Métodos de Avaliação
Lecture assessments (7 out of 20)
The theoretical assessments take place over two components:
A (6 out of 20): The best six out of seven quizzes, each worth one mark out of 20
These will take place during the lecture sessions (see the dates on the table below)
Each quizz should take no more than 10 minutes to complete (10 questions)
The quizzes use multiple-choice questions, and each incorrect answer carries a penalty of -0.1 points
If for some reason you are not able to attend these sessions, you might request a final one hour quiz worth the six marks out of 20
B (1 out of 20): The sharing of information relevant to the course, such as news, crowdsourcing projects, research papers, etc.
Regardless of your lab. assessments, you need a minimum of 3.15 marks (out of seven) to successfully complete the course.
Week |
Date |
Assessment |
Marks (out of 20) |
Modality |
1 |
||||
2 |
October 6 |
Quiz #1 |
1 |
Remote |
3 |
||||
4 |
October 13 |
Quiz #2 |
1 |
Remote |
5 |
||||
6 |
October 27 |
Quiz #3 |
1 |
Remote |
7 |
||||
8 |
November 12 |
Quiz #4 |
1 |
Remote (The quiz takes place after ISS 2020) |
9 |
||||
10 |
November 24 |
Quiz #5 |
1 |
Remote |
11 |
||||
12 |
December 10 |
Quiz #6 |
1 |
Remote |
13 |
December 18 |
Recovery quiz |
1 (replaces one mark above) |
Remote |
Lab. assessments (13 out of 20)
The lab. assessment culminates in a functional VR/AR prototype and is tackled by groups of four students. This is designed as a research-based project with sequential deliverables throughout the semester, via in-class presentations:
C (2 out of 20): Your pitch for the project, via a 15min. presentation (plus 15min. discussion)
This needs to include an in-depth introduction to at least one research paper that motivates your idea (from this list), and three main milestones that describe the overall development cycle of the project (features, user studies, etc.)
Faculty feedback will include a tentative final mark if all milestones are achieved as proposed (out of 13 marks)
Domain experts will be invited to attend these presentations
D (1 out of 20): A 15min. presentation of your low-fidelity prototype and storyboard (plus 15min. discussion)
E (6 out of 20): Three 20min. presentations describing what was achieved in each of the three milestones, each worth two marks out of 20
F (4 out of 20): A final 20min. presentation and prototype demonstration (if feasible)
This should include a written report, video, and source code
Your marks for E can be reassessed if you manage to tackle their limitations in this final delivery
Week |
Date |
Assessment |
Marks (out of 20) |
Modality |
1 |
||||
2 |
September 30 |
Project pitch [B] |
2 |
Mixed |
3 |
October 7 |
Project pitch [A] |
Mixed |
|
4 |
October 14 |
Low-fidelity prototype and storyboard presentation [B] |
1 |
Mixed |
5 |
October 21 |
Low-fidelity prototype and storyboard presentation [A] |
Mixed |
|
6 |
October 28 |
Milestone #1 presentation [B] |
2 |
Mixed |
7 |
November 4 |
Milestone #1 presentation [A] |
Mixed |
|
8 |
November 11 |
Milestone #2 presentation [B] |
2 |
Mixed |
9 |
November 18 |
Milestone #2 presentation [A] |
Mixed |
|
10 |
November 25 |
Milestone #3 presentation [B] |
2 |
Mixed |
11 |
December 2 |
Milestone #3 presentation [A] |
Mixed |
|
12 |
December 9 |
Final presentation, report, and files [B] |
4 |
Mixed |
13 |
December 16 |
Final presentation, report, and files [A] |
Mixed |
Your final lab. mark will be scaled up or down depending on how your group peers assess your contribution to the project (submitted anonymously via Stanford’s Creddit system).