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DAT190 Bachelor Thesis - Computing

Course description for academic year 2020/2021

Contents and structure

The bachelor thesis is the final course in the bachelor degree, taken in the 6th semester.

Students will complete an independent method and problem-oriented task based on a realistic engineering problem, which requires knowledge and skills of key areas of the bachelor program. The project is a joint student project. The project may be a partnership with a company or a government agency or be part of the internal research and development initiatives at HVL.

Each team of students is assigned an internal supervisor, who will provide guidance to ensure the scientific and methodological elements are well attended. Students regularly report the progress of the project to the supervisor, and to the company contact, through oral and written reports. The team makes regular entries in a project diary documenting the project activities. On completion of the project, the individual students will, through a reflection paper, account for their academic and personal development while working on the project.

The thesis must be conducted in accordance with Guidelines for bachelor thesis at HVL, and a supervisory agreement must be signed.

The course ends with the exhibition EXPO where the graduating students can show the project they have been working on with posters and products.

Learning Outcome

Upon completing the course, the candidate will have attained the following learning outcome:

Knowledge

  • is familiar with the relevant methods and working practices relating to research and development within their own engineering field
  • be able to update their knowledge through contact with relevant academic communities and practice fields

Skills

  • collect, analyze and refer information in a critical and reflective way
  • document and communicate project results in a systematic and scientific way

General competence

  • work with planning and execution of an engineering project, both independently and in teams
  • translate their knowledge and skills into practical solutions
  • show reflective, ethical and environmental insight into their work, in accordance with relevant national guidelines

Entry requirements

To be assigned a project after the 5th semester, the student must have passed 120 credits - including all courses included in the first year and any specialization relevant for the project. If the project is assigned after the 4th semester the credit requirement is reduced to 100 credits. Exemption from these requirements can be given by submitting a written application.

Recommended previous knowledge

None except the required ones.

Teaching methods

Lectures and joint student project. The project is supervised and there will normally be 2-3 students in a team. A team of one student may be allowed as an exception. 20 hours of supervision is mandatory for the team/student.

Joint project work

The team develops a preliminary report with project plan in cooperation with the supervisor and (if relevant) the company. The preliminary report contains problem formulation, feasibility analysis (method selection and required resources), project organization with project schedule and any cost estimates. The project work typically consists of collection of information / specification / construction / calculation / programming etc. based on knowledge from the discipline.

The project team documents the activities of the project regularly in a project diary. The project diary is submitted to the supervisor, who gives feedback regarding the academic content and quality.

The course ends with the exhibition EXPO where the graduating students can show the project they have been working on with posters and products.

Compulsory learning activities

1. Individually requirements:

  • attending supervision
  • A reflection paper (self-reflection on personal development)

2. Requirements for the group:

  • Participation at workshops related to the introduction to scientific theory and methodology.
  • preliminary report with a project plan
  • written project diary
  • poster for EXPO

All coursework items must be submitted by the given deadlines. The course requirements are valid only during the semester in which the bachelor thesis is carried out.

Assessment

The final assessment is based on two parts:

  • Thesis (in group), counts 70%. 
  • Oral exam (individual), counts 30 %. 

Both parts must be passed in order to pass the examination. In case one of the parts gets a failing grade, the whole course have to be retaken the next academiv year, preferably in spring semester. It is not possible to deliver an improved version of the bachelor thesis.

Thesis: 

Suggested total number of pages for the bachelor's thesis is 20-50.

The grading scale is Passed / Not passed. The grade for the thesis is set for the group as a whole.

Oral examination:

The oral exam will be held after the bachelor thesis has been submitted.

The oral exam will focus on the team and the individual student's understanding of methods, the choice of methods in their work process, as well as the final result in terms of the bachelor's thesis (and the product).

The grading scale is Passed / not passed. Each student will get an individual grade for the oral exam.

Examination support material

None

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