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School of Engineering and Informatics (for staff and students)

MSc Individual Project (864H1)

MSc Individual Project

Module 864H1

Module details for 2025/26.

60 credits

FHEQ Level 7 (Masters)

Module Outline

The Masters Individual Project is designed to expose you to a real-life engineering problem to which you apply the skills and knowledge acquired in the area of your degree course. The work must be completed within budget, using available resources, by a specified deadline, and presented to an audience not necessarily directly familiar with the work you have done. The project is designed encourage creative thinking and expose you to issues of project management, resourcing, planning, scheduling, documentation and communication. It will demand individual responsibility, critical awareness, including awareness of relevant regulatory requirements governing engineering activities. You will be expected to exercise initiative and personal responsibility while working at the project.

The project will involve you as an individual working on a particular area of activity relevant to your degree, with the goal of meeting a specific set of objectives. Your project will be supervised by a single member of faculty, who takes on the role of technical director. A second (minor) supervisor is also assigned to provide occasional guidance. The specific objectives will depend on the nature of the project. It is however typical for a project to involve you in developing competency in project management, specification, development of concepts, detailed design, hardware and/or software implementation, testing, analysis, evaluation and communication.

AHEP4 Learning Outcomes
M1, M2, M3, M4, M5, M7, M17

Module learning outcomes

Exercise initiative and personal responsibility in planning, conducting and reporting on a substantial engineering project

Demonstrate the ability to integrate knowledge from various sources to form a view of a real and current engineering problem and as a basis for developing a solