Post on 27-Jul-2020
Faculty of Engineering
School of Minerals and Energy Resources Engineering
Undergraduate Course Outline
MINE4951, 4952 and 4953 Research Thesis A, B and C
Professor Paul Hagan Dr Carlito Tabelin
Term 3, 2019
MINE4951/52/53 Research Thesis A, B and C
CONTENTS 1. INFORMATION ABOUT THE COURSE ........................................................................................................... 1
1.1 Overview of Honours Research Project.................................................................................................... 1 1.2 Course Description ................................................................................................................................... 1 1.3 Requirements for Course Completion ...................................................................................................... 2 1.4 Assumed Knowledge ................................................................................................................................ 2
2. AIMS, LEARNING OUTCOMES AND GRADUATE ATTRIBUTES ................................................................. 3 2.1 Course Aims ............................................................................................................................................. 3 2.2 Learning Outcomes................................................................................................................................... 3 2.3 BE (Hons) Program Learning Outcomes .................................................................................................. 3 2.4 Graduate Attributes ................................................................................................................................... 3
3. COURSE RESOURCES ................................................................................................................................... 4 3.1 Reference Materials .................................................................................................................................. 4 3.2 Other Resources ....................................................................................................................................... 4 3.3 Online Resources ..................................................................................................................................... 4
4. COURSE CONTENT AND LEARNING ACTIVITIES ....................................................................................... 5 4.1 MINE4951 Research Thesis A ................................................................................................................. 5 4.2 MINE4952 Research Thesis B ................................................................................................................. 6 4.3 MINE4953 Research Thesis C ................................................................................................................. 6
5. COURSE ASSESSMENT ................................................................................................................................. 7 5.1 Assessment Schedule .............................................................................................................................. 7 5.2 Assessment Requirements ....................................................................................................................... 8 5.3 Penalties for a Non-Compliant Submission .............................................................................................. 9 5.4 Assessment Process ................................................................................................................................ 9 5.5 Assignment Attachments .......................................................................................................................... 9
6. ASSESSMENT CRITERIA .............................................................................................................................. 11 6.1 A01: Research Project Proposal ............................................................................................................ 12 6.2 A02: Annotated Bibliography ................................................................................................................. 13 6.3 A03: Project Progress Report I – Literature Review .............................................................................. 15 6.4 A04: Quality of Student Consultation with Supervisor ........................................................................... 17 6.5 A06: Project Progress Report II – Project Plan & Risk Assessment ..................................................... 17 6.6 A07: Project Progress Report III – Preliminary Results ......................................................................... 20 6.7 A08: Quality of Student Consultation with Supervisor ........................................................................... 23 6.8 A09: Seminar Presentation .................................................................................................................... 23 6.9 A10: Examiners Copy of Thesis ............................................................................................................ 25 6.10 A11: Conference Paper ......................................................................................................................... 29 6.11 A12: Quality of Student Consultation with Supervisor ........................................................................... 30
7. STUDYING AN UG COURSE IN MINING ENGINEERING AT UNSW .......................................................... 31 1.2 How We Contact You.............................................................................................................................. 31 7.1 How You Can Contact Us ....................................................................................................................... 31 7.2 Computing Resources and Internet Access Requirements ..................................................................... 31 7.3 Accessing Course Materials Through Moodle ........................................................................................ 31 7.4 Assignment Submissions ........................................................................................................................ 31 7.5 Late Submission of an Assignment ......................................................................................................... 32 7.6 Special Consideration ............................................................................................................................. 32 7.7 Unsatisfactory and/ or Non-completion of course ................................................................................... 32 7.8 Course Results ........................................................................................................................................ 32 7.9 Students Needing Additional Support ..................................................................................................... 33 7.10 Academic Honesty and Plagiarism .......................................................................................................... 33 7.11 Report Writing Guide for Engineers ........................................................................................................ 33 7.12 Continual Course Improvement ............................................................................................................... 33
MINE4951/52/53 Research Thesis A, B and C
LIST of TABLES
Table 1. Project Milestones and Learning Activities – MINE4951 ........................................................... 5 Table 2. Project Milestones and Learning Activities – MINE4952 ........................................................... 6 Table 3. Project Milestones and Learning Activities – MINE4953 .......................................................... 6 Table 4. Course Assessment and Due Dates. ........................................................................................ 7 Table 5. Assessment Criteria – Research Project Proposal ................................................................. 12 Table 6. Assessment Criteria – Annotated Bibliography ....................................................................... 13 Table 7. Assessment Criteria – Project Progress Report I ................................................................... 15 Table 8. Assessment Criteria – Consultation with Supervisor .............................................................. 17 Table 9. Assessment Criteria – Project Progress Report II .................................................................. 17 Table 10. Assessment Criteria – Project Progress Report III ............................................................... 20 Table 11. Assessment Criteria – Consultation with Supervisor ............................................................ 23 Table 12. Assessment Criteria – Seminar Presentation ....................................................................... 23 Table 13. Assessment Criteria – Examiner’s Copy of Thesis ............................................................... 25 Table 14. Assessment Criteria – Conference Paper ............................................................................. 29 Table 15. Assessment Criteria – Consultation with Supervisor ............................................................ 30
Document Management: Filename: CourseOutline_UG_MINE495X_2019_T3 Date last update: 23 August 2019 Changes made by: Paul Hagan Revision number: V2.6
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1. INFORMATION ABOUT THE COURSE
Course Code: MINE4951/52/53 Term: T3, 2019 Level: UG Units/Credits 4 UOC Course Name: Research Thesis A, B and C
Course Convenor: Dr Carlito Tabelin
Contact Details: School of Minerals & Energy Resources Engineering Old Main Building, Rm 159C
Email: c.tabelin@unsw.edu.au
Phone: +61 2 9385 7946
Contact times: As per scheduled time for course
Course Convenor: Professor Paul Hagan
Contact Details: School of Minerals & Energy Resources Engineering Old Main Building, Rm 160
Email: p.hagan@unsw.edu.au
Phone: +61 2 9385 5998
Contact times: As per scheduled time for course
1.1 Overview of Honours Research Project
Completion of a research project is a requirement for the award of an Honours degree. The research project in engineering programs at UNSW involves three courses, these being Research Thesis A, Research Thesis B and Research Thesis C completed over consecutive terms in the final year of study. Progression onto each successive course is contingent on successful completion of the previous course. In general terms, the objective of each of the courses is as follows.
MINE4951 Research Thesis A: This covers the scoping, planning, and completing preparations for the research project.
MINE4952 Research Thesis B: The primary aim of the course is to progress the experimental/investigative aspects that may involve, for example, a laboratory or field-based study with a preliminary analysis of results.
MINE4953 Research Thesis C: It is expected that the student will finalise any remaining experimental work and present the findings of the research. The key deliverables include: a student presentation (verbal presentation summarising the research question, the methodology, results and findings); the Thesis (a formal written report on the research project); and, Conference paper (a summary of the project).
1.2 Course Description
The research project runs over three consecutive terms with the principal objective of managing a significant research project. The project is an individual student undertaking, not a team-based assessment. The course is intended to develop the capability and requisite skills of an engineer to build the foundation of knowledge related to a particular industry-related problem. This foundation provides a basis on which to design a solution that is robust and safe, cost-effective and appropriate to the end-user. The research project provides an opportunity for the student to bring together engineering principles learned over their previous years of study and apply these principles to innovatively solve problems such as the development of a specific design, process and/or the investigation of a hypothesis. Thesis projects must entail complex, open-ended questions that allow room for student creativity, and the acquisition, analysis and interpretation of results. There must be multiple possible solutions or
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conclusions at the outset and sufficient complexity to require a degree of project planning from the student. The thesis requires the student to formulate problems in engineering terms, manage an engineering project and find solutions by applying engineering methods. Students also develop their ability to work in a research and development environment. It is essential that this foundation reflects not only established thinking and practices but equally important, it should account for divergent and newly developing views as well as any limitations or weaknesses that underpin current understanding. The quality of the engineering solution is, therefore, a function of the quality and timing to complete this investigation; an investigation that forms part of a process known as research.
1.3 Requirements for Course Completion
Each of the three courses, that is Research Thesis A, Research Thesis B and Research Thesis C, have separate assessment components. On successful completion of Research Thesis A, the student will be awarded a grade result of Enrolment Continuing (EC) allowing progression onto the subsequent course, Research Thesis B. Similarly, following successful completion of Research Thesis B, the student will be awarded a grade of EC that will allow progression onto the subsequent course Research Thesis C. On completion of Research Thesis C, a composite mark will be calculated based on the assessment tasks in all three courses and the same mark will then be applied to all three courses. Course completion requires:
submission of all assessment items; failure to submit one or more assessment items will result in the award of an Unsatisfactory Failure (UF) grade for the Course.
In the case of Research Thesis A, submission at the end of the term of the Project Objectives Agreement (POA) form. The student must make an appointment with the Project Supervisor towards the end of the term to discuss the outcomes and any changes required to the Project Objectives as defined in the Research Literature Review. Following this discussion and once the student has demonstrated the changes have been satisfactorily made, the student can then arrange to have the POA form signed-off by the student’s Project Supervisor. The final course results will be withheld and a grade of Results Withheld (WD) will be set and remain in place until the completed form is submitted. If by the start of the following term, the discussion and/or necessary changes have not been made and the completed form not provided to the Course Convenor then the course grade will be altered to Unsatisfactory Failure (UF). This will require the student to re-enrol in the course in the following term.
In the case of Research Thesis B, submission of Project Plan Agreement (PPA) form. The student must make an appointment with the Project Supervisor before Week 5 to discuss details of the final research plan. Following this discussion and once the student has demonstrated any required changes have been satisfactorily made to the research plan, the student can then arrange to have the PPA form signed-off by the student’s Project Supervisor.
1.4 Assumed Knowledge
This course assumes that a student: is currently enrolled in the Mining Engineering single degree program or a Mining Engineering
double degree program at UNSW; and has satisfactorily completed all the courses in Stages 1 to 3 of the Mining Engineering single
degree program or equivalent in the Mining Engineering double degree program and is in the final Stage/Year of the program; and
has successfully completed MINE3430 Mining Systems; and has a sound knowledge of mining terms and systems and has had previous exposure to mining
operations through industry employment and/or field trips.
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2. AIMS, LEARNING OUTCOMES AND GRADUATE ATTRIBUTES 2.1 Course Aims
The course provides the opportunity for the student to undertake a research project on a mining, minerals engineering or other topic approved by the Course Convenor. Candidates are required to submit a dissertation or thesis, conference paper and make a presentation. The work may take the form of an engineering analysis, experimental investigation, theoretical study or design project.
2.2 Learning Outcomes
At the conclusion of this course, a student should be able to: 1. Develop a design or a process or investigate a hypothesis following industry and professional
engineering standards. (refer to elements 7, 8, 9, 10 of BE (Hons) Program below) 2. Critically reflect on a specialist body of knowledge related to their thesis topic. (3) 3. Apply scientific and engineering methods to solve an engineering problem. (7) 4. Analyse data objectively using quantitative and mathematical methods. (2, 7, 8) 5. Demonstrate oral and written communication in professional and lay domains. (12) 6. Complete a risk assessment associated with a project. (6, 7, 8, 9, 10 & 11)
2.3 BE (Hons) Program Learning Outcomes
1. Comprehensive, theory-based understanding of the underpinning natural and physical sciences and the engineering fundamentals applicable to the engineering discipline.
2. Conceptual understanding of the mathematics, numerical analysis, statistics, and computer and information sciences which underpin the engineering discipline
3. In-depth understanding of specialist bodies of knowledge within the engineering discipline. 4. Discernment of knowledge development and research directions within the engineering
discipline. 5. Knowledge of engineering design practice and contextual factors impacting the engineering
discipline. 6. Understanding of the scope, principles, norms, accountabilities and bounds of sustainable
engineering practice in the specific discipline. 7. Application of established engineering methods to complex engineering problem-solving. 8. Fluent application of engineering techniques, tools and resources. 9. Application of systematic engineering synthesis and design processes. 10. Application of systematic approaches to the conduct and management of engineering
projects. 11. Ethical conduct and professional accountability. 12. Effective oral and written communication in professional and lay domains. 13. Creative, innovative and pro-active demeanour. 14. Professional use and management of information. 15. Orderly management of self and professional conduct. 16. Effective team membership and team leadership.
