of rubrics in the 2002-2003 academic year, subsequent evaluations performed at annual Faculty Retreats have indicated that the rubrics have been a successful model for conducting the evaluation of the various aspects of the senior design experience. Additionally, by coalescing subjective faculty judgments into an objective numerical form through the use of rubrics, the results can be readily used for program outcomes assessment. As a result of this methodology, what was once considered to be essentially a random process by the students is now a more uniform process grounded in a fundamental set of definitions accessible by all. I. Senior Design Sequence All seniors in the College of Engineering are required to complete a capstone project. The senior capstone project is not the student’s first exposure to formal design work; however, it does challenge students to draw from all of their previous coursework and complete a design that is large enough in scope to require a team effort and a six-month time period. The ECCS Department developed a year-long, three course senior design sequence common to all majors offered in the department.1 This approach allows students to work on interdisciplinary comprehensive projects, and also allows for participation on interdepartmental teams. The students are presented with a mixture of faculty- and industry-sponsored projects and are

Topics & Concepts

RubricGrading (engineering)CapstoneComputer scienceNegotiationMathematics educationPsychologyEngineeringSociologySocial scienceAlgorithmCivil engineeringExperimental Learning in EngineeringEngineering Education and Curriculum DevelopmentEngineering Education and Pedagogy
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