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COIT20233/COIT20249 Assessment
Details

Assessment item 3—Report

Due
date:

11:55 pm AEST, Friday, Week 9

ASSESSMENT

Weighting:

30%

3

Length:

3000 words +/- 500 words (Note: Failure to submit within this
range will result in a penalty of 5 marks)

Objectives

Please refer to the course profile to see
how this assessment item relates to the course learning outcomes.

This assignment is designed to stimulate
critical thinking outside of the classroom by requiring students to write a
formal academic report. You will need to follow the ARE process described in chapters
2 and 3 of Your Business Degree2 (prescribedtextbook
for COIT20233/COIT20249) to analyse the assessment task, research relevant
information and evaluate the information you find. This information should be
used to write an academic report in which you present your findings or outcomes
and make recommendations for future practice Professional writing and writing
reports are described in chapters 4 and 5 of Your Business Degree2. This
assessment task will assess your skills in critical thinking, researching
information, forming an opinion, academic writing, logical ordering of ideas
and your ability to support your arguments with quotes from literature.These objectives will be measured by
the ‘closeness of fit’ to meeting the assessment task, assessment requirements
and assessment criteria listed below.

Please
note that there is a wealth of material available on the Libguide website for
this course that you should use to help you gather and evaluate relevant information
for writing your report
(http://libguides.library.cqu.edu.au/content.php?pid=322500&sid=2640638).

Assessment task

Students are required to write an academic report as per
the format outlined in chapter 5 of the textbook. The report must follow either
theHarvard citation
and referencing guidelines
orAPA
referencing style
. Please note that the prescribed textbook uses APA
referencing guidelines but the School of Engineering and Technology recommends
Harvard style. See also the Referencing Style
subsection below.

The report is to be
based on the following case study scenario about Wearable Computers.

The last decade
has seen the introduction of wearable computers. For example, smartwatches are
computerised wristwatches that have screens and functionality that is far greater
than just displaying the time and date. Another example is Google Glass which
is worn like a pair of spectacles. It has a touch screen and can also be
controlled by voice. Wearable computers have many advantages such as, assisting
with health and fitness. Smartwatches can be used to track physical activity,
sleep patterns and heart rate. Google Glass can be used in medicine for a range
of applications such as assisting surgeons to record operations on patients and
in healthcare to provide online support from mid-wives for mothers having
problems breast-feeding.

However there are
also concerns about privacy and security with wearable computers. Recently
smartwatches have been in the news because students have used them in exams;
seeIs it
cheating to wear a smartwatch into an exam?
(http://www.theage.com.au/comment/is-it-cheating-to-wear-a-smartwatch-into-an-exam-20150609-ghixg1) written by our Melbourne-based colleague
Dr Ritesh Chugh. Google Glass has been criticised for a range of issues about
invading people’s privacy and secretly recording people; seeGoogle Glass:
is it a threat to our privacy?
(http://www.theguardian.com/technology/2013/mar/06/google-glass-threat-to-our-privacy).

You are the ICT
manager of a university based in Rockhampton. The Vice-Chancellor has asked you
to research wearable computers in higher education. She is interested in
finding out how wearable computers can be used in learning and teaching. She is
also concerned about any possible negative effects. You are to write a report
to be presented at the next executive meeting. The report should address:

1. What are
wearable computers and how are they currently being used. You should explore a
range of applications of wearable computers, for example, in areas such as healthcare,
the military and entertainment.

2. Discuss at
least three ways that wearable computers could be used to enhance higher
education. In particular the Vice-Chancellor would like you to explore ways wearable
computers could be used to provide educational opportunities that are not
possible with current stand-alone computers.

3. Assess the advantages
and disadvantages of using wearable computers in higher education. Explore the
ethical, social and legal considerations of students being connected to the
Internet through wearable computers. Examine the privacy and security concerns
of using wearable computers in higher education.

Your report should
conclude with recommendations for the university with respect to the implementation
and use of wearable computers in higher education.

Please note that you will
need to make some assumptions about the university in order to write this
report. These assumptions should be incorporated in the introduction to your
report when you describe the university and outline the problem to be solved
.

Specifically your report should include the following:

1. Title page: student name, student number, email address, course
code, assignment number, assignment due date, academic referencing style, campus
lecturer/tutor, and course coordinator. Not counted
in the word count. Note the title
page must indicate which academic referencing style you have used: APA or
Harvard.

