Logistics for Clients
This briefing information is provided for potential client/mentors of group design project teams.
Preparation
We will work with you to define a reasonably open-ended one-paragraph design brief, in a technical and business area that interests you. For more information, see What makes a good project?. The design briefs are pitched to students in November, after which they express their preferences. A few briefs are usually cancelled at this stage.
Kick-off
Students are assigned to projects, in teams of 5 or 6, at the start of term in mid-January. Some groups may need to contact clients by email, to obtain specific technical resources, data etc., but further contact is not normally required at this stage.
Progress meetings
The group project course runs for 7 weeks, in January-March each year. Client contact with the groups involves three one-hour progress meetings in weeks 2, 4 and 6 of the project. Actual dates in the current year are advertised in the course timetable: http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/teaching/group-projects/timetable.html
Note that clients are not required to attend the briefing lecture in November or project kick-off session in January. They are welcome to attend the public demonstration as guests of the Computer Lab, but this is not essential.
Each meeting is scheduled within a three-day period. You will be asked to nominate times you are available, and students choose from among those. They will be held during the afternoon to avoid morning lectures. Our student administrator books a meeting room at those times, informs the teams, and provides you with an official list of team members to check attendance.
Please let us know if a student fails to come to a meeting. Attendance is compulsory, and vigorously enforced. If a student does not turn up, this is most often a welfare problem, so it is important that we learn of it as soon as possible in order to get assistance from the student's college.
We ask clients to attend these meetings in person, and for the meeting to take place in Cambridge. The students have very full timetables, and it is unlikely that a change in meeting time or location can be accommodated, once the timetable has been agreed. If it appears that you may be unable to attend one of the three meetings, please contact the group project organisers as soon as possible, to discuss alternative arrangements.
Deliverables
The team’s project manager must send you any deliverable documents by email before noon on the day before the meeting. Email delivery must be copied to the course administrators.
Public demonstration
At the end of the term, groups are required first to demonstrate their achievements to staff, other students and guests during a public demonstration session, then make very short (4 minute) presentations to a theatre audience. Presentations are followed by a vote, and the award of a prize to the group voted the best. We hope you are able to attend this enjoyable event, but this is not essential.
A selection of presentations from previous years:
- 2017: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g7FVZcjZCGY&list=PLstyePOvf2d0fbeximiXyWR2gB5KjjjE6
- 2016: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oxcEQE4FigU&list=PLstyePOvf2d2QbiVFI4naska1n4G0fhSW
- 2015: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLstyePOvf2d0cPplAB3DxHoaJC6hTYomP
- 2014: http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLstyePOvf2d2A3vWW4DkEGIAUIm4T0fg6
- 2013: http://www.sms.cam.ac.uk/collection/1435486
- Others: http://www.youtube.com/user/CambridgeComputerLab
Correspondence
Please send all official correspondence, especially notes on attendance or other problems during the project, to group-project@cl.cam.ac.uk Email sent to this address is received by the course directors (for projects in Lent term 2020, these will be Richard Mortier and Rob Harle), and by the undergraduate student administrators (in 2020, these will be Megan Sammons, Dinah Pounds)
Assessment
The client is not required to assess or grade the students. It is Computer Laboratory policy to award a flat mark (called a “tick”) for adequate participation in a group project (actually four ticks – one based on group performance, and three on performance of each individual within the group). The standard of adequate performance is determined by independent examiners, based on project documentation submitted by students. Clients are simply requested to inform the course administrators if any group member fails to attend, or seems unwilling / unable to contribute to discussion. These precautions are mainly motivated by concern for student welfare. Reports from the client are not the sole grounds for withholding a tick, but students are told that if they fail to attend meetings, this will jeopardize their chances of getting the tick. It is important that we know this as soon as possible, so that students can receive tutorial or pastoral support if necessary.