2.4 Graduate Attributes
This course will contribute to the development of the following Graduate Attributes: 1. appropriate technical knowledge 2. having advanced problem solving, analysis and synthesis skills with the ability to tolerate
ambiguity 3. ability for engineering design and creativity 4. awareness of opportunities to add value through engineering and the need for continuous
improvement 5. being able to work and communicate effectively across discipline boundaries 6. having HSEC consciousness 7. being active life-long learners.
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3. COURSE RESOURCES 3.1 Reference Materials
Mining Research Project Course Learning Guide Report Writing Guide for Engineers. P Hagan and P Mort (Mining Education Australia (MEA)).
(Latest edition available for download from the School website or a hardcopy version is available from the UNSW Bookshop)
Guide to Authors. (Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy: Melbourne) (Available for download from the AusIMM website)
3.2 Other Resources
Student Resource Book: Mining Research Project EndNote, software package available to UNSW students ELISE, the on-line study skills tutorial and ELISE Plus. Both tutorials will be useful to students
when preparing the Annotated Bibliography and Project Progress Report assignment submissions. The latter in particular includes a tutorial on EndNote and Refworks. The tutorials can be accessed at www.subjectguides.library.unsw.edu.au/elise
The Complete Idiot’s Guide to Project Management. G Campbell and S Baker (Alpha: New York)…or its equivalent.
Style Manual for Authors, Editors and Printers, 2002. 6th edition (John Wiley & Sons) The Research Project – How to Write It, 2000. R Berry, 4th edition (Routledge: London) How to Write a Better Thesis, 2002. D Evans and P Gruba (Melbourne University Press:
Melbourne) The Learning Centre. A number of resources are available at the UNSW Learning Centre
website to assist students in preparing the various assessment tasks including: Guide for Writing Thesis Proposals, available at www.student.unsw.edu.au/thesis-proposals Honours Thesis Writing for Engineering and Science Students, available
at www.student.unsw.edu.au/honours-thesis-writing-engineering-and-science-students
3.3 Online Resources
Selected readings and other supporting materials (e.g. Course Outline, Course Learning Guide, style templates for course assessment items) are available on Moodle. Videos are often provided to students as a web stream within the Moodle learning management system. Videos are not available for download by students, unless approved by the Course Convenor and either the Undergraduate or Postgraduate Coursework Director. Special consideration can be provided for students to access videos off-line (e.g. working remotely). Please contact the Course Convenor for more information. Note that UNSW reserves the right to deliver videos as a web stream rather than off-line and cannot provide videos that are copyright from other providers.
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4. COURSE CONTENT AND LEARNING ACTIVITIES 4.1 MINE4951 Research Thesis A
Table 1. Project Milestones and Learning Activities – MINE4951
UNSW Week Project Milestone Content / Activities
Before start of Term
Consider different options for research project during period of Industry Experience
Discuss with academics the suitability of the topic as a thesis project including formulating research objectives.
1 Course briefing – objectives, expectations and timeframes
Outline of course objectives, activities and assessment. Further consideration of alternate research project topics
2 Discussion with academic(s) on potential project topics
3 PROJECT MILESTONE #1 Submission of
Project Proposal
4
5
6 PROJECT MILESTONE #2 Submission of
Annotated Bibliography
7
8
9 PROJECT MILESTONE #3
10
Consultation and feedback Submission of
Project Objectives Agreement (POA)
Agreement & sign-off by Supervisor of POA
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4.2 MINE4952 Research Thesis B
Table 2. Project Milestones and Learning Activities – MINE4952
UNSW Week Project Milestone Content / Activities
1 Prepare project plan and risk assessment
2 Prepare project plan and risk assessment
3 PROJECT MILESTONE #4 Submission of
Project Progress II: Plan & Risk Assessment
Finalise experimental design, Construct, commission and calibrate equipment
4 Submission of Project Plan Agreement Undertake experiments/investigation/modelling
5 Undertake experiments/investigation/modelling
6 Undertake experiments/investigation/modelling
7 Review and analyse results to date
8 PROJECT MILESTONE #5 Submission of
Project Progress III: Preliminary Results
Report results
9 Assess results from experiments
10 Discuss results with supervisor
4.3 MINE4953 Research Thesis C
Table 3. Project Milestones and Learning Activities – MINE4953
UNSW Week Project Milestone Content / Activities
1 Course briefing – objectives, expectations and timeframes Undertake any followup experiments/investigation/modelling
2 Undertake any followup experiments/investigation/modelling
3 Undertake any followup experiments/investigation/modelling
4 Undertake final round of experiments/investigation/modelling
5 Analyse results and prepare findings, begin draft of thesis
6 Prepare drafts of project results, conclusions & presentation
7 PROJECT MILESTONE #6 Submission of
Seminar Presentation
Project presentation* including objectives, current knowledge and most importantly the results, analysis, conclusions and recommendations.
8 PROJECT MILESTONE #7 Submission of
Thesis for Examination Submit Examiner’s Copy of Thesis for assessment
9
10 PROJECT MILESTONE #8 Submission of
Final Submission Requirements
Complete summary of research in the form of a conference paper plus submit the finalized hardbound copy of thesis
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5. COURSE ASSESSMENT 5.1 Assessment Schedule
Assessment of the research project is based on the student submissions at each of the project milestones during the term. Specific details of the requirements of the submissions at these project milestones are contained in the Mining Research Project Learning Guide. The range of assessment tasks have been designed to ensure a student can demonstrate they have satisfactorily attained the minimum requirements of the course as defined in the Learning Outcomes of the course and Graduate Attributes of the program. The student is strongly advised to review the relevant Assessment Criteria for each submission contained in the following section before completing each of the assessment items.
Table 4. Course Assessment and Due Dates.
Assessment No. Assessment / Project Milestone UNSW
Week due Course
Weighting Learning
Outcomes
Thesis A
(20%)
A01 Project Proposal 3 14% 1
A02 Annotated Bibliography (750-2000 words) 6 20% 2
A03 Progress Report I/ Report on Research Literature Review (12-20 pages)
9 60% 1, 2, 3 & 5
A04 On-going Consultation with Supervisor Ongoing 4% 5
A05 Project Objectives Agreement (POA) 14 2% 5
Thesis B
(15%)
A06 Progress Report II: Report on Research Plan and Risk Assessment 3 30% 1-5
A07 Progress Report III: Report on Preliminary Results 8 65% 1-5
A08 On-going Consultation with Supervisor Ongoing 5% 5
Thesis C
(65%)
A09 Student Seminar presentation on project and outcomes Week 7 15% 1-5
A10 Examiner’s Copy of Thesis Week 8 65% 1-5
A11
Final Submission Requirements including: Conference Paper Final bound version of Thesis (2 copies) CD/DVD/USB containing project files Project Final Clearance form Graduate Destination form Honours Calculation spreadsheet
Stuvac 15% 6
A012 Quality Consultation with Supervisor Ongoing 5% 1-4
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5.2 Assessment Requirements
Who All assessment items must be submitted to the Course Convenor. Unless stated otherwise,
the submission must be made through the relevant Assignment Dropbox on Moodle. The assignment must not be submitted directly to the student’s individual Project Supervisor.
When Unless stated otherwise, the default deadline for submission of an assignment is 9:00 am
on the Monday in the nominated week. If the Monday falls on a Public Holiday, then the due date is the next business day in the nominated week.
Early submission is required in cases where the student will otherwise knowingly be absent on the due date of submission, for example to attend the Student Mining Games, a graduate employment interview etc. – no extensions will be granted in these circumstances.
Prior to submission, the student should read the School Policy on Assignment Submissions which can be viewed at: www.engineering.unsw.edu.au/mining-engineering/what-we-do/about-the-school/school-general-guidelines
In particular, the student should make sure they have read and understood the: o Declaration of Academic Integrity; o Assignment Submission requirements detailed in the University Policies section of the
Course Outline; and o School Policy on Assignment Submission available on the School's website (the web
address is given in the Course Outline). Where
Unless stated otherwise, the submission must be made through the relevant Assignment Dropbox or Turnitin on Moodle. Turnitin is a plagiarism checking service that will retain a copy of the assessment item on its database for the purpose of future plagiarism checking.
What Submission requirements for all assignments are listed in Sections 4 and 7 of the Course
Learning Guide. The submission must be:
o a single document in PDF format; and o prepared in the form of a formal report. The report must include a list of reference
sources that are cited in the report that is prepared in accordance with the report writing standards of the School as detailed in the Report Writing Guide for Engineers. A copy can be obtained from the UNSW Bookshop or downloaded from the School webpage.
Each submission must have appended: o to the front, a signed copy of the Student Declaration Form and Coversheet; and o to the end, a copy of the Assessment Criteria. Copies of both these documents are available for download from Moodle.
It is strongly recommended when preparing a report that the student use the provided Report Template available from Moodle. Note: as this template already incorporates the required the Student Declaration Form, a student does not need to separately append a signed copy of coversheet to their assignment.
How The name of the document must be consistent with the standard file naming convention as
stated in the Assignment Submission, these being: FamilyNameInitials_CourseCode_AssignmentNumber.pdf
An example of a typical filename that follows this file naming convention would be: SmithPD_MINE4951_A01.pdf
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which elements correspond to: o Family name of student: Smith o First and second initial(s) of student: PD o Course Code: MINE4951 o Relevant assignment number as defined in Table 2: A01 for the assessment task Project
Proposal o File format: PDF document
5.3 Penalties for a Non-Compliant Submission
A submission that is non-compliant with the School Policy on Assignment Submission and/or requirements as contained in this Course Outline may not be marked and/or penalty marks subtracted from the assignment mark for non-compliance. Some examples of a non-compliant assignment include the assignment submission are as follows.
is not a single PDF document Penalty for non-compliance: assignment not marked. does not contain a signed copy of the Student Declaration Statement. Penalty for non-
compliance: assignment not marked. is not fully consistent with the designated file naming convention as listed above and defined as
Item #6 in the School Policy on electronic submission. For example, a file name such as ProjectProposal.pdf is NOT compliant. Penalty for non-compliance: 10 marks.
does not have appended at the end of the assignment a copy of the official Assessment Criteria template. Penalty for non-compliance: 5 marks.
5.4 Assessment Process
Each student must have a Project Supervisor who is a member of academic staff in the School. In some instances, the Project Supervisor may deem it appropriate to appoint a Project Co-Supervisor who is either an academic from the School or some other School/Faculty/University or, a person from the industry. The Project Supervisor is responsible in conjunction with the Course Convenor for assessment of the student’s performance in the research project. In general, it is strongly recommended that a student should arrange to consult with their Project Supervisor on a regular basis to discuss project progress, options and future direction and, issues that may potentially impact performance and/or project completion. The onus is on the student not the Project Supervisor to initiate and hold regular meetings to discuss progress and issues arising related to the timely and quality completion of the project. If there is frequent communication with the Supervisor, there is less likelihood that “surprises” will arise which can adversely impact on the successful and timely completion of the project and ensure the various milestones in the project are attained.
5.5 Assignment Attachments
Depending on the assessment item, grading will be undertaken by the Course Convenor and/or Project Supervisor. In the case of the:
Project Proposal and Annotated Bibliography – assessment will be undertaken by the Course Convenor and/or Course Teaching Assistant.
Project Progress Report I: Literature Review – assessment will be undertaken by the student’s Project Supervisor and the Course Convenor
Project Progress Report II: Plan & Risk Assessment – assessment will be undertaken by the student’s Project Supervisor and the Course Convenor.
Project Progress Report III: Preliminary Results – assessment will be undertaken by the student’s Project Supervisor and the Course Convenor.
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Student Presentation – assessment will be undertaken by a panel of academics that would often not include the student’s Project Supervisor.
Examiner’s Copy of Thesis – assessment will be undertaken by the student’s Project Supervisor and the Course Convenor.
Conference Paper – assessment will be undertaken by the Course Convenor and/or Course Teaching Assistant.
Grading of the Project Progress Reports and Examiner’s Copy of Thesis will often involve at least some if not all of the following steps.