2. Executive summary: should include the purpose of the report, the
problem and how it was investigated, your findings and your recommendations. Should be approximately 300 words.

3. Table of Contents: should list the report topics using decimal
notation. Needs to include the main headings and subheadings with corresponding
page numbers, using a format that makes the hierarchy of topics clear Use MS
Word’s ToC auto-generator rather than manually typing out the ToC. Instructions
can be found here https://support.office.com/en-gb/article/Create-a-table-of-contents-or-update-a-table-of-contents-eb275189-b93e-4559-8dd9-c279457bfd72#__create_a_table.
Not counted in the word count.

4. Introduction: provide a brief description of the organisation, a concise
overview of the problem you have been asked to research, the objectives to be
achieved by writing the report and how you investigated the problem. Provide an
outline of the sections of the report. Note that you will have to make
assumptions about what type of organisation you are working for in this case
study. Should be approximately 400 words.

5. Body of the report (use appropriate headings in the body of the
report.): Define key terms you will use in your report, such as what is meant
by ‘wearable computers’. Present your ideas on the topic and discuss the information
you found in your research that was relevant to the report’s objectives. Provide
an analysis of the information that you gathered. Ensure that you explore the three
points listed in the scenario above. You also need to discuss the ethical,
social and legal aspects surrounding this issue. In your discussion, examine
the issues from a global perspective as well as from the local perspective (of the
fictional university that is the centre of this report).

Please do NOT use ‘Body of
the Report’ as a heading.
Create meaningful
headings that reflect the content of your report. Should
be approximately 1200 words.

6. Conclusion: based on your research and analysis. Explain the
significance of your findings and your discussion. State if your report has
achieved its objectives. Should be approximately 550
words.

7. Recommendations: (based on your findings) what would your
recommendations be to your Vice-Chancellor in this situation? Provide some
guidelines for the university with respect to the implementation and use of wearable
computers in higher education. Should be approximately
550 words.

8. Reference list. Not counted in the word
count.

9. Appendices if necessary. Not counted in
the word count.

Note:Additional information regarding this
assignment may be placed on the course website as required.Check the course website at least once a week for
further information relating to the report.Regular access to the course website is a
requirement of this course.

Assessment Requirements

Your response should be structured as a report
(chapter 5 of textbook), written in accordance with standard academic writing
principles (chapter 4 of textbook). The report must be written using your own words with any in text
citations clearly marked (see Referencing
Style
subsection below). You may discuss the assessment task with other
students and the lecturing staff but you must WRITE the report YOURSELF in your own words.

You will need to conduct research to
support your arguments using AT LEAST NINE references in addition to your set
textbook (that is, a minimum of ten (10) references in your reference list). At least six (6) of these references should be
from refereed academic journals and books. All sources should be current i.e.
2010 onwards.

The assignment should demonstrate a logical flow of
discussion, be grammatically correct and free from
typographical, spelling and grammatical errors. It should be
prepared in MS-Word (or equivalent) using 12 point font, 1.5 line spacing and
margins of 2.54 cm.

It is highly recommended that you submit your
assignment to theAcademic Learning
Centre
AT LEAST
ONE WEEK
before the due date so that it can be checked for spelling and
grammatical errors.

Referencing Style

References must be cited (in
text) and a reference list provided in accordance with either the Harvard (author-date) referencing style
or the APA
referencing style
.

Helpful information on
referencing techniques and styles can also be found on CQU’s referencing
webpage:

http://www.cqu.edu.au/student-life/services-and-facilites/referencing

Marks will be
deducted for poor referencing or having less than ten (10) references or going
under or over the word length.

Use quotation
marks for direct quotes and you must include the author, date and page number(s)
with the quote as per the referencing standards.

ALL assignments will be checked for
plagiarism (material copied from other students and/or material copied from
other sources) using TurnItIn. If you are found to have plagiarised material or
if you have used someone else’s words without appropriate referencing, you will
be penalised for plagiarism which could result in zero marks for the whole
assignment. In some circumstances a more severe penalty may be imposed.

Useful information about academic integrity (avoiding plagiarism) can
be found at:

http://www.cqu.edu.au/student-life/services-and-facilites/referencing

Submission

To be submitted online through the
COIT20233 or COIT20249 Moodle course website assessment block on or before the
due date.

Before submitting your assignment you
should check it against the detailed assessment criteria in the following table
to ensure that you have satisfactorily addressed ALL the criteria that will be
used to mark your report.


