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11.520 : A Workshop on Geographic
Information Systems |
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Upload to Stellar a one or two paragraph
project proposal. You need not have a fully formulated project. At
this point, we just want you to give us some indication of your
possible areas of interest so we can help you zero in on specific
questions and datasets that will make it manageable. Tell us a general
area of interest, one or two possible questions that you would like to
explore, and any data sets (beyond those we've already used in class)
that you anticipate needing. Send us an email with your final project title & brief
abstract by the end of lab on Wednesday,
Nov. 28 . The abstract should be brief, 1 paragraph - maximum
of 1/2 page - and drawn from the earlier project proposal (or
subsequent revisions). In this case, the abstract should briefly
state the question/problem, the methodology (that is, the data
you used and the methods such as thematic maps, buffer/overlay,
etc. that you used to explore the question/problem), and some hint of the
general results/conclusion (which will not yet be finished).. Use the Web or PowerPoint or Acrobat Reader for visual
aids. The presentation (as a PDF, webpage, or powerpoint, etc.) should include the talk outline, tables and maps (as JPEGs or PNGs), your results/conclusion outline, and a brief indication
of any surprises, problems, newly-learned techniques. Due to strict
time constraints, presentations will be cut off after six minutes; it
will be timed. This will allow time to show only a few maps and tables,
and a handful of bullet points. Be concise! The project writeup should track the presentation with at
most 3
pages of text (if single-spaced, 12 point font, on a letter-sized page) in addition to the maps/graphics. In general,
the web page for the presentation will be more of an outline and the
writeup will fill in a paragraph or two of text for each of the items
in the outline. Turning in a text-expanded copy of the web page or
PowerPoint presentation is okay as long as a printed copy of the web
page is adequate as a readable, standalone report. Color printouts are
acceptable but we prefer electronic submission to Stellar (so we can save trees and see color) in PDF or powerpoint format. (Ask us, if you prefer to use another submission format). The project is intended to require about as much time as
one of the
homework sets. The purpose of the project is to undertake a small but
open-ended project using one or more of the new technologies that you
have learned this semester. Each project should involve some
combination of the following: As explained in the class syllabus, the project writeup is
due on the last day of class (Wednesday, Dec. 10).
But, every year, students request an extension. That's okay
as long as you turn it in by 5 PM on Friday, Dec.12,
2008, but you
will lose 5 points per day (after Friday 5 PM, with the weekend counting as one day). No project write-ups will be accepted
after 12:00 noon on Tuesday,,
December 16.
We need time to grade them and we don't want this class to interfere
with your preparation for other finals. If you are unlikely to meet this deadline, you should talk to us as early as possible about getting an Incomplete for the class and scheduling post-semester completion. Here
are powerpoint slides prepared by Cherie Abbanat, DUSP writing
specialist, "Creating
Your 11.188/11.520 Presentation and Report." Created by Joseph Ferreira and
Thomas H. Grayson Back to the CRL Home
Page. |