A student must submit each assignment item to the Course Convenor through the Assignment dropbox in Moodle to record the date and time of submission.
The Project Report will then be accessed by the student’s Project Supervisor. The Project Supervisor will assess the work. A provisional mark will be returned to the Course
Convenor. The relativity between Supervisors of the provisional mark will be audited. Provisional marks will be distributed to all Project Supervisors in confidence. Marks will not be
released, and the reports are not returned at this stage. A meeting of all Project Supervisors will discuss relativities. Penalties will be deducted from the adjusted provisional mark. The final mark will be released after which reports can be collected from the Project Supervisor.
Note: Do NOT submit any assessment item directly to your Project Supervisor, as a late submission penalty will be applied.
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6. ASSESSMENT CRITERIA
The following assessment criteria provide a guide for students to consider when preparing the major assessment items in the course. The student is strongly advised to review the relevant framework before undertaking their assignment. This is also used as a guideline by the assessor when marking an assignment. The criteria for each item of assessment and the descriptions contained therein are not intended to be prescriptive, nor is it an exhaustive list. Instead, it should be viewed as a framework to guide the student as to the type of information, depth of coverage and the quality standard that is expected to be evident in a submission; the framework illustrates for example how an excellent achievement could be distinguished from a satisfactory and from a poor result. The student should be cognisant that a range of factors is often being assessed in any one assignment; not just whether the final results are numerically correct. Consideration is given to other relevant attributes that contribute to the Learning Outcomes of the course as well as the Graduate Attributes of the overall degree program. Hence, the student is cautioned against using the assessment criteria merely as a checklist of the content in an assignment. When assessing an assignment, elements in the framework will be examined in terms of quality and creativity. Hence ensuring all the listed features are covered in an assignment may not always be sufficient in itself and will not automatically lead to full marks being awarded. Other factors such as how the student went about presenting information, level of creativity/novelty of the factors considered and solution, how an argument was structured and/or the elements supporting a particular recommendation or outcome are also important. Finally, the criteria can provide the basis for feedback to a student on their performance in an assignment. Periodically the criteria are reviewed and updated; hence, changes may be made from time to time to the framework to improve its effectiveness in achieving these objectives. Note: Reference to RWG in the assessment criteria refers to the Report Writing Guide for Engineers, and GTA to the AusIMM Guide to Authors.
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6.1 A01: Research Project Proposal
The assessment criteria and relative weighting that will be used in assessing the Project Proposal is summarised in the following table.
Table 5. Assessment Criteria – Research Project Proposal
Criteria Excellent Good Satisfactory Unsatisfactory Poor nil
Quality of Proposal
the submission was in the form of a formal report that was written and
presented to a high professional standard that was grammatically correct, and clear to read and understand; and
conformed in all aspects entirely with the RWG in terms of format, structure and style; and
proposal contains all essential elements including: o well defined
Project Objectives and Expected Outcomes; and
o a clear description of the research elements associated with the project; and
o evidence of preliminary background reading on the topic; and
all in-text citations were correct as per the RWG; and
all sources of information were referenced; and
all listings in the References section were correct and all exactly in total accord with AusIMM referencing requirements as defined in the GTA and RWG; and
all bibliographical details correctly provided in for each listing in the Reference section; &
there were no references missing from the References section and
total word count was not less than 750 and did not exceed 1500 words and
a completed Assignment Coversheet and relevant Assessment Criteria were attached
the submission was in the form of a formal report that was well written and
presented to a reasonably high standard and on the whole reasonably clear to read and understand containing only a few errors; and
conformed in nearly all aspects of the RWG in terms of format, structure and style; and
proposal contains most essential elements including: o a generally well
defined Project Objectives and Expected Outcomes;
o a clear description of the research elements associated with the project;
o evidence of some preliminary background reading on the topic; and
referencing and references were mainly correct and in total accord with AusIMM referencing requirements as defined in the GTA and RWG; and,
total word count was not less than 750 and did not exceed 1500 words, and
a completed Assignment Coversheet and relevant Assessment Criteria were attached
the submission was in the form of a formal report that while it contained the
correct information, it was overall somewhat difficult to understand, unclear, ambiguous and/or contained several unsubstantiated statements; and
conformed in most aspects of the RWG with a few exceptions in terms of format, structure and style; and
proposal contains many essential elements including: o a vaguely defined
Project Objectives and Expected Outcomes;
o a description of the research elements;
o little or no evidence of preliminary background reading on the topic; and
referencing and references were mostly correct and in accord with AusIMM referencing requirements as defined in the GTA and RWG with only a few very minor exceptions; and ,
total word count was not less than 500 and did not exceed 1000 words and
a completed Assignment Coversheet and relevant Assessment Criteria were attached
the submission was mostly in the form of a formal report that contained many
errors and/or was difficult to read; and/or was ambiguous and/or contained unsubstantiated statements; and/or
was not always consistent with the RWG with many minor exceptions in terms of format, structure and style;
proposal lacked many of the essential elements with: o poorly defined
Project Objectives and Expected Outcomes;
o poorly defined or incomplete description of the research elements;
o no evidence of preliminary background reading on the topic; and/or
many errors in referencing and/or references were not correct and were not in accord with AusIMM referencing requirements as defined in the GTA and RWG; and/or
total word count was less than 500 words and/or
did not have attached a completed Assignment Coversheet and/or Assessment Criteria
the submission was largely not in the form of a formal report and/or was very poorly
written/ presented making it difficult to understand and follow; and/or
was largely inconsistent with expectations of a formal report with many inconsistencies with the RWG; and/or
proposal does not contain most of the essential elements with: o little/no defined
Project Objectives and Expected Outcomes;
o missing description of the research elements;
o no evidence of preliminary background reading on the topic; and/or
majority of referencing and/or references were not correct and were not in accord with AusIMM referencing requirements as defined in the GTA and RWG; and/or
total word count was less than 250 words and/or
did not have attached a completed Assignment Coversheet and/or Assessment Criteria
the submission was not consistent with the expectations of a formal report and/or inconstant with the
RWG in terms of report format, structure and writing style and/or contained major non-conformance issues; and/or
report was not consistent with requirements of a formal report
no proposal submitted; and/or
not submitted on time; and/or
missing sections from report; and/or
no in-text citation in main body of report of information sources used; and/or
incorrect system of citing references with respect to RWG; and/or
no References section; and/or
incorrect system of listing references in the References section; and/or
incomplete and/or incorrect bibliographic details provided for references in the Reference list; and/or
did not conform with AusIMM referencing requirements as defined in the GTA and RWG; and/or
did not conform with assignment submission requirements; and/or
no Assignment Coversheet and/or relevant Assessment Criteria were attached
10 9 8 7 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
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6.2 A02: Annotated Bibliography
The assessment criteria and relative weighting that will be used in assessing the Annotated Bibliography is summarised in the following table.
Table 6. Assessment Criteria – Annotated Bibliography
Criteria Excellent Good Satisfactory Unsatisfactory Poor nil
Relevance of References to Topic (15%)
All references were relevant to the topic with in particular an explicit linkage and relevance made in the discussion for annotated reference.
Majority of references were relevant to the topic with explicit linkage to topic made in the discussion.
Many references relevant to the topic with few exceptions,
Only a few references were relevant to the topic.
Majority of references were not relevant to the topic and/or had only a tenuous link to topic.
References had no relevance to the topic and/or no explicit discussion as to linkage/relevance to topic.
15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
Variety of Sources (15%)
A balanced array of at least four different types of reference sources critiqued/annotated; and, a minimum of ten references of which there were a minimum of five different types of reference sources included in the References list (e.g. journals, conference papers, monographs, and websites)
A variety of at least three different types of reference sources critiqued /annotated; and, a minimum of ten references of which there are a minimum of five different types of reference sources included in the References list
Several different types of at least two different types of reference sources critiqued /annotated; and, a minimum of ten references of which there are a minimum of three different types of reference sources included in the References list
Fewer than three different reference sources critiqued; and/or fewer than ten references included.
Very few different sources critiqued; and/or fewer than six references included.
Only the one source critiqued; and/or fewer than five references included in the References section
15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
Quality of the Critique in the Annotations (30%)
Excellent discussion with all relevant and significant key points of interest identified especially pointing out the importance of the information contained in each of the references.
Good discussion and most key points of interest identified that points out the importance of the information contained in each of the references
Some discussion and some key points of interest identified with some identification of information relevant to the topic
Some discussion but only a few key points of interest identified.
Little discussion or lack of discussion on key points of interest and/or were poorly identified.
No discussion or identification of any key points of interest from the reference.
30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
Referencing (20%)
all in-text citations were correct as per the RWG; and
all sources of information were referenced; and
all listings in the References section were correct and all exactly in total accord with AusIMM referencing requirements as defined in the GTA and RWG; and
all bibliographical details correctly provided for each listing in the Reference section; and
there were no missing references from the References section
majority of intext citations were correct with only a few minor errors; and
majority of sources of information were referenced with only a few minor exceptions; and
all listings in the references section were mostly correct and in total accord with AusIMM referencing requirements as defined in the GTA and RWG; and
the bibliographical details were correctly provided for each listing in the Reference section with only few minor exceptions; and
there were only one to two references missing from the References section
most in-text citations were correct though there were several errors and
some information is not referenced; and
all listings in the references were correct and in accord with AusIMM referencing requirements as defined in the GTA and RWG with only a few very minor exceptions; and
bibliographical details correctly provided for most listings in the Reference section with several minor exceptions; and
the References section was mostly complete with only a few references missing from the References section
many errors with in-text citations; and/or
too little use of in-text citations and/or
several instances of information not being properly referenced to identify source of information; and/or
many errors in referencing and/or references were not correct and were not in accord with AusIMM referencing requirements as defined in the GTA and RWG; and/or
bibliographical details not always correctly provided or were incomplete in many listings in the Reference section; and/or
the Reference section was incomplete/ and/or several missing references
most in-text citations had errors; and/or
little use of made of in-text citations to identify source of information; and/or
majority of referencing and/or references were not correct and were not in accord with AusIMM referencing requirements as defined in the GTA and RWG; and/or
bibliographical details were not always correct or were incomplete in many listings in the Reference section; and/or
there were many references missing from the References section
there were no in-text citations in the main body of report indicating the sources of information; and/or
there was no References section; and/or
incorrect system of citing references in report with respect to RWG; and/or
the references were unsorted, or an incorrect system of listing references used in the References section; and/or
incomplete and/or incorrect bibliographic details provided for references in the Reference list; and/or
many missing references from the References section;
did not conform with AusIMM referencing requirements as defined in the GTA and RWG
20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
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Criteria Excellent Good Satisfactory Unsatisfactory Poor nil
Standard of Presentation (20%)
in the form of a formal report that was written and presented to a professionally high standard and conformed in all aspects entirely with the RWG in terms of format, structure and style, in particular: conformed entirely
with the prescribed guidelines in the RWG in terms of report format, structure and writing style; and
structure contained all the required sections as required for a formal technical report and was in accord with RWG; and
structure followed a logical progression; and
format was completely in accord with the report writing conventions as detailed in RWG; and
use of tables, figures and equations was correct and completely in accord with the RWG with no errors; and
writing style was appropriate; and
there was no evidence of spelling and grammatical errors; and
a completed Assignment Coversheet and relevant Assessment Criteria were attached
in the form of a formal report that was well written and presented and conformed in nearly all aspects of the RWG in terms of format, structure and style, in particular: conformed in most
aspects with RWG in terms of format, structure and writing style; and,
structure and contained all major elements; and
format was largely in accord with RWG with only a few minor errors; and
use of tables, figures and equations was largely correct with only a few minor errors; and
style was largely appropriate for a thesis with a few minor exceptions; and
largely free of spelling and grammatical errors; and
a completed Assignment Coversheet and Assessment Criteria were attached
in the form of a formal report conformed in most aspects of the RWG in terms of format, structure and style, in particular: in most respects was
in reasonable conformance with the RWG in terms of format, structure and writing style with only a few very minor exceptions; and,
structure was mostly correct and/or some minor elements could have been added; and
format was mostly in accord with the RWG though it had some minor errors; and
use of tables, figures and equations was mostly correct though there were several minor errors; and
style was appropriate in most instances with some minor errors; and
several minor spelling and grammatical errors; and
a completed Assignment Coversheet and Assessment Criteria were attached
in the form of a formal report but it was not always consistent with the RWG in terms of format, structure and style, in particular: contained many minor
exceptions to RWG in terms of format, structure and writing style; and/or
several issues with structure and/or many minor errors and/or omissions; and/or
many issues with format as it deviated from RWG; and/or
several issues with use of tables, figures and/or equations; and/or
writing style was inappropriate in some instances; and/or
many instances of spelling and/or grammatical errors; and/or
did not have attached a completed Assignment Coversheet and/or Assessment Criteria
the submission was not in the form of a formal report and/or it contained many major conformances with the RWG, in particular: contained major non-
conformance issues with RWG in terms of format, structure and writing style; and/or,
significant issues with structure and/or many major errors and significant omissions; and/or
large number of significant major issues in format; and/or
use of tables, figures and/or equations was largely inconsistent with RWG; and/or
writing style was inappropriate in many instances; and/or
large number of spelling and/or grammatical errors; and/or
did not have attached a completed Assignment Coversheet and/or Assessment Criteria
the submission was not consistent with expectations of a formal report and largely inconsistent with the RWG, in particular:
no report submitted; and/or
not submitted on time; and/or
was largely not consistent with requirements in terms of format, structure and writing style and/or had major non-conformance issues with RWG; and/or
most essential elements of structure were missing; and/or
report lacked any apparent logical structure; and/or
significant amount of information was missing; and/or
format was not in accord with the RWG standards; and/or
use of tables, figures and/or equations was incorrect; and/or
inappropriate writing style; and/or
major issues due to numerous spelling and/or grammar errors; and/or
did not conform with assignment submission requirements; and/or
no Assignment Coversheet and/or relevant Assessment Criteria were attached
20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
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6.3 A03: Project Progress Report I – Literature Review
The assessment criteria and relative weighting that will be used in assessing the Project Progress Report is summarised in the following table.
