Part IIB projects: first notice
Table of contents
This document:
- explains the procedure for signing up for a project which is offered by a member of staff. These are called type (a) projects;
- explains how you may propose your own project - these are called type (b) projects - if you wish to do this, you will need to begin acting now;
- lists the contact details for the Group Coordinators and Group Administrators.
Forms required are the type (b) proposal form and the project planning form.
The slides from the Part IIB Projects Q&A session presented by Professor Gee are available here.
Introduction
Summary
Roughly half of your final year will be spent working on a major individual project of your own choosing. The project will usually involve design, research and/or computer work at a high technological level on a topic of practical relevance. There are two types of fourth year project, either of which may involve collaboration with an industrial company:
- Type (a) are offered by staff and cover a wide range of areas relating to their research interests.
- Type (b) are projects that you propose yourself, which may then be approved by the Department. Any such project must be approved by the Coordinator of the appropriate Group, and a member of CUED staff must be willing to act as supervisor. Arrangements to undertake this type of project should begin during the Lent Term of Part IIA.
Your project is a very important part of the final year and is expected to take up roughly half your working time throughout the whole of that year. Given the amount of effort involved, it is essential that you find a project that will engage your interest. A good project will be one that stretches your ability in the skills which you have acquired on the Cambridge engineering course and will give you opportunity to show initiative in more than one area of engineering activity, such as experimentation, design, computing or analysis.
For more information regarding Part IIB projects, see also:
- Part IIB project importance, overview and aims
- Finding what you need for your 4th year project (recording)
- FindingWhatYouNeed_2022_2023_EB_AccessibilityWriteUp.doc
- Finding What You Need Fourth Year Projects - Slides & Notes 2023
Important landmarks in the project period
- Lent and Easter terms (Part IIA) - Details of type (a) projects will be posted online. During the first part of the Easter Term, you will be asked to look through and discuss the projects of interest to you with the members of staff offering them. You will then make a provisional selection of five projects in order of preference. Remember, early action is especially necessary if you wish to propose your own project (type (b) projects). Bythe end of Easter Term, you will have been allocated a project and held a planning meeting with your supervisor.
- Long vacation between Parts IIA and IIB - for some industry-linked projects, there may be investigations at an industrial site. Background reading and preparation should be undertaken by all students: ask your supervisor for some suitable preparatory work so you can hit the ground running in October.
- Michaelmas term (Part IIB) - you will be required to keep a log book or equivalent electronic record, which will be checked regularly by your supervisor. Its content may be taken into account in the assessment of your project. There will be credit available for progress and industry throughout the year.
- End of Michaelmas term (Part IIB) - you will be required to give a 10-minute presentation to staff and other project students, explaining what the project is about and how much progress has been made. The presentation is assessed.
- Start of Lent term (Part IIB) - the technical milestone report (TMR) is submitted. This is a formal report, not more than six pages long, produced to professional standards. It gives details of the progress on the project to date, the results obtained and presents plans for the remainder of the work.
- Middle to end of Easter term (Part IIB) - the final project report and a technical abstract are submitted. You will also be required to give a 10-minute presentation focused on the most significant aspects of the project work. Guidance notes on the form to be taken by the reports and the presentations will be issued during the Michaelmas term.
Group centres
Detailed guidance in your project work is primarily the responsibility of your supervisor. However, overall control within each group is in the hands of a Group Coordinator. Some of your day-to-day contact will be with the group centres, which provide a channel for communication and source of information for both students and staff. You should familiarise yourself with the details and routine practices of your group early in the year in order to maximise the support on offer and to avoid confusion over handing in times, etc.
Overall project coordinator: Prof A H Gee
Group A – Thermodynamics and fluid mechanics
Coordinator: |
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Group centre: |
Hopkinson lab, Room ISO-22 (Inglis building) |
Noticeboard: |
Between rooms 203 and 208, second floor, Baker building |
Group B – Electrical engineering
Coordinator: |
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Group centre: |
EIETL, second floor, Inglis Building |
Noticeboard: |
West end of the EIETL, to the left of the main aisle |
Group C – Mechanics and materials
Coordinator: |
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Group centre: |
room BE3-39 (Baker Building, third floor). |
Noticeboard: |
North corner of lab (i.e. by roadway entrance) |
Group D – Civil engineering
Coordinator: |
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Group centre: |
2-41 at the Civil Engineering Building, West Cambridge Site. |
Noticeboard: |
Mezzanine floor, Inglis building |
Group F – Information engineering
Coordinator: |
Prof R V Venkataramanan |
Group centre: |
Red mailbox by BNO-37 or by email to div-f-teaching-admin@eng.cam.ac.uk |
Noticeboard: |
West end of the EIETL, to the left of the main aisle |
Project selection procedure
Your project can be either:
(a) one that is suggested by a member of staff of the Department, or
(b) one that you propose yourself and is then approved by the Department.