Assessment criteria

This assessment is criterion
referenced which means your work is assessed against the criteria in the
marking rubric below.

Criteria

Quality

High Distinction

(2.75-3.0 marks)

Distinction

(2.25-2.5 marks)

Credit

(1.75-2 marks)

Pass

(1.25-1.5 marks)

Fail

(0-1 marks)

Executive summary

The executive summary contained:

– a brief description of the purpose of the report

– the definition of the problem and how it was investigated

– a summary of what you found and what you concluded

– your recommendations

The executive summary contained the proper sections but did not
include enough detail.

The executive summary had sections which were too brief or missing.
Did not include enough detail.

The executive summary lacked clarity and has incomplete or missing
sections. It did not clearly explain the problem, how it was investigated and
your recommendations.

Entire sections of the executive summary are missing. There is a lack
of detail and the problem is not well explained.

Table of contents

Lists the report topics using decimal notation. Includes the main
headings and subheadings with corresponding page numbers. Format makes the
hierarchy of topics clear. Auto generated using MS Word.

A few things missing from the table of contents.

Some things missing from the table of contents

Includes the main headings only.

Table of contents missing.

Introduction

Set the scene for the report; gave some background information for the
topic. Included a brief description of the organisation.

Stated the objectives of the investigation. Include the problem you
are addressing.

Explained the research method used to gather information.

Outlined the sections of the report.

The introduction contained the proper parts but did not include enough
detail.

The introduction had parts which were too brief or missing. Did not
include enough detail.

The introduction lacked clarity and had incomplete or missing parts.
It did not clearly introduce the report.

The introduction was missing or was a repeat of the executive summary.
It did not clearly introduce the report.

Body of report:

Selection and sequencing of subject material; including evidence.

Selected exact amount of relevant material that supports argument with
no contradictions.

Substantial, logical, & concrete development of ideas. Arguments were
logical and clear.

Assumptions were made explicit.

Key terms were defined.

Details were germane, original, and convincingly interpreted.

Selected large amount of relevant material.

Offered solid development of ideas but less original reasoning.

Assumptions were not always recognised or made explicit.

Contained some appropriate details or examples.

Selected adequate amount of material.

Some development of ideas; not much original reasoning.

Assumptions are not always recognised or made explicit.

Contains some appropriate details or examples.

Selected adequate amount of material not all of it relevant.

Not much development of ideas. Very little original reasoning.

Offered somewhat obvious support that may be too broad.

Details were too general, not interpreted, irrelevant to problem, or
inappropriately repetitive.

Selected too little material or material that is irrelevant.

No development of ideas or original reasoning.

Offered simplistic, undeveloped, or cryptic support for the ideas.

Inappropriate or off-topic generalisations, faulty assumptions, errors
of fact.

Conclusion

Problem restated clearly, main points and supporting arguments
summarised.

Stated the significance of the findings and that the objectives of the
report had been met.

No new material.

The conclusion contained the proper parts but did not include enough
detail.

No new material.

The conclusion had parts which were too brief or missing. Did not
include enough detail.

May have included some new material.

The conclusion lacked clarity and had incomplete or missing parts. It
did not clearly conclude the report.

May have included some new material.

The conclusion is missing or was a repeat of the executive summary. It
did not clearly conclude the report.

Included new material.

Recommendations

Suggested actions to address the problem.

Actions were clearly based on the findings of the report.

Most suggested actions were relevant to the problem.

Actions were based on the findings of the report.

Suggested actions were somewhat relevant to the problem.

Not all actions were based on the findings of the report.

Suggested some actions. Not all actions were relevant to the problem.

Not all actions were based on the findings of the report.

Recommendations missing or irrelevant to the problem and/or did not
relate to the findings.

Organisation: of ideas/main points; structure of sentences and
paragraphs.

Organisation fully supported the problem being addressed and the
objectives of report.

Sequence of ideas was effective.

Excellent sentence structure. Well-constructed paragraphs;clear linkages between
paragraphs.

Organisation supported the problem being addressed and the objectives
of report.

Sequence of ideas could be improved.

Good sentence structure. Linkages between paragraphs were mostly
appropriate.

Organisation supported the problem being addressed and the objectives
of report.

Sequence of ideas did not always flow in a logical manner.

Some good sentence structure. Linkages between paragraphs could be
improved. Some brief,
undeveloped paragraphs.

Some signs of logical organisation.

