Final Project: E-Portfolio & Presentation

Part I: Outline of E-Portfolio due Thursday, June 2nd at 11:59pm PDT

Part II: Final E-Portfolio Submission due Tuesday, June 7th at 11:59pm PDT

Part III: E-Portfolio Presentations: Tuesday, June 7th from 4:30-6:30pm PDT

CSE 390B is built on a number of different learning objectives: demystifying parts of the CSE curriculum, practicing academic skills for success at the UW, and exploring some of the coolest topics in computer science, to name a few. But at its heart, the course is grounded in the practice of metacognition: reflecting on your own thought processes and actions to understand how they impact an outcome.

As a course staff, we’ve gotten to see you grow and reflect on your academic strategies on 390B assignments. Now, we’d like to give you the chance to broaden that reflection and apply the skill of metacognition by reflecting on the growth and progress you’ve made as an Allen School student. For your final project, you will put together an E-Portfolio and deliver a short presentation geared toward new Allen School students (or even to yourself when YOU first started), giving them the advice for starting in the Allen School. Your E-Portfolio will highlight the lessons learned from your own experience that you can pass on to other students and should ultimately address the question: "Looking back, how has your learning experience contributed to your ability to be more successful as an Allen School student, however you define success?"

This E-Portfolio project is intended to be open-ended to some degree: we want to let you be creative and reflect on your own individual journey. However, we are also providing a few strict requirements for the content of your E-Portfolio. Part of the work you’re expected to complete is preparing for a 8-10 minute presentation that will be delivered on the last day of class during finals week.

Required E-Portfolio Elements

The topic of your E-Portfolio project is your experience so far in the major, but your audience is a newly admitted Allen School student. Therefore, when deciding how to communicate your experience, you should think about what would be most effective for that audience. How you structure your E-Portfolio is up to you, but you must include the following elements (in no particular order):

Because your audience is a newly admitted Allen School student, you should make sure to give appropriate levels of background information for that audience. Keep in mind that a newly admitted student may not know all of the technical content you do, and may not be as familiar with Allen school courses and procedures as you are.

There are a number of sites that you can use to create your E-Portfolio. The following are free and fairly user friendly but are not required for students to use:

Your E-Portfolio should include visual aids and be easily navigable.

Remember that your E-Portfolio and reflections can be about your entire time in the Allen School thus far and does not need to focus specifically on this quarter. However, feel free to use as many skills, examples, and topics from 390B as you’d like. As a refresher, this quarter we’ve focused on the following major academic skills:

At the end of your presentation, we will open it up to the audience for questions and comments.

Required Submission Parts

Part I: Outline of E-Portfolio (5 points)

The first step in working on the final project is to draft up an outline of your E-Portfolio. At a minimum, your project outline should include the two metacognitive subjects, two examples of these two metacognitive subjects, and one technical skill that you decide to present on. You should also begin to demonstrate some reflection on each of these components, whether that’s listing bullet points of what ideas you are seeking to convey or a rough draft of the content you’re looking to include in your E-Portfolio.

You may still change the metacognitive subjects, examples, or technical skill that you want to present on after this deadline. The purpose of this check-in is to encourage you to begin reflecting on these components earlier.

The project outline submission is due on June 2nd, 2022 at 11:59pm PDT Please submit the outline on the Canvas assignment titled "Final Project, Part I: Outline of E-Portfolio."

Part II: Final E-Portfolio Submission (50 points)

Once you have completed a final draft of your E-Portfolio, submit a link to your E-Portfolio by the Tuesday of finals week (June 7th) at 4:00pm PDT. Submit a link to your E-Portfolio on the Canvas assignment titled "Final Project, Part II: Final E-Portfolio Submission."

Part III: E-Portfolio Presentations (5 points)

We will meet on Tuesday, June 7th from 4:30pm-6:20pm PDT, where all students will give their E-Portfolio project Presentations in small groups.

Timeline

To help you navigate this open-ended project, we’ll do a check-in during lecture on Tuesday, May 31st. At this point, you do not need to have a E-Portfolio or presentation prepared.However, we do want to see that you’ve spent some time reflecting on your CSE experience and have identified the five required elements above that you want to talk about (two academic skills, a concrete example for each, and a cool technical topic). You’ll also have a chance to ask any questions you have about the E-Portfolio or presentation. It’s okay to change your mind about the five elements after the check-in, but we encourage you to spend time reflecting early to make the process easier on yourself.

Grading

There are 60 points total, divided as follows:

As an open-ended presentation, the majority of the feedback you receive from the course staff will be qualitative. However, you will also be given a grade based on how well you addressed the above requirements in your E-Portfolio and how much effort you put into meaningful reflections about your time in CSE. The relative weights for the presentation grade are as follows, and these elements are all to be demonstrated in the E-Portfolio: