Project Development
Bringing everything together into a final project
Assignment
Develop, plan and execute a final project that integrates skills, tools and processes from across the module.
Document all your work on your student blog, showing your progress each week (1 week per page for 4 weeks minumum).
Coronavirus update: 2020-03-23
I’ve started to collect some project ideas and approaches better suited to a lockdown situation here:
What do I need to do to pass? (40%)
2020-03-31 Updated for Coronavirus:
Try to integrate some different design and fabrication skills into one project. Ideally one or more of these should be digital, but you can combine this with non-digital processes and tools.
You can also augment a non-digital project with a digital element, e.g. building a prototype with craft materials, and using CAD to render a visualisation of how it could look if digitally fabricated.
As with the other assignments, the assesment is based on the quality of your documentation, so try to:
- Set yourself – and state – a hypothesis to test: “Can I make this thing using this process?”
- Document what you did to test it
- Show your results and a plan for how to improve the next version
- Iterate
Include a page on your original project proposal including sketches, diagrams, mood boards or examples of similar work.
Include a page on the end result with photographs of the final project, a description of what it is/does and a reflection on how it could be improved.
Cite external sources where you have used someone else’s work.
Extra credit (50-100%)
Write up your project as a project that someone else could replicate. Publish it on Instructables, or other appropriate platform
Integrate more technologies to a greater degree of sophistication.
Show how prototyping has helped you develop a better final project.
Include videos, timelapses or other rich media to show off your final project or its development.