Table 7. Assessment Criteria – Project Progress Report I Criteria Excellent Good Satisfactory Unsatisfactory Poor nil
Extent and Depth of Research on Topic (15%)
comprehensive range and variety of references sources which are all relevant to the topic area associated with research objectives
no gaps in references sources
good broad range of references that are mostly relevant and appropriate to the topic
all significant references included except for a few minor omissions
reasonable range of references from different sources
many significant references were considered with some minor omissions
limited range of references and/or some that are not appropriate to the topic
many significant references were missing
poor range of references and/or many are not appropriate to the topic
most significant references were missing
little/no evidence of any research
15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
Critique and Interpretation of the Information and,Justification of Research Objectives (40%)
all information has been appropriately critiqued and cross-referenced that demonstrated significant insight into topic ; and
considered all up-to-date and relevant issues with no gaps in discussion on the topic; and
full integration of the appropriate sources e.g. differences in results, critiquing different theories; and
research objectives are all clearly defined with each being fully justified and clearly linked to the findings outlined in the literature review
good evidence of some information being critiqued with some insight into topic and some cross linkage
most of the relevant information and issues were discussed with few gaps
most sources are well integrated e.g. differences in results, critiquing different theories
research objectives are well defined, and each are adequately justified by the literature review
a mixture of critique and paraphrase of information with limited evidence of any significant insight being demonstrated
many of the major relevant information and issues were discussed
some effort made to integrate the variety of sources e.g. differences in results, critiquing different theories
research objectives are adequately defined though they are poorly justified and/or with tenuous links to the literature review
information has largely been paraphrased with little sight provided
some relevant information and/or issues were missing and/or inadequately discussed
limited effort made to integrate the variety of sources e.g. differences in results, critiquing different theories
research objectives are poorly defined or are poorly justified, – further consideration is required
little or no interpretation of information
large amounts of and/or some major relevant information and/or issues were not discussed
no/little effort made to integrate the variety of sources e.g. differences in results, critiquing different theories
research objectives are poorly defined and poorly justified – major revision is required
no critique or interpretation provided
no discussion of relevant information and/or issues
no statement and justification of research objectives
40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
Conclusions and Definition of the Research Question/ Objectives (15%)
clear, concise and comprehensive statement of project objectives that reflects state of understanding of topic
good statement of project objectives that reflect current state of understanding of topic
reasonable statement of project objectives that reflect to some degree current state of understanding of topic
poorly revised project objectives that does not account for current state of understanding of topic
project objective is ambiguous and/or does not account for current state of understanding of topic
no concluding remarks about the project objectives and project plan were provided
15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
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Criteria Excellent Good Satisfactory Unsatisfactory Poor nil
Referencing (15%)
all in-text citations were correct as per the RWG; and
all sources of information were referenced; and
all listings in the References section were correct and all exactly in total accord with AusIMM referencing requirements as defined in the GTA and RWG; and
all bibliographical details correctly provided in for each listing in the Reference section; and
there were no references missing from the References section
majority of sources of information were referenced with a few minor exceptions; and
all listings in the references were mainly correct and in total accord with AusIMM referencing requirements as defined in the GTA and RWG; and
bibliographical details correctly provided for each listing in the Reference section with only few minor exceptions; and
there was one reference missing from the References section
most in-text citations were correct though there are several errors and/or
some information is not referenced; and
all listings in the references were correct and in accord with AusIMM referencing requirements as defined in the GTA and RWG with only a few very minor exceptions; and
bibliographical details correctly provided for most listings in the Reference section with several minor exceptions; and
the References section was mostly complete with only a few references missing from the References section
many errors with in-text citations; and/or
too little use of in-text citations and/or
several instances of information not being properly referenced to identify source of information; and/or
many errors in referencing and/or references were not correct and were not in accord with AusIMM referencing requirements as defined in the GTA and RWG; and/or
bibliographical details not always correctly provided or were incomplete in many listings in the Reference section; and/or
the Reference section was incomplete/ missing several references
most in-text citations had errors; and/or
little use of made of in-text citations to identify source of information; and/or
majority of referencing and/or references were not correct and were not in accord with AusIMM referencing requirements as defined in the GTA and RWG; and/or
bibliographical details not always correct or incomplete in many listings in the Reference section; and/or
there were many references missing from the References section
no in-text citation in main body of report of information sources used; and/or
there was no References section; and/or
incorrect system of citing references in report with respect to RWG; and/or
incorrect system of listing references in the References section; and/or
incomplete and/or incorrect bibliographic details provided for references in the Reference list; and/or
many missing references from the References section;
did not conform with AusIMM referencing requirements as defined in the GTA and RWG
15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
Standard of Report Presentation (15%)
in the form of a formal report that was excellently written and prepared to a professional high standard that was grammatically correct, and clear to read and understand; and
the report conformed entirely with RWG in terms of report format, structure and writing style; and
report structure contained all the sections as required for a formal technical report and was in accord with RWG; and
structure followed a logical progression; and
format of report was completely in accord with the report writing conventions as detailed in RWG; and
use of tables, figures and equations was correct and completely in accord with the RWG with no errors; and
writing style was appropriate and completely in accord with a formal technical report; and
there were no spelling and grammatical errors etc. in report.
in the form of a formal report that was well written and presented to a high standard and on the whole reasonably clear to read and understand with only a few errors;
the report conformed in most aspects with RWG in terms of report format, structure and writing style; and,
report structure and contained all major elements; and
format was largely in accord with RWG with only a few minor errors; and
use of tables, figures and equations was largely correct with only a few minor errors; and
style was largely appropriate for a technical report with a few minor exceptions; and
largely free of spelling and grammatical errors.
in the form of a formal report that while it contained the correct information, it was overall somewhat difficult to understand, unclear, ambiguous and/or contained several unsubstantiated statements; and,
in most respects was in reasonable conformance with the RWG in terms of report format, structure and writing style with only a few very minor exceptions; and,
report structure was mostly correct and/or some minor elements could have been added; and
format of report was mostly in accord with the RWG though it had some minor errors; and
use of tables, figures and equations was mostly correct though there were several minor errors; and
style was appropriate in most instances with some minor errors; and
several minor spelling and grammatical errors.
in the form of a formal report that contained many errors an/or was difficult to read; and/or was ambiguous and/or contained unsubstantiated statements; and/or,
the report contained many minor exceptions to RWG in terms of report format, structure and writing style; and/or
several issues with report structure and/or many minor errors and/or omissions; and/or
many issues with format of report as it deviated from RWG; and/or
several issues with use of tables, figures and/or equations; and/or
writing style was inappropriate in some instances; and/or
many instances of spelling and/or grammatical errors.
was not presented in form of a formal report and/or was poorly written and/or presented; and/or,
contained major non-conformance issues with RWG in terms of report format, structure and writing style; and/or,
significant issues with report structure and/or many major errors and significant omissions; and/or
large number of significant major issues in format of report; and/or
use of tables, figures and/or equations was largely inconsistent with RWG; and/or
writing style was inappropriate in many instances; and/or
large number of spelling and/or grammatical errors.
no proposal submitted; and/or
not submitted on time; and/or
report was not consistent with requirements of a formal report in terms of report format, structure and writing style and/or contained major non-conformance issues with RWG; and/or
most essential elements of report structure were missing; and/or
report lacked any apparent logical structure; and/or
significant amount of information was missing; and/or
format of report was not in accord with the RWG standards; and/or
use of tables, figures and/or equations was incorrect; and/or
inappropriate report writing style; and/or
major issues /numerous spelling and/or grammar errors; and/or
did not conform with assignment submission requirements; and/or
no Assignment Coversheet and/or relevant Assessment Criteria were attached
15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
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6.4 A04: Quality of Student Consultation with Supervisor
The assessment criteria and weighting that will be used in assessing the quality of the student consultations is summarised in the following table.
Table 8. Assessment Criteria – Consultation with Supervisor
Criteria Excellent Good Satisfactory Unsatisfactory Poor nil
Quality of Consultation
student maintained regular contact with academic supervisor (at least once a week); and
clearly demonstrated consistent effort and progress; and
discussed options to resolve issues related to project; and
clearly demonstrated significant initiative and competence that contributed to successful completion of project
student maintained regular contact with academic supervisor (at least once a fortnight), and
demonstrated to a reasonable degree some effort and progress of project, and
discussed some issues related to project, and
demonstrated competence in completing project and was largely self-directed
student had intermittent contact with academic supervisor (at least once a month), and
indicated sporadic progress, and
some initiative in resolving issues
but had to be largely guided in project by Supervisor
student had infrequent contact with academic supervisor (e.g. two to four times during term), and/or
little evidence to suggest otherwise that the project was not high on agenda and not left until final weeks before Seminar, and
little initiative demonstrated nor ownership shown of the project unless directed by Supervisor
student had very little contact if any with academic supervisor (perhaps only once for the term), and/or
little evidence to suggest otherwise that large portion of the project was left till the last minute, and
lack of any initiative demonstrated, nor ownership shown of the project
lack of any meaningful consultation by student with academic supervisor
5 4 3 2 1 0
6.5 A06: Project Progress Report II – Project Plan & Risk Assessment
The assessment criteria and relative weighting that will be used in assessing the Project Progress Report is summarised in the following table.