May have had abrupt or illogical shifts and ineffective flow of ideas.

Some awkward sentences; paragraphs not well linked. Paragraph
structurenot well
integrated; contained extraneous information.

Unclear organisation or organisational plan was inappropriate to problem
being addressed.

Poorly worded sentences. No linkages between paragraphs.

Showed minimal
effort or lack of comprehension of the assignment.

Presentation:

·
Title page

·
Grammar, punctuation
and spelling.

Title page contained all necessary information: student name, student
number, email address, course code, assignment number, assignment due date,
academic referencing style, campus lecturer/tutor, and course coordinator.

Written expression was clear and correct; evidence of thorough proof-reading.

Observed professional conventions of written English and report format.

Grammar excellent; correct use of punctuation; minimal or no spelling
errors.

Title page contained all necessary information.

A few errors in grammar (wrong verb tense, subject-verb agreement,
pronoun agreement, apostrophe errors, singular/plural errors, article use,
preposition use, split infinitives, etc.). Made occasional problematic word
choices or syntax errors.

Observed professional conventions of written English and report
format; made a few minor or technical errors.

Grammar strong
despite occasional lapses;a few spelling or punctuation errors.

Title page contained all necessary information.

Some distracting grammatical errors (wrong verb tense, subject-verb
agreement, pronoun agreement, apostrophe errors, singular/plural errors,
article use, preposition use, split infinitives, etc.). Little evidence of
proof-reading.

Needed to observe professional conventions of written English and
report format; made numerous errors.

Grammar could
be improved; errors in punctuation and spelling.

Some necessary information was missing from the title page.

Some major grammatical or proofreading errors (wrong verb tense,
subject-verb agreement, pronoun agreement, apostrophe errors, singular/plural
errors, article use, preposition use, split infinitives, sentence fragments,
word form errors, etc.).

Needed to observe professional conventions of written English and
report format; made repeated errors.

Frequent
errors in grammar, punctuation, and spelling.

Title page missing or missing necessary information.

Numerous grammatical errors which seriously detracted from understanding
the writing.

Evidence of poor planning and/or
no serious revision of writing.

Did not meet professional conventions of written English and report
format.

Frequent major
errors in grammar, punctuation, and spelling.

References (1):Evidence of research and
analysis of the references.

Thorough research indicated; clear well-thought out analysis clearly
integrated into discussion.

Analysed and evaluated information in great depth.

Used references to support, extend, and inform, but not substitute
writer’s own development of ideas.

Combined material from a variety of sources.

Did not overuse quotes.

Research was generally thorough; analysis was generally well done;
integrated into discussion.

Analysed and evaluated information in considerable depth.

Used references to support, but not substitute writer’s own
development of ideas.

Combined material from a variety of sources.

Did not overuse quotes.

Some evidence of research; basic analysis; some integration into discussion.

Analysed and evaluated information in reasonable depth, some
description.

Used references to support, but not substitute writer’s own
development of ideas.

Combined material from a few sources.

Did not overuse quotes.

Basic research; weaknesses evident in analysis.

Little evidence of analysis and evaluation of information; recounted
and described. Details were too general, not interpreted, irrelevant to
topic, or inappropriately repetitive.

Used relevant references but lacked in variety of references and/or
the skilful combination of references.

Combined material from a few sources.

Quotations and paraphrases may be too long or not well integrated into
the text.

Little or no evidence of research and analysis of information.

Neglected important references.

Simplistic or undeveloped support for the ideas.

Inappropriate or off-topic generalisations, faulty assumptions, errors
of fact.

Overused quotations or paraphrasing to substitute writer’s own ideas.

Possibly used source material without acknowledgement.

References (2):

In-text citations and reference list.

At least ten current references.

Thorough referencing. Citations and reference list accurate and
consistent with Harvard style.

At least ten current references

A few inaccuracies with Harvard
style for citations and/or reference list.

All references listed.

At least ten current references

Generally complete. One or two references missing.

Some errors in Harvard style for citations and/or reference list.

At least ten current references

Incomplete reference list. References not cited properly in text.

Errors with Harvard style.

Less than ten references.

Problems with citations.

Inconsistent with Harvard style.

Length

Correct length
(2500-3500 words)

Correct length
(2500-3500 words)

Correct length
(2500-3500 words)

Correct length
(2500-3500 words)

Too long (>3500 words) or too short (<2500 words)

Reports in
this range will receive a penalty of 5 marks.

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