There is no onus on you to think up a type (b) project, and you should find plenty to interest you amongst the type (a) projects. Type (b) projects are most likely to arise when sponsored students wish to work in areas suggested by their companies.
The project selection portal can be accessed at iibprojects.eng.cam.ac.uk.
Type (a) projects
A list of type (a) projects will be available online during the Easter term. If you are not proposing a type (b) project, you are expected to submit between three and five choices, from at least three different supervisors, stating an order of preference. The deadline for submitting choices is midnight on Friday of week 4, but you are strongly advised to find out more about the projects whose titles you find of interest well before this date.
Four points to note:
- It is not necessary for you to work on a project which is related to your own engineering area.
- With some supervisors, more projects are listed than can be taken up. Those which remain finally on offer depend on which projects attract student interest.
- Some projects are subject to confidentiality restrictions: these are indicated clearly in the project descriptions. If you are considering applying for such a project, you should make sure that you are fully aware of the nature of the confidentiality issues by discussing them with the supervisor. Where no confidentiality issues are flagged, you may safely assume that you will be able to write freely about all aspects of your project work, discuss what you have done with potential future employers, and present your work in public. Further guidance on CDAs is available https://www.legal.admin.cam.ac.uk/guidance/students-and-confidentiality-agreements.
- Some projects have two supervisors listed, and in such cases it is the first of the two who should be contacted.
When you find a project which is likely to be one of your preferences, you should make every effort to contact the supervisor and discuss it with them. Note that, in due course, the supervisor may have to choose between you and other students who wish to undertake that project. There may be a need for you to persuade them that you are the best choice.
Students in the past have found that supervisors are reluctant to choose them for a project if a face-to-face meeting has not been arranged prior to the allocation process. It is therefore very important to meet prospective supervisors and discuss possible projects before selecting those projects as your choices.
Preferences are to be entered online between Monday of week 2 and Friday of week 4. During this period, each online project description will be accompanied by a facility for submitting it as a preference. Remember that the allocation of projects is not done automatically, but by the staff in consultation.
After submitting preferences, it is still possible to amend them up until midnight on Friday of week 4 simply by submitting new ones (the old will be overwritten). A ‘‘first allocation’’ list of students to whom projects are assigned will be posted online on Friday of week 5. If you have been unlucky and it has not been possible to assign you one of your preferences, you should contact the coordinator of the group that is of most interest to you as soon as possible. They will assist you in finding an alternative project.
NB. It is your responsibility to register for a project before the end of the Easter term.
Type (b) projects
If you wish to do a type (b) project, you are strongly advised to submit the proposal form as early as possible, preferably before the end of the Lent term, to allow time for suitable supervision to be arranged. If your proposal is not accepted by a member of staff, acting this early will also leave you with plenty of time to choose a type (a) project instead. Be aware that projects with significant confidentiality issues are unlikely to attract a willing supervisor.
To propose a type (b) project, you must contact the coordinator of the group which covers the field of the project, discuss your ideas with them and submit your proposal form by the Tuesday of week 0, Easter term, at the latest. The coordinator will decide whether the project is a suitable one and determine whether there is a member of staff willing to act as supervisor. All projects must have a departmental supervisor. The coordinator will contact you as soon as possible.
Type (b) projects involving an external partner will, in addition, need due-dilligence approval from the Deputy Head of Department (Teaching) on behalf of the Head of Department, this will be obtained by the group project coordinator on your behalf. The Department reserves the right to decline to accept the involvement of any particular external partner in a proposed type (b) project and the Department's decision in respect of external organisations is final.
If a suitable supervisor is not available within the department, you cannot do the type (b) project proposed. You should now choose a type (a) project instead (see above).
If a suitable supervisor is available within the department, the coordinator will tell you their name. You should contact the supervisor and complete the project planning form together.
If the project is approved or seems likely to be approved, it is your responsibility to enter a record of the proposed project during the period in the Easter term between Monday of week 2 and Friday of week 4. This should be done by logging on to the project selection portal and following the instructions for submitting type (b) projects. The system will ask for: project title, industrial sponsor (if any), supervisor’s name, the group it will be associated with and a brief (100 word) amplification of the title.
Actions for all students
By Friday of week 4 Easter term, all students must have submitted type (a) preferences or an approved type (b) project description. You must keep to this deadline in order not to be disadvantaged. As the final allocation is settled by discussion among staff and not by an algorithm, you are advised to contact the supervisors of your selected projects before the Friday of week 4, so that you can both be clear about all aspects of the project.
Once your type (a) or type (b) project has been determined, you are responsible for arranging to see the supervisor so that the project planning form is completed by both of you. At this meeting, you and your supervisor should draw up an initial plan for the project and discuss long vacation work (industrial or preliminary). You should then submit the form to the Group Administrator by Friday of week 7 Easter term. Please contact the relevant group administrator if you have a problem in doing this. Please make sure that you include the project reference number - for example, A-GTP-1, or A-GTP-type(b) etc - on your form.