Table 9. Assessment Criteria – Project Progress Report II
Criteria Excellent Good Satisfactory Unsatisfactory Poor nil
Discussion on Tasks, Activities and Resource Requirements with link to Research Objectives (25%)
contains a comprehensive list of the various tasks and activities that need to be undertaken to achieve the objectives; and
detailed list of all required resources (materials and equipment) has been identified; and
demonstrated sufficient depth and quality of consideration to the tasks, activities and resources such that there is a high level of confidence the project outcomes can be achieved
contains all the various major tasks and activities and most of the minor tasks and activities that need to be undertaken to achieve the objectives
list of required resources (materials and equipment) has been identified
depth and quality of consideration has addressed most of the major tasks, activities and resources requirements with few minor omissions such that there is good level of confidence the project outcomes can be achieved
contains a list of many tasks and activities that need to be undertaken to achieve the objectives
list of some required resources (materials and equipment) has been identified
depth and quality of consideration has addressed many of the major tasks, activities and resources requirements with some omissions such that there is a reasonable level of confidence the project outcomes can be achieved
contains some tasks and activities but some important elements were not considered
incomplete list of the required resources missing many important resources (materials and equipment) has been identified
many omissions in tasks, activities and/or resources such that there is a low level of confidence the research objectives can be achieved – further consideration is required to this section
list is largely incomplete with significant gaps evident
limited list of the required resources (materials and equipment) has been identified
many major omissions in tasks, activities and/or resources such that there is very low level of confidence that the research objectives can be achieved – major revision required to this section
no list of tasks, activities and materials provided
no alignment with achieving the research objectives
20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
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Criteria Excellent Good Satisfactory Unsatisfactory Poor nil
Project Schedule (25%)
comprehensive schedule of all required activities and events was clearly and neatly indicated; and
all project milestones were identified; and
all tasks on the project’s critical path were clearly identified and discussed; and
schedule appears to be realistic and practical demonstrating detailed level of planning with sufficient allowance given to contingencies such that there is a high level of confidence the project outcomes can be achieved on time
schedule of activities and events was provided
all major milestones were identified
most of the major and minor tasks on the project’s critical path were clearly identified with some discussion
the schedule is realistic and clearly demonstrates good planning with reasonable allowance to contingencies such that there is good level of confidence the project outcomes can be achieved on time
reasonable schedule of activities and events was provided
many major milestones were identified
many of the tasks on the project’s critical path were identified with a few minor omissions though there was little discussion
schedule is reasonable with some minor issues such that there is a reasonable level of confidence the project outcomes can be achieved on time
incomplete schedule of activities and events was presented
only a few milestones were identified.
some tasks on the project’s critical path were not identified with many omissions and/or not discussed
schedule is poorly defined such that there is a low level of confidence the project objectives can be achieved on time – further consideration needs to be given to the schedule
haphazard schedule of activities and events was presented
no project milestones were identified
most tasks on the project’s critical path were not identified and/or with some important omissions and not discussed
schedule is unrealistic such that there is a very low level of confidence project objectives can be achieved on time – major revision of the schedule is required
no schedule of tasks and activities provided
no tasks on the project’s critical path were identified and/or discussed
no identification of project milestones
20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
Risk Management Plan (20%)
student, in the role of Project Manager, has considered all relevant and potential physical and process hazards associated with the project; and
applied an appropriate method to rate the risk of each hazard and ranked these risks to identified major risks; and
appropriate and comprehensive set of controls to manage all major risks that will contribute to successful project completion
student, in the role of Project Manager, has considered most of the relevant and potential physical and process hazards associated with the project
assigned appropriate rating and ranked the risks
defined appropriate controls to manage most major risks that will contribute to successful completion
student, in the role of Project Manager, has considered many of the relevant and potential physical and process hazards associated with the project
applied simple rating and ranking of the risks
appropriate controls defined for many of the major risks though lacks appropriate controls in some minor areas
student, in the role of Project Manager, has considered few of the relevant and potential physical and process hazards associated with the project
inappropriate rating or ranking the risks
poorly defined, inadequate and/or incomplete set of controls that do not address some major risks such that there is a low level of confidence the research objectives can be achieved – further consideration in managing the risks is required
student, in the role of Project Manager, has considered few or none of the relevant and potential physical and process hazards associated with the project
no rating and ranking of the risks
very few, inadequate and poorly defined controls such that there is a very low level of confidence project objectives can be achieved – major revision in managing the risks is required
no risk assessment provided
20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
Contingency Plans (10%)
detailed appropriate and realistic alternate action plans such that there is a high level of confidence the project outcomes can be safely achieved on time and within budget
reasonably appropriate alternate action plan(s) such that there is good level of confidence the project outcomes can be safely achieved on time and within budget
some consideration given to some an alternate action plan such that there is a reasonable level of confidence the project outcomes can be safely achieved on time and within budget
poor/little discussion on appropriate alternate action plan provided – further consideration is required in this section
unclear/confused/inappropriate and/or incomplete discussion of appropriate alternate action plan – major revision required to this section
no contingency plans provided
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
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Criteria Excellent Good Satisfactory Unsatisfactory Poor nil
Standard of Report Presentation (20%)
in the form of a formal report that was excellently written and prepared to a professional high standard that was grammatically correct, and clear to read and understand; and
the report conformed entirely with RWG in terms of report format, structure and writing style; and
report structure contained all the sections as required for a formal technical report and was in accord with RWG; and
structure followed a logical progression; and
format of report was completely in accord with the report writing conventions as detailed in RWG; and
use of tables, figures and equations was correct and completely in accord with the RWG with no errors; and
writing style was appropriate and completely in accord with a formal technical report; and
there were no spelling and grammatical errors etc. in report.
in the form of a formal report that was well written and presented to a high standard and on the whole reasonably clear to read and understand with only a few errors;
the report conformed in most aspects with RWG in terms of report format, structure and writing style; and,
report structure and contained all major elements; and
format was largely in accord with RWG with only a few minor errors; and
use of tables, figures and equations was largely correct with only a few minor errors; and
style was largely appropriate for a technical report with a few minor exceptions; and
largely free of spelling and grammatical errors.
in the form of a formal report that while it contained the correct information, it was overall somewhat difficult to understand, unclear, ambiguous and/or contained several unsubstantiated statements; and,
in most respects was in reasonable conformance with the RWG in terms of report format, structure and writing style with only a few very minor exceptions; and,
report structure was mostly correct and/or some minor elements could have been added; and
format of report was mostly in accord with the RWG though it had some minor errors; and
use of tables, figures and equations was mostly correct though there were several minor errors; and
style was appropriate in most instances with some minor errors; and
several minor spelling and grammatical errors.
in the form of a formal report that contained many errors and/or was difficult to read; and/or was ambiguous and/or contained unsubstantiated statements; and/or,
the report contained many minor exceptions to RWG in terms of report format, structure and writing style; and/or
several issues with report structure and/or many minor errors and/or omissions; and/or
many issues with format of report as it deviated from RWG; and/or
several issues with use of tables, figures and/or equations; and/or
writing style was inappropriate in some instances; and/or
many instances of spelling and/or grammatical errors.
was not presented in form of a formal report and/or was poorly written and/or presented; and/or,
contained major non-conformance issues with RWG in terms of report format, structure and writing style; and/or,
significant issues with report structure and/or many major errors and significant omissions; and/or
large number of significant major issues in format of report; and/or
use of tables, figures and/or equations was largely inconsistent with RWG; and/or
writing style was inappropriate in many instances; and/or
large number of spelling and/or grammatical errors.
no proposal submitted; and/or
not submitted on time; and/or
report was not consistent with requirements of a formal report in terms of report format, structure and writing style and/or contained major non-conformance issues with RWG; and/or
most essential elements of report structure were missing; and/or
report lacked any apparent logical structure; and/or
significant amount of information was missing; and/or
format of report was not in accord with the RWG standards; and/or
use of tables, figures and/or equations was incorrect; and/or
inappropriate report writing style; and/or
major issues /numerous spelling and/or grammar errors; and/or
did not conform with assignment submission requirements; and/or
no Assignment Coversheet and/or relevant Assessment Criteria were attached
15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
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6.6 A07: Project Progress Report III – Preliminary Results
The assessment criteria and relative weighting that will be used in assessing the Project Progress Report is summarised in the following table.
Table 10. Assessment Criteria – Project Progress Report III Criteria Excellent Good Satisfactory Unsatisfactory Poor nil
Progress Against Plan (40%)
Achievement is beyond expectations with respect to plan; and
If any complexities or challenges have been encountered, a plan for equivalent work has been developed with significant progress made; and
Highly detailed discussions on work completed; and
Detailed discussion on all non-planned events that arose and what innovative measures were taken in managing these to ensure progress continued; and
The student is clearly on track to demonstrate a sophisticated understanding of the meaning and implications of their research findings.
Highly satisfactory achievement against the plan.
If complexities or challenges have been encountered, a plan for equivalent work has been developed with satisfactory progress made.
Detailed discussions on the work completed.
Discussion on some non-planned events that arose and how they were managed
The student clearly on their way to demonstrating a good understanding of the meaning and implications of their research findings.
Mostly satisfactory achievement against the plan.
If complexities have been encountered a plan for equivalent work has been developed and a good start has been made.
Some discussion of the work completed.
Some reference to non-planned events that arose and what steps were taken
The student looks to be developing a reasonable understanding of the meaning of their research findings.
Marginal achievement compared to the plan.
If complexities have been encountered a plan for equivalent work has been developed but with little progress.
Only superficial discussions of the work completed.
Some reference to some non-planned events that arose with few details provided on remedial actions
The student will probably be able to demonstrate some understanding of the meaning of their results.
Achievement is not satisfactory with respect to the plan.
Little work has been done to address any complexities or challenges encountered.
Little or no discussion of the work completed.
Scant details provided on non-planned events
It is unclear that the student understands what their results mean.
No results reported No demonstrable
progress made in project
40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
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Criteria Excellent Good Satisfactory Unsatisfactory Poor nil
Reflection on Progress (25%)
Compares and contrasts the thesis, with industrial and other academic experiences, illuminating the differences and similarities between them. and
The student also demonstrates deep understanding of their field(s) of study and broadening perspective through the research experience; and
Evaluates changes in learning through the thesis, recognizing complex contextual factors (e.g. works with ambiguity and risk, deals with frustration); and
Based on the non-planned events that arose, provided insight on the takeaway learnings what would be done differently in the future when managing a similar project; and
Demonstrates self-awareness and envisions a future self or develops plans that build on the research experience.
Compares and contrasts the thesis, with industrial and other academic experiences, illuminating the differences and similarities between them.
The student also demonstrates a growing understanding of their field(s) of study and developing perspective through the research experience.
Evaluates changes in learning through the thesis, through either recognizing complex contextual factors (e.g. works with ambiguity and risk, deals with frustration)
Based on non-planned events that arose, outlined what are the learnings for managing a project in the future
Demonstrates self-awareness, and/or envisioning a future self / developing plans that build on the research experience
Compares and contrasts the thesis, with industrial and/or other academic experiences, illuminating the differences and similarities between them.
Evaluates changes in learning through the thesis, recognizing complex contextual factors (e.g. works with ambiguity and risk, deals with frustration).
Some comment made on non-planned events that arose and the learnings for managing a project in the future
Compares and contrasts the thesis, with industrial or other academic experiences, inferring differences and similarities between them.
Articulates strengths and challenges during the thesis, with contexts.
Little comment made on non-planned events that arose and the learnings for managing a project in the future
Identifies superficial connections between the thesis, and industrial or other academic experiences.
Describes own performances during the thesis with general descriptors of success and failure at a superficial level.
Little evidence on insight gained from non-planned events that arose
No demonstrable insights provided on learnings from managing the project
25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
Update / Revisions to Project Plan (15%)
Highly thoughtful and incisive discussions on future project plan and expected results; and
Provides a detailed strategy to ensure progress is stated, explained in detail and innovative.
Quality discussion of the future project plan and expected results.
A reasonable strategy to ensure progress is stated and explained in detail.
Some discussions of future project plan and outcomes.
A reasonable strategy to ensure progress is stated and briefly explained.
Superficial discussion of future project plan &/or outcomes.
A reasonable strategy to ensure progress is stated.
Little or no discussion of future project plan or outcomes.
No reasonable strategy to ensure progress in stated.
No clear indications of any changes to the project plan
15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
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Criteria Excellent Good Satisfactory Unsatisfactory Poor nil
Standard of Report Presentation (20%)
in the form of a formal report that was excellently written and prepared to a professional high standard that was grammatically correct, and clear to read and understand; and
the report conformed entirely with RWG in terms of report format, structure and writing style; and
report structure contained all the sections as required for a formal technical report and was in accord with RWG; and
structure followed a logical progression; and
format of report was completely in accord with the report writing conventions as detailed in RWG; and
use of tables, figures and equations was correct and completely in accord with the RWG with no errors; and
writing style was appropriate and completely in accord with a formal technical report; and
there were no spelling and grammatical errors etc. in report.
in the form of a formal report that was well written and presented to a high standard and on the whole reasonably clear to read and understand with only a few errors;
the report conformed in most aspects with RWG in terms of report format, structure and writing style; and,
report structure and contained all major elements; and
format was largely in accord with RWG with only a few minor errors; and
use of tables, figures and equations was largely correct with only a few minor errors; and
style was largely appropriate for a technical report with a few minor exceptions; and
largely free of spelling and grammatical errors.
in the form of a formal report that while it contained the correct information, it was overall somewhat difficult to understand, unclear, ambiguous and/or contained several unsubstantiated statements; and,
in most respects was in reasonable conformance with the RWG in terms of report format, structure and writing style with only a few very minor exceptions; and,
report structure was mostly correct and/or some minor elements could have been added; and
format of report was mostly in accord with the RWG though it had some minor errors; and
use of tables, figures and equations was mostly correct though there were several minor errors; and
style was appropriate in most instances with some minor errors; and
several minor spelling and grammatical errors.
in the form of a formal report that contained many errors and/or was difficult to read; and/or was ambiguous and/or contained unsubstantiated statements; and/or,
the report contained many minor exceptions to RWG in terms of report format, structure and writing style; and/or
several issues with report structure and/or many minor errors and/or omissions; and/or
many issues with format of report as it deviated from RWG; and/or
several issues with use of tables, figures and/or equations; and/or
writing style was inappropriate in some instances; and/or
many instances of spelling and/or grammatical errors.
was not presented in form of a formal report and/or was poorly written and/or presented; and/or,
contained major non-conformance issues with RWG in terms of report format, structure and writing style; and/or,
significant issues with report structure and/or many major errors and significant omissions; and/or
large number of significant major issues in format of report; and/or
use of tables, figures and/or equations was largely inconsistent with RWG; and/or
writing style was inappropriate in many instances; and/or
large number of spelling and/or grammatical errors.
no proposal submitted; and/or
not submitted on time; and/or
report was not consistent with requirements of a formal report in terms of report format, structure and writing style and/or contained major non-conformance issues with RWG; and/or
most essential elements of report structure were missing; and/or
report lacked any apparent logical structure; and/or
significant amount of information was missing; and/or
format of report was not in accord with the RWG standards; and/or
use of tables, figures and/or equations was incorrect; and/or
inappropriate report writing style; and/or
major issues /numerous spelling and/or grammar errors; and/or
did not conform with assignment submission requirements; and/or
no Assignment Coversheet and/or relevant Assessment Criteria were attached
20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
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6.7 A08: Quality of Student Consultation with Supervisor
The assessment criteria and weighting that will be used in assessing the quality of the student consultations is summarised in the following table.
Table 11. Assessment Criteria – Consultation with Supervisor Criteria Excellent Good Satisfactory Unsatisfactory Poor nil
Quality of Consultation
student maintained regular contact with academic supervisor (at least once a week); and
clearly demonstrated consistent effort and progress; and
discussed options to resolve issues related to project; and
clearly demonstrated significant initiative and competence that contributed to successful completion of project
student maintained regular contact with academic supervisor (at least once a fortnight), and
demonstrated to a reasonable degree some effort and progress of project, and
discussed some issues related to project, and
demonstrated competence in completing project and was largely self-directed
student had intermittent contact with academic supervisor (at least once a month), and
indicated sporadic progress, and
some initiative in resolving issues
but had to be largely guided in project by Supervisor
student had infrequent contact with academic supervisor (e.g. two to four times during term), and/or
little evidence to suggest otherwise that the project was not high on agenda and not left until final weeks before Seminar, and
little initiative demonstrated nor ownership shown of the project unless directed by Supervisor
student had very little contact if any with academic supervisor (perhaps only once for the term), and/or
little evidence to suggest otherwise that large portion of the project was left till the last minute, and
lack of any initiative demonstrated, nor ownership shown of the project
lack of any meaningful consultation by student with academic supervisor
5 4 3 2 1 0
6.8 A09: Seminar Presentation
Table 12. Assessment Criteria – Seminar Presentation
Criteria Excellent Good Satisfactory Unsatisfactory Poor nil
Introduction, Aims and Objectives (15%)
provided an excellent and comprehensive overview of the project context, aims and objectives, significance and likely benefits
provided a good overview of the project context, aims, objectives, significance and benefits, but some points not clearly made
provided a reasonable overview of the project context, aims, objectives, significance and benefits, but lacked overall clarity
provided only a limited overview of the project, resulting in some questions about its formulation and or outcomes
provided limited or confusing overview of the project, resulting in many questions about its formulation and outcomes
provided no project background, context nor motivation
15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
Research Quality and Analysis (35%)
demonstrated a deep understanding of past work undertaken in the topic area; and
clearly identified the gap in knowledge or best practice addressed by the project; and
research methodology based on solid scientific principles; and
results analysed in depth and with insight, drawing on models and other analytical tools linking back to theory, aims and objectives
demonstrated a sound understanding of past work undertaken in the topic area
fairly identified the gap in knowledge or practice addressed by the project
research methodology based on solid scientific principles;
results analysed with some insight and made use of some models or analytical tools that in part linked back to theory, aims and objectives
demonstrated an adequate but incomplete understanding of past work in the topic area
unclearly identified the gap in knowledge or practice addressed by the project
research methodology based on solid scientific principles, but followed well-established methods
results analysed with minimal insight and made limited use of models or analytical tools to link to theory, aims and objectives
demonstrated minimal understanding of past work in the topic area
poorly or did not identify the gap in knowledge or practice addressed by the project
research methodology unclear or not based on solid scientific principles
little analysis of results undertaken, and little attempt to link them to theory, aims and objectives
demonstrated limited or no understanding of past work in the topic area
no attempt to identify the gap in knowledge or practice addressed by the project
research methodology unsoundly based or not described
limited or no analysis of results presented, or no results presented
no content provided, significant content missing, content not relevant, and or content derived from or due to work of others with minimal analysis or added insight
35 34 33 32 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 21 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9
8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
Innovation (5%)
demonstrated new and novel and/or creative thinking either through development of new methodology, equipment design and/or analysis
some evidence of new approach demonstrated either through development of new methodology, equipment design and/or analysis
some elements of new approach to research was demonstrated
essentially a slight step-change in research in methodology, equipment and/or analysis
little evidence demonstrated of new approach or innovation in research in methodology, equipment and/or analysis
no evidence of innovation in research
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Criteria Excellent Good Satisfactory Unsatisfactory Poor nil
5 4 3 2 1 0
Conclusions and Recommendations (8%)
clear, concise, appropriate, useful and insightful conclusions soundly linked to the observed results; and
provided detailed appropriate recommendations for further or improved work stemming from critical reflection on project
clear, well-developed set of conclusions showing recognition of the significance of the results
provided a number of recommendations for future or improved work stemming from some reflection on project
limited but satisfactory articulation of project conclusions with some links to results
limited number of recommendations for future or improved work which may or may not have stemmed from reflection on project
questionable or unclear set of conclusions which are not fully supported by the results
unclear or irrelevant recommendations for future work, with no evidence of reflection on project
invalid or inappropriate conclusions with only tenuous justification
inappropriate or no recommendations for future work
lacked any clear conclusions or justification
lacked any recommendations for future work
8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
Responses to Questions (7%)
excellent and valid responses to all questions
appropriate and valid responses to all or most questions
adequate responses to most questions
limited or questionable answers to most or some questions
inappropriate and invalid responses to questions
unable to reasonably respond to questions, or no time for questions
7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
Quality of Visual Aids and Resources (15%)
excellent balance of informative content that supplemented rather than dominated the presenter’s message; and
optimum number of slides and/or visual aids; and
slides and embedded graphics efficiently communicate results and are easy to read and digest; and
no spelling errors or other errors in slides nor format inconsistencies
good balance of content that supplements the presenter’s message
reasonable number of slides or visual aids
slides and embedded graphics communicate results, with most easy to read and digest
few minor errors or format inconsistencies
adequate balance of information in slides
satisfactory number of slides or visual aids
slides and embedded graphics communicate some results, and for the most part legible and well-designed
several minor errors or format inconsistencies or shortcomings
some slides difficult to read and or included too much content
too few or too many slides or visual aids
slides dominated the communication process
several major errors or format inconsistencies or shortcomings
most slides were poorly designed or impossible to read
inappropriate number of slides or visual aids
message was often confusing
many major errors, mistakes or format inconsistencies
no slides or visual aids, or these were mostly illegible, confusing and or contained many errors that distracted the audience from the main message
15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
Quality of Delivery (15%)
excellent delivery and easy to comprehend, clear oral presentation; and
speaker was always mindful of the audience in delivery; and
confident and enthusiastic delivery resulting in engagement of the audience; and
excellent structure which clearly provided all relevant background information, method, and outcomes related to project
clearly delivered all key aspects within the defined timeframe with no sense of rush
clear presentation of main messages
speaker was often mindful of the audience in delivery
largely confident delivery with reasonable level of audience engagement
good structure which provided most relevant background information, method, and outcomes related to project
completed on time
adequate presentation of main messages
some recognition of need of audience in delivery
reasonable delivery with some attempt at audience engagement
some evidence of planning evident that ensured the audience was informed of most of the main messages
delivery was rushed in places to complete on time
generally inadequate presentation
speaker spoke to screen and or notes and not to audience
messages confused and or ambiguous leading to lack of audience engagement
presentation difficult to follow partly due to poor planning and or erratic structure or delivery
rushed delivery meant important messages not well communicated
poorly presented with little or poor structure
poorly presented leading to alienation or lack of engagement of audience
little evidence of planning result in limited or no communication of main messages
did not complete on time
inaudible presentation or no oral delivery
speaker was unaware of or ignored audience
lacking any structure difficult to understand
main messages poor time
management or not completed within allotted timeframe
15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
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6.9 A10: Examiners Copy of Thesis
Considering the diversity of topics and the approaches that can be taken by a student in their research project, assessment of each thesis will be partly dependent on the complexity of the major activities involved in the project; the higher the complexity, the greater the potential for a higher mark. As a guide, the following research activities are ranked from relatively low complexity to high complexity.
state of the art investigation; laboratory investigation or some quantitative/qualitative assessment; modelling of results/observed behaviour; and development of some underlying principle.
A good honours thesis would be expected to involve one or more activities of higher complexity. The thesis should represent a comprehensive report on the research project consistent with the usual requirements of an undergraduate thesis. The Examiner’s Copy of the Thesis should include an updated and improved version of the earlier progress reports taking account the comments and suggestions made by the Supervisor. Aside from complexity, assessment will also account for the quality of work undertaken by a student in conducting the research and presentation of the thesis. As would be expected there should be a reasonable correlation between the quality of the research and the resultant assessment. Another dimension to assessment of the thesis entails the student’s demonstrated capability in Project Management. This includes consideration of whether the project objectives were clearly defined and achieved, achieving the various project deadlines, degree of ownership and leadership of the project, amount of initiative demonstrated, identifying and managing the various forms of risk; organisational and scheduling skills, and, how any WH&S and environment issues of the research project were managed. The assessment criteria and weighting that will be used in assessing the Examiner’s Copy is summarised in the following table.
