New Winter Quarter 2007
Course Announcement:
E110/210: Perspectives in Assistive Technology
with Professor Drew Nelson (Mechanical Engineering)
and David L. Jaffe, MS (VA Palo Alto Health Care System)
Winter Quarter, Tuesdays 4:15pm - 5:30pm
Location: Main Quad,
History
Corner, Lane Hall (Building 200) , Room 030 (basement)
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Assignment
Three
Design Proposal
In Class Presentation: Tuesday - March 13,
2007
Report Due Friday - March 16, 2007 at 5pm
In Professor Drew Nelson's Office - Terman 517
(Please slide under the door)
For your third and final assignment you are asked to
further research the need you have identified and to focus on a specific design
solution. You will present this design in class and submit a final
comprehensive project report that encompasses your project work for the entire
quarter. This should include all your background research, user testing,
evolution of ideas, etc. Your team's report should be 5 to 10 pages in
length.
Specific to this report should be a concise and
accurate overview of your design solution. Describe the design objectives, the
rationale for the specific design selected, how this design addresses the
identified project problem, and features / potential benefits of this design
over others considered. Include any mechanical engineering analyses,
calculations, drawings, and sketches you have developed as well as any feedback
from potential users or coaches.
Comment on the concept's technical feasibility and
engineering difficulty, estimated cost of materials, and safety
considerations.
Assuming this project will be pursued in ME113 or as
directed study, identify future challenges and include a timetable of major
tasks to produce and test a functional prototype.
Reflect on your class and team experiences. Each
project team member will provide a one-page discussion of the design process,
what you learned, and what was most valuable to you individually. Here are some
items to address.
You have spent the past quarter hearing from
different professionals and users, interviewing community members,
brainstorming with your team, doing background research, looking at prior art,
etc. Please comment on the relative value of the different parts of this
process toward your design.
How did the different interactions in the class (with
users, community members, speakers, professionals, etc.) contribute to the
results of your design? Was any particular interaction especially rewarding or
helpful? Why?
If you were to go through this process again, what
would you do differently? Was there support from the teaching staff or course
content that you felt was missing? What advice would you give to future
students?
In addition to a printed final report for Professor
Nelson, please send an electronic copy to Alex Tung at
tungsten-at-stanford.edu.
Presentation
Your 15-minute (approximately 10 minutes plus questions)
presentation should include the following points:
- Introduction of team members
- Statement of problem
- Discussion of interviews with project suggestors and
users
- Statement of need
- Identification and limitations of existing
solutions
- Magnitude of problem addressed by this project
- Description of and rationale for all design concepts
considered
- Analysis of considered design topics
- Description of selected design including its technical
feasibility, engineering difficulty, estimated cost, user acceptance, safety
considerations, etc
- Project visualizations: photographs, videos, sketches,
drawings, models, prototypes
- Future work and challenges for continuing the
project
Course staff, your classmates, and others in attendance
will judge your presentation on the following metrics:
- Content - the overall quality of the information
presented
- Clarity - did your audience understand your
presentation's content?
- Conciseness - was your presentation short and to the
point?
- Completeness - did you include all major
elements?
- Convincing - did you provide a good reason for your
decisions?
- Creativity - how inventive is the design?
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