Key dates & deadlines
Actions relating to projects running during the current academic year (2023-24) are shown here in bold text.
Actions relating to preparation of projects for the next academic year (2024-25) are shown in plain text.
Michaelmas term 2023
Tuesday, wk 0 |
3 October |
Start of full term. Teaching Office issues ‘Second Notice about Part IIB Projects’ to all IIB students. Teaching Office issues a ‘Summary for Project Supervisors’ to all Part IIB project supervisors, and the Michaelmas ‘progress & industry’ mark forms (there are two per student – one for Michaelmas and one for Lent). |
Wednesday, wk 0 |
4 October |
Compulsory health and safety lecture - all Part IIB students must attend. |
Wednesday, wk 1 |
11 October |
Hazard assessment forms to the Safety Office by 4pm. A penalty will be deducted per week, or part week, the assessment is late. |
Friday, wk 5 |
3 November |
Deadline for first progress & industry meeting with supervisor. Written feedback to student within 48 hours. |
Thursday, wk 7 |
16 November |
Start of mini-conferences where students give oral presentations. Supervisor and assessor mark independently. Mark forms to Group Administrator. |
Wednesday, wk 8 |
29 November |
By this date, feedback should be given to students on their performance at mini-conference. |
Friday, wk 9 |
1 December |
Deadline for second progress & industry meeting with supervisor. Written feedback to student within 48 hours. Michaelmas progress and industry mark forms to be returned to Group Administrators. |
Lent term 2024
Thursday, wk 1 |
18 January |
Submission of technical milestone report (by 4pm). The supervisor and assessor mark independently and deliver the mark forms to Group Administrators by the division of Lent term. |
Monday, wk 1 |
22 January |
Teaching Office issues ‘First Notice about Part IIB Projects’ to Part IIA students. |
Thursday, wk 3 |
1 February |
Deadline for submission of technical milestone report mark forms to administrators. |
Monday, wk 4 |
12 February |
Administrators to have sent technical milestone report feedback forms to students. |
Friday, wk 5 |
16 February |
Deadline for third progress & industry meeting with supervisor. Written feedback to student within 48 hours. |
Tuesday, wk 8 |
12 March |
Prof Gee will give a talk to IIA students about the IIB project selection process, at 1.30pm in the Constance Tipper Lecture Theatre. |
Friday, wk 9 |
15 March |
Deadline for fourth progress & industry meeting with supervisor. Written feedback to student within 48 hours. Lent progress and industry mark forms to be returned to Group Administrators. |
Friday, wk 9 |
15 March |
Coordinators to request type (a) project proposals from their groups. |
Friday, wk 9 |
15 March |
Students wishing to initiate a type (b) project should work on proposal. Ideally, proposal forms should be submitted to relevant Group Coordinators before the end of term. |
Easter term 2024
Tuesday, wk 0 |
23 April |
Last possible date for type (b) projects to be proposed to coordinators. Viability to be determined as soon as possible thereafter. |
Monday, wk 1 |
29 April |
By this date type (a) proposals to be entered by staff online. |
Monday, wk 2 |
6 May |
Teaching Office emails students that project descriptions are available for viewing. |
Monday, wk 2 |
6 May |
Students may start entering project choices online. |
Friday, wk 4 |
17 May |
By midnight, all type (a) preferences and type (b) proposals to be entered online. |
Saturday, wk 4 |
18 May |
Lists of projects in each group with names of students choosing each and the order of preference available online. Where a student's preferences span more than one group, name is included on lists of all coordinators involved. |
Friday, wk 5 |
24 May |
First list of Part IIB project/student allocations posted on or by this date. Any student without a project to contact coordinator of group they wish to be in. |
Monday, wk 5 |
27 May |
Teaching Office and coordinators to have identified students failing to get a project at first selection and discuss alternatives. |
Monday, wk 5 |
27 May |
Last day for submitting final reports and technical abstracts (by 4pm). Each student also submits their log book or electronic equivalent (to go to the assessor). Supervisor and assessor mark independently. Each group passes a complete set of technical abstracts to the Teaching Office for archiving. |
Tuesday, wk 5 |
28 May |
Start of mini-conference period. Presentations marked by supervisors and assessors independently. Mark forms to Group Administrator. |
Wednesday, wk 6 |
5 June |
Last day for return to Group Administrator of final report, presentation and synoptic mark forms. Group Coordinators moderate final grades. |
Friday, wk 7 |
7 June |
Project planning forms (signed by both student and supervisor) to be submitted to Group Administrators by this date. Supervisors and supervisees to hold planning meetings. |
Monday, wk 7 |
10 June |
Coordinators to supply a complete set of milestone reports, final reports, log books and relevant forms to the Teaching Office for submission to external examiners |
Wednesday, wk 7 |
12 June |
Last day for submission of project mark books and reports to Chairman of Examiners by Group Coordinators. |
Last updated on 12/03/2024 13:53