Table 13. Assessment Criteria – Examiner’s Copy of Thesis
Criteria Excellent Good Satisfactory Unsatisfactory Poor nil
Abstract (5%)
clearly and concisely describes all essential aspects of the project including context, aims and objectives, methodology, outcomes and critical assessment
clearly describes most of the essential aspects of the project such as context, aims and objectives, methodology, outcomes and critical assessment
adequately describes most of the essential aspects of the projects though one or more components is missing
inadequately and or verbosely describes the essential aspects of the project, or many of the essential aspects are missing, or inappropriate material included
poorly written and or does not describe most of the essential aspects of the project, or is primarily comprised of irrelevant or inappropriate material
not included or largely incomplete
5 4 3 2 1 0
Introduction (5%)
provided an excellent and comprehensive overview of the project context, scope, aim and objectives, significance and likely benefits
provided a good overview of the project context, scope, aims, objectives, significance and benefits, but some points not clearly made
provided a reasonable overview of the project context, scope, aims, objectives, significance and benefits, but lacked overall clarity
provided only a limited overview of the project, resulting in some questions about its formulation and or outcomes
provided limited or confusing overview of the project, resulting in many questions about its formulation and outcomes
provided no project background or motivation, or is largely incomplete
5 4 3 2 1 0
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Criteria Excellent Good Satisfactory Unsatisfactory Poor nil
Literature Review, Methodology, and Risk Management (5%)
provided an extensive, relevant, logically organised and critical review which demonstrated a deep understanding of past work in the topic area; and
presented specific research and general theory which helps communicate and justify the research project; and
clearly identified the gap in knowledge or best practice addressed by the project; and
presented an excellent description of research methodology and or experimental procedure, based on sound scientific principles; and
clearly evidenced adherence to a well-defined risk management plan
provided a relevant, logically organised and critical review which demonstrated a sound understanding of past work in the topic area
presented specific research and general theory which helps communicate and justify the research project
fairly identified the gap in knowledge or practice addressed by the project
presented a good description of research methodology and or experimental procedure, based on solid scientific principles
clearly evidenced adherence to a good risk management plan
provided an adequate but not necessarily critical review which demonstrated a basic understanding of past work in the topic area
presented some specific research and general theory which helps justify or describe the research project
unclearly identified the gap in knowledge or practice addressed by the project
presented an adequate description of the research methodology and or experimental procedure, based mostly on sound scientific principles
evidenced adherence to a good but incomplete risk management plan
provided limited review of relevant background material, limited critical analysis, demonstrating a flawed understanding of past work in the area
presented little specific research and or general theory which helps justify or describe the research project
poorly or did not identify the gap in knowledge or practice addressed by project
presented a limited description of the research methodology and or experimental procedure, or these were unsoundly based
evidenced adherence to an unsatisfactory risk management plan
provided an extremely limited review of background material with no critical analysis, demonstrating a lack of understanding of past work in the topic area
presented very little research or theory to justify or describe the research project
no attempt to identify the gap in knowledge or practice addressed by the project
poor description of the research methodology and or experimental procedure, or these lacked scientific basis
little evidence of adherence to a risk management plan, or this was poorly defined
review and critique of relevant background material is missing or largely incomplete, demonstrating no understanding of past work in the topic area
no description of the research methodology and or experimental procedure
no evidence of adherence to a risk management plan, or this is largely incomplete
5 4 3 2 1 0
Results and Analysis (35%)
all relevant results are presented clearly and in sufficient depth; and
meaningful analysis and interpretation of results underpin appropriate theory; clear analysis link to and support the research aims and objectives; and
excellent use of visual aids (e.g. tables, graphs and figures) to concisely illustrate trends or relationships
most relevant results are presented clearly, along with meaningful analysis and interpretation with respect to appropriate theory
good but conventional analysis of the results with respect to the aims and objectives of the research project; and
good use of visual aids (e.g. tables, graphs and figures) to concisely present results
many relevant results are presented, along with some meaningful analysis and interpretation with respect to appropriate theory
satisfactory analysis of the results but lacking interpretation with respect to the aims and objectives of the project; and
satisfactory use of visual aids (e.g. tables, graphs and figures) to present results
some results are presented but these are incomplete or irrelevant, while limited analysis and or interpretation of these results is given
limited analysis of results or the results are not aligned to the aims and objectives of the research project; and
inappropriate use of visual aids (e.g. tables, graphs and figures) to present results
limited or irrelevant results are presented, and no analysis or interpretation is given
little or no analysis or interpretation of results; and
poor or limited use of visual aids (e.g. tables, graphs and figures) to present results
no relevant results are presented, and no analysis or interpretation is given
35 34 33 32 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 21 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9
8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
Research Quality and Innovation (20%)
clear evidence of innovation and/or creativity in research approach, along with an evaluation of other approaches; and
demonstrated adherence to a clearly articulated and organised plan; and
project execution clearly demonstrated an understanding of the state-of-the-art as well as the generation of new knowledge or improvement of industry best practice
some evidence of innovation or creativity in research approach, along with an evaluation of other approaches
evidenced adherence to a well-described and organised plan
project execution clearly demonstrated an understanding of the state-of-the-art as well as the generation of valuable, but not novel, engineering results
research approach is conventional and systematic, but included an evaluation of other approaches
satisfactory evidence of adherence to and description of a plan
project execution demonstrated some understanding of the state-of-the-art as well as the generation of some engineering results
research approach is unconventional and not well considered, or does not logically stem from the background research presented
limited evidence of adherence to and description of a plan
project execution demonstrated flawed understanding of the state-of-the-art and or little generation of engineering results
research approach is haphazard and has no logical basis
limited evidence of the description of a coherent work plan
project execution shows very little understanding of the state-of-the-art and no generation of results
little or no evidence of research quality, planning or execution
20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
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Criteria Excellent Good Satisfactory Unsatisfactory Poor nil
Conclusions and Recommendations (10%)
clear, concise, appropriate, useful and insightful conclusions soundly linked to the observed results and their significance; and
provided detailed appropriate recommendations for further or improved work stemming from critical reflection on project
clear, well-developed set of conclusions showing recognition of the significance of the results
provided a number of recommendations for future or improved work stemming from some reflection on project
limited but satisfactory articulation of project conclusions with some links to results
limited number of recommendations for future or improved work which may or may not have stemmed from reflection on project
questionable or unclear set of conclusions which are not fully supported by the results
unclear or irrelevant recommendations for future work, with no evidence of reflection on project
invalid or inappropriate conclusions with only tenuous justification
inappropriate or no recommendations for future work
lacked any clear conclusions or justification
lacked any recommendations for future work
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
Referencing (5%)
all in-text citations correct as per the RWG;
all sources of information correctly referenced; and
all listings in References section correct; and
all References section correctly sorted; and
all listings exactly in total accord with AusIMM referencing requirements as defined in the GTA and RWG; and
all bibliographical details correctly provided for each listing in the Reference section; and
no missing references in the report nor in the References section
majority of intext citations were correct with only a few minor errors; and
majority of sources of information were referenced with only a few minor exceptions; and
all listings in the references section were mostly correct and in total accord with AusIMM referencing requirements as defined in the GTA and RWG; and
the bibliographical details were correctly provided for each listing in the Reference section with only few minor exceptions; and
there were only one to two references missing from the References section
were correct though there were several errors and
some information is not referenced; and
all listings in the references were correct and in accord with AusIMM referencing requirements as defined in the GTA and RWG with only a few very minor exceptions; and
bibliographical details correctly provided for most listings in the Reference section with several minor exceptions; and
the References section was mostly complete with only a few references missing from the References section
many errors with in-text citations; and/or
too little use of in-text citations and/or
several instances of information not being properly referenced to identify source of information; and/or
many errors in referencing and/or references were not correct and were not in accord with AusIMM referencing requirements as defined in the GTA and RWG; and/or
bibliographical details not always correctly provided or were incomplete in many listings in the Reference section; and/or
the Reference section was incomplete/ and/or several missing references
most in-text citations had errors; and/or
little use of made of in-text citations to identify source of information; and/or
majority of referencing and/or references were not correct and were not in accord with AusIMM referencing requirements as defined in the GTA and RWG; and/or
bibliographical details were not always correct or were incomplete in many listings in the Reference section; and/or
there were many references missing from the References section
there were no in-text citations in the main body of report indicating the sources of information; and/or
there was no References section; and/or
incorrect system of citing references in report with respect to RWG; and/or
the references were unsorted, or an incorrect system of listing references used in the References section; and/or
incomplete and/or incorrect bibliographic details provided for references in the Reference list; and/or
many missing references from the report and/or References section;
did not conform with AusIMM referencing requirements as defined in the GTA and RWG
5 4 3 2 1 0
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Criteria Excellent Good Satisfactory Unsatisfactory Poor nil
Standard of Presentation (10%)
in the form of a conventionally prepared thesis in the School that was excellently written and prepared to a professional high standard that was grammatically correct, and clear to read and understand; and
conforms entirely with the prescribed guidelines in the RWG in terms of report format, structure and writing style; and
thesis structure contained all the required sections as expected in a thesis and in accord with RWG; and
structure followed a logical progression; and
format of thesis was completely in accord with thesis writing conventions as detailed in RWG; and
use of tables, figures and equations was correct and completely in accord with the RWG with no errors; and
writing style was completely consistent with expectations of a thesis; and
no evidence of spelling and grammatical errors; and
a completed Assignment Coversheet and Assessment Criteria were attached
in the form of a thesis that was well written and presented to a high standard and on the whole reasonably clear to read and understand with only a few errors;
conforms in most aspects with RWG in terms of format, structure and writing style; and,
structure and contained all major elements; and
format was largely in accord with RWG with only a few minor errors; and
use of tables, figures and equations was largely correct with only a few minor errors; and
style was largely appropriate for a thesis with a few minor exceptions; and
largely free of spelling and grammatical errors; and
a completed Assignment Coversheet and Assessment Criteria were attached
in the form of a thesis that while it contained the correct information, it was overall somewhat difficult to understand, unclear, ambiguous and/or contained several unsubstantiated statements; and,
in most respects was in reasonable conformance with the RWG in terms of format, structure and writing style with only a few very minor exceptions; and,
structure was mostly correct, and/or some minor elements could have been added; and
format was mostly in accord with the RWG though it had some minor errors; and
use of tables, figures and equations was mostly correct though there were several minor errors; and
style was appropriate in most instances with some minor errors; and
several minor spelling and grammatical errors; and
a completed Assignment Coversheet and Assessment Criteria were attached
in the form of a thesis that contained many errors and/or was difficult to read; and/or was ambiguous and/or contained unsubstantiated statements; and/or,
contained many minor exceptions to RWG in terms of format, structure and writing style; and/or
several issues with structure and/or many minor errors and/or omissions; and/or
many issues with format as it deviated from RWG; and/or
several issues with use of tables, figures and/or equations; and/or
writing style was inappropriate in some instances; and/or
many instances of spelling and/or grammatical errors; and/or
did not have attached a completed Assignment Coversheet and/or Assessment Criteria
was not presented in form of a thesis and/or was poorly written and/or presented; and/or,
contained major non-conformance issues with RWG in terms of format, structure and writing style; and/or,
significant issues with structure and/or many major errors and significant omissions; and/or
large number of significant major issues in format; and/or
use of tables, figures and/or equations was largely inconsistent with RWG; and/or
writing style was inappropriate in many instances; and/or
large number of spelling and/or grammatical errors; and/or
did not have attached a completed Assignment Coversheet and/or Assessment Criteria
no thesis submitted; and/or
not submitted on time; and/or
thesis was largely not consistent with requirements in terms of format, structure and writing style of a thesis and/or had major non-conformance issues with RWG; and/or
most essential elements of structure were missing; and/or
report lacked any apparent logical structure; and/or
significant amount of information was missing; and/or
format was not in accord with the RWG standards; and/or
use of tables, figures and/or equations was incorrect; and/or
inappropriate writing style; and/or
major issues due to numerous spelling and/or grammar errors; and/or
did not conform with assignment submission requirements; and/or
no Assignment Coversheet and/or relevant Assessment Criteria were attached
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
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6.10 A11: Conference Paper
The assessment criteria and weighting that will be used in assessing the Conference Paper is summarised in the following table.
