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Dr Peter Milton, Director of Programme Review, Quality Assurance Agency I am grateful to the authors for giving me the opportunity to write this foreword, mainly because it represents the first occasion that the Fund for the Development of Teaching and Learning (FDTL) has led directly to a pUblication such as this. In my former capacity as Director of Quality Assessment at the Higher Education Funding Council for England (HEFCE), I chaired the FDTL Committee during 1996/7 and am delighted to see the projects which were selected so painstakingly leading to successful outcomes. Assessment of the quality of higher education (HE) was introduced in 1993 and was intended to improve public information about what was on offer in British universities and colleges, as well as to assist in the enhancement of educational opportunities for students. This was part of a larger agenda in which educational quality and the standards achieved by students have come under increasing scrutiny, with a long-term objective of linking funding allocations to the quality of the provision. It was in this context that the FDTL Initiative was launched in 1995 to support projects aimed at stimulating developments in teaching and learning and to encourage the dissemination of good practice across the HE sector. Good practice is identified through the process of quality assessment and bids for funding can only be made by those institutions which have demonstrated high quality provision. To date, the programme includes 63 projects drawn from 23 subject areas.




The role of projects in the computing curriculum is of great importance in enabling students to explore different issues when putting theory into practice. The Project 98 workshop, from which this book has evolved, was held in April 1998 at the University of Sheffield. Projects in the ComputingCurriculum looks at current experiences and ideas about the many and varied types of University projects. The papers in this volume cover a broad cross-section of project styles, presented not just by staff, but by a few studen ts as well. This book provides some ideas and experiences that can be used by others in developing their use of projects in the computing curriculum. Issues addressed in the papers in this book include:- management of project work; assessment of project work; industrial projects; large group projects; individual projects.


The role of projects in the computing curriculum is of great importance in enabling students to explore different issues when putting theory into practice. The Project 98 workshop, from which this book has evolved, was held in April 1998 at the University of Sheffield. Projects in the ComputingCurriculum looks at current experiences and ideas about the many and varied types of University projects. The papers in this volume cover a broad cross-section of project styles, presented not just by staff, but by a few studen ts as well. This book provides some ideas and experiences that can be used by others in developing their use of projects in the computing curriculum. Issues addressed in the papers in this book include:- management of project work; assessment of project work; industrial projects; large group projects; individual projects.
Content:
Front Matter....Pages I-XV
Front Matter....Pages 1-1
Teaching Professional Ethics to Software Engineers....Pages 3-18
Using Other People’s Experience of Project Work: Realising Fitness for Purpose....Pages 19-30
Using Group Project Work to Enhance the Learning of Professional Issues....Pages 31-43
Front Matter....Pages 45-45
Improving the quality of Software Engineering courses through University Based Industrial Projects....Pages 47-69
Using Virtual Workspaces to Promote HND Group Project Success....Pages 70-78
Group Projects for the Software Engineering of Knowledge Based Systems....Pages 79-88
The Prof@T Project....Pages 89-99
Front Matter....Pages 101-101
VICI: Experiences in Introducing Student run Software Companies into the Curriculum....Pages 103-116
Non-technical issues in Undergraduate CS project work or What are we (all) here for?....Pages 117-125
Front Matter....Pages 127-127
HEFCE EPCOS Project....Pages 129-142
The role of learning conversations (and the learning coach) in Computing Projects in Higher Education in the UK....Pages 143-166
Front Matter....Pages 167-167
Computing Science Projects at the University of Glasgow....Pages 169-183
The Sheffield University Maxi Project The Industrial Project Manager’s Perspective....Pages 184-195
Perceptions of Final Year Project Outcomes....Pages 196-206
Front Matter....Pages 207-207
Group Projects....Pages 209-213
Front Matter....Pages 215-215
A Window on Group Formation Factors....Pages 217-224
Project ’98 Poster Summary....Pages 225-229
Back Matter....Pages 231-231


The role of projects in the computing curriculum is of great importance in enabling students to explore different issues when putting theory into practice. The Project 98 workshop, from which this book has evolved, was held in April 1998 at the University of Sheffield. Projects in the ComputingCurriculum looks at current experiences and ideas about the many and varied types of University projects. The papers in this volume cover a broad cross-section of project styles, presented not just by staff, but by a few studen ts as well. This book provides some ideas and experiences that can be used by others in developing their use of projects in the computing curriculum. Issues addressed in the papers in this book include:- management of project work; assessment of project work; industrial projects; large group projects; individual projects.
Content:
Front Matter....Pages I-XV
Front Matter....Pages 1-1
Teaching Professional Ethics to Software Engineers....Pages 3-18
Using Other People’s Experience of Project Work: Realising Fitness for Purpose....Pages 19-30
Using Group Project Work to Enhance the Learning of Professional Issues....Pages 31-43
Front Matter....Pages 45-45
Improving the quality of Software Engineering courses through University Based Industrial Projects....Pages 47-69
Using Virtual Workspaces to Promote HND Group Project Success....Pages 70-78
Group Projects for the Software Engineering of Knowledge Based Systems....Pages 79-88
The Prof@T Project....Pages 89-99
Front Matter....Pages 101-101
VICI: Experiences in Introducing Student run Software Companies into the Curriculum....Pages 103-116
Non-technical issues in Undergraduate CS project work or What are we (all) here for?....Pages 117-125
Front Matter....Pages 127-127
HEFCE EPCOS Project....Pages 129-142
The role of learning conversations (and the learning coach) in Computing Projects in Higher Education in the UK....Pages 143-166
Front Matter....Pages 167-167
Computing Science Projects at the University of Glasgow....Pages 169-183
The Sheffield University Maxi Project The Industrial Project Manager’s Perspective....Pages 184-195
Perceptions of Final Year Project Outcomes....Pages 196-206
Front Matter....Pages 207-207
Group Projects....Pages 209-213
Front Matter....Pages 215-215
A Window on Group Formation Factors....Pages 217-224
Project ’98 Poster Summary....Pages 225-229
Back Matter....Pages 231-231
....
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