Table 14. Assessment Criteria – Conference Paper
Criteria Excellent Good Satisfactory Unsatisfactory Poor nil
Title, Abstract & Introduction (20%)
title accurately reflects the content of the paper; and
abstract clearly and concisely describes all essential aspects of the project including aims, methodology, and main findings; and
introduction provides an excellent and comprehensive overview of the project context, background, and state of the art, with appropriate referencing; and
clearly identifies the gap in knowledge or best practice addressed by the project
title reflects content of the paper well
abstract clearly describes most of the essential aspects of the project such as aims, methodology, and main findings
introduction provides a good overview of the project context, background, and state of the art, with appropriate referencing
fairly identifies the gap in knowledge or practice addressed by the project
title adequately reflects the content of the paper
abstract adequately describes most of the essential aspects of the project though one or more components is missing
introduction provides a reasonable overview of the project context, background, and state of the art, but lacked clarity or appropriate referencing
unclearly identified the gap in knowledge or practice addressed by the project
title poorly reflects the content of the paper
abstract inadequately or verbosely describes the essential aspects of the project, or many of these aspects are missing, or inappropriate material included
introduction provides only a limited overview of the project or is poorly referenced, resulting in some questions about its formulation
poorly or did not identify the gap in knowledge or practice addressed by project
title is not relevant to the content of the paper
abstract poorly written or does not describe most of the essential aspects of the project, or is primarily comprised of irrelevant or inappropriate material
introduction provides limited or confusing overview of the project or is not referenced, resulting in many questions about its formulation
no attempt to identify the gap in knowledge or practice addressed by the project
title not included or is nonsensical
abstract not included or largely incomplete
introduction not included or largely incomplete
20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
Methodology and/or Experimental Procedures (20%)
presents an excellent description of research methodology and or experimental procedure, based on sound scientific principles
presents a good description of research methodology and or experimental procedure, based on solid scientific principles
presented an adequate description of the research methodology and or experimental procedure, based mostly on sound scientific principles
presented a limited description of the research methodology and or experimental procedure, or these were unsoundly based
poor description of the research methodology and or experimental procedure, or these lacked scientific basis
no description of the research methodology and or experimental procedure
20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
Results and Discussion (40%)
excellent use of visual aids to concisely present results; and
all relevant results are presented along with meaningful analysis and interpretation with respect to appropriate theory; and
clear demonstrate;on of how the project advances knowledge and or industry best practice
good use of visual aids to concisely present results
most relevant results are presented along with meaningful analysis and interpretation with respect to appropriate theory
some demonstration of how the project advances knowledge and or industry best practice
satisfactory use of visual aids to present results
some relevant results are presented, along with some meaningful analysis or interpretation with respect to appropriate theory
demonstration of how the project advances site-specific knowledge or practice
inappropriate use of visual aids to present results
some results are presented but these are incomplete or irrelevant, while limited analysis and or interpretation of these results is given
no clear discussion of the new knowledge or practice emanating from the project
poor or limited use of visual aids to present results
limited or irrelevant results are presented, and no analysis or interpretation is given
project does not result in any meaningful new knowledge
no relevant results are presented, and no analysis or interpretation is given
40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
Conclusions (10%)
clear, concise, appropriate, useful and insightful conclusions soundly linked to the observed results and their significance
clear, well-developed set of conclusions showing recognition of the significance of the results
limited but satisfactory articulation of project conclusions with some links to results
questionable or unclear set of conclusions which are not fully supported by the results
invalid or inappropriate conclusions with only tenuous justification
lacked any clear conclusions or justification
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
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Criteria Excellent Good Satisfactory Unsatisfactory Poor nil
Format and Quality of Presentation (10%)
paper contains all the required sections in a structure that follows a logical presentation, and is clear to read and understand; and
format conformed entirely with the prescribed guideline (i.e. AusIMM Guide to Authors) in terms of structure, writing style, use of tables, figures and equations; and
all sources were cited appropriately in text, listed in the references, and in the required format (i.e. AusIMM Guide to Authors); and
no evidence of spelling or grammatical errors
paper contains all the required sections in a structure that follows a largely logical presentation, and is mostly clear to read
format conformed in most part with the prescribed guideline in terms of structure, writing style, use of tables, figures and equations, with only minor errors
majority of sources were cited appropriately in text, listed in the references, and in the required format
only minor spelling and grammatical errors
paper contains most of the required sections in a structure that is sub-optimal making it ambiguous or difficult to understand in places
format mostly conformed with the prescribed guideline in terms of structure, writing style, use of tables, figures and equations, but with a number of minor errors
most sources were cited in text, listed in the references, and in the required format, but some are not cited or in the required format
several minor spelling and grammatical errors.
paper does not contain most of the sections required of an academic paper, or is poorly structured making it very difficult to comprehend,
format rarely conformed with the prescribed guideline, featuring incorrect use of structure, writing style, tables, figures or equations
many sources were not cited appropriately in text, listed in the references, and or in the required format
many major spelling and grammatical errors
not presented in the form of an academic paper or is significantly lacking in its content or structure
format contained major non-conformance issues with the prescribed guideline in terms of report structure, writing style, tables, figures or equations
most sources were not cited or listed appropriately, while those that were did not follow the required format
large number of spelling and or grammatical errors.
no paper submitted, or the document was largely inconsistent with requirements in terms of format and structure
no in-text citation or listing of information sources, or incorrect system of citing sources
references section was missing
major issues due to numerous spelling and or grammatical errors
did not conform with assignment submission requirements
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
6.11 A12: Quality of Student Consultation with Supervisor
The assessment criteria and weighting that will be used in assessing the quality of the student consultations is summarised in the following table.
Table 15. Assessment Criteria – Consultation with Supervisor
Criteria Excellent Good Satisfactory Unsatisfactory Poor nil
Quality of Consultation
student maintained regular contact with academic supervisor (at least once a week); and
clearly demonstrated consistent effort and progress; and
discussed options to resolve issues related to project; and
clearly demonstrated significant initiative and competence that contributed to successful completion of project
student maintained regular contact with academic supervisor (at least once a fortnight), and
demonstrated to a reasonable degree some effort and progress of project, and
discussed some issues related to project, and
demonstrated competence in completing project and was largely self-directed
student had intermittent contact with academic supervisor (at least once a month), and
indicated sporadic progress, and
some initiative in resolving issues
but had to be largely guided in project by Supervisor
student had infrequent contact with academic supervisor (e.g. two to four times during term), and/or
little evidence to suggest otherwise that the project was not high on agenda and not left until final weeks before Seminar, and
little initiative demonstrated nor ownership shown of the project unless directed by Supervisor
student had very little contact if any with academic supervisor (perhaps only once for the term), and/or
little evidence to suggest otherwise that large portion of the project was left till the last minute, and
lack of any initiative demonstrated, nor ownership shown of the project
lack of any meaningful consultation by student with academic supervisor
5 4 3 2 1 0
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7. STUDYING AN UG COURSE IN MINING ENGINEERING AT UNSW 1.2 How We Contact You
At times, the School or your course convenors may need to contact you about your course or your enrolment. Your course convenors will use the email function through Moodle, or we will contact you on your @student.unsw.edu.au email address. We understand that you may have an existing email account and would prefer for your UNSW emails to be redirected to your preferred account. Please see these instructions on how to redirect your UNSW emails: https://www.it.unsw.edu.au/students/email/index.html
7.1 How You Can Contact Us
We are always ready to assist you with your inquiries. To ensure your question is directed to the correct person, please use the email address below for:
Enrolment or other admin questions regarding your program: https://unswinsight.microsoftcrmportals.com/web-forms/
Course inquiries: these should be directed to the Course Convenor.
7.2 Computing Resources and Internet Access Requirements
The School provides blended learning using the on-line Moodle LMS (Learning Management System). It is essential that you have access to a PC or notebook computer. Mobile devices such as smartphones and tablets may complement learning, but access to a PC or notebook computer is also required. Note that some specialist engineering software is not available for Mac computers. You can access the School’s computer laboratory on-line with the School laboratory for Mining Engineering students in OMB G48/49. It is recommended that you have regular internet access to participate in forum discussion and group work. To run Moodle most effectively, you should have: broadband connection (256 Kbit/sec or faster) ability to view streaming video (high or low definition UNSW The Box options) More information about system requirements is available at www.student.unsw.edu.au/moodle-system-requirements.
7.3 Accessing Course Materials Through Moodle
Course outlines, support materials are uploaded to Moodle, the university standard Learning Management System (LMS). Also, on-line assignment submissions are made using the assignment dropbox facility provided in Moodle. All enrolled students are automatically included in Moodle for each course. To access these documents and other course resources, please visit: www.moodle.telt.unsw.edu.au
7.4 Assignment Submissions
The School has developed a guideline to help you when submitting a course assignment. We encourage you to retain a copy of every assignment submitted for assessment for your record either in hardcopy or electronic form. All assessments must have an assessment cover sheet attached.
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7.5 Late Submission of an Assignment
Full marks for an assignment are only possible when an assignment is received by the due date. We understand that at times, you may not be able to submit an assignment on time, and the School will accommodate any fair and reasonable extension. We would recommend you review the UNSW Special Consideration guidelines – see the following section. In the case of the Project Progress Report, penalty marks will be applied at the following rate if submitted after the due date: five (5) percentile points of the maximum possible mark for each day or part thereof that the assessment is overdue. For example, if a student submitted the Project Progress Report five days after the due date and the unadjusted mark was 68% then the final adjustment mark for the assignment would be 43%; that is the raw mark of 68% less 25 percentile points (5 days @ 5 percentile points per day).
7.6 Special Consideration
You can apply for special consideration through UNSW Student Central when illness or other circumstances interfere with your assessment performance. Sickness, misadventure or other events beyond your control may:
Prevent you from completing a course requirement, Keep you from attending an assessable activity, Stop you submitting assessable work for a course, Significantly affect your performance in assessable work, be it a formal end-of-term
examination, a class test, a laboratory test, a seminar presentation or any other form of assessment.
We ask that you please contact the Course Convenor immediately once you have completed the special consideration application, no later than one week from submission. More details on special consideration can be found at https://student.unsw.edu.au/special-consideration
7.7 Unsatisfactory and/ or Non-completion of course
A student who has not satisfactorily completed all the requirements of MINE4951 Mining Research Thesis A will not have met the prerequisite requirements and therefore will not be eligible to undertake MINE4952 Mining Research Thesis B.
7.8 Course Results
For details on UNSW assessment policy, please visit: www.student.unsw.edu.au/assessment. Aside from a passing grade the following grades can be assignment:
EC – a grade of Enrolment Continuing is awarded on successful completion of MINE4951 Research Thesis A and MINE4952 Research Thesis B.
UF – a grade of Unsatisfactory Fail is awarded when one or more course requirements have not been met by the student. See section on Course Assessment for possible issues.
NC – a grade of Course Not Completed is awarded when a course assessment has not been completed.
In some instances, your final course result may be withheld and not released on the UNSW planned date. This is indicated by a course grade result of either:
WD – which usually indicates you have not completed one or more items of assessment or there is an issue with one or more assignment; or
WC – which indicates you have applied for Special Consideration due to illness or misadventure and the course results have not been finalised.
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In either event, it would be your responsibility to contact the Course Convener as soon as practicable but no later than five (5) days after the release of the course result. If you don’t contact the convener on time, you may be required to re-submit an assignment or re-sit the final exam and may result in you failing the course. You would also have an NC mark on your transcript and would need to re-enrol in the course.
7.9 Students Needing Additional Support
The Student Equity and Disabilities Unit (SEADU) aims to provide all students with support and professional advice when circumstances may prevent students from achieving a successful university education. Please take a look at their webpage: www.studentequity.unsw.edu.au/
7.10 Academic Honesty and Plagiarism
Your lecturer and the University will expect your submitted assignments are genuinely your work. UNSW has unambiguous guidelines on what plagiarism is and how to avoid it. Plagiarism is using the words or ideas of others and presenting them as your own. Plagiarism is a type of intellectual theft. It can take many forms, from deliberate cheating to accidentally copying from a source without acknowledgement. The University has adopted an educative approach to plagiarism and has developed a range of resources to support students. All the details on plagiarism, including some useful resources, can be found at https://student.unsw.edu.au/plagiarism. All Mining Engineering students are required to complete a student declaration for academic integrity, which is outlined in the assignment cover sheets. By signing this declaration, you agree that your work is your original work. If you need some additional support with your writing skills, please contact the Learning Centre or view some of the resources on their website: www.lc.unsw.edu.au/. The Learning Centre is designed to help you improve your academic writing and communication skills. Some students use the Centre services because they are finding their assignments a challenge, others because they want to improve an already successful academic performance.
7.11 Report Writing Guide for Engineers
The School has a report writing guide (RWG) available for all mining engineering students to assist them in preparing a report for assessment. View this website to download a copy of this guide: https://www.engineering.unsw.edu.au/mining-engineering/sites/mine/files/publications/MEA_ReportWritingGuide_eBook_2018ed.pdf
7.12 Continual Course Improvement
At the end of each course, all students will have the opportunity to complete a course evaluation form. These anonymous surveys help us understand your views of the course, your lecturers and the course materials. We are continuously improving our courses based on student feedback, and your perspective is valuable. Feedback is given via https://student.unsw.edu.au/myexperience, and you will be notified when this is available for you to complete. We also encourage all students to share any feedback they have any time during the course – if you have a concern, please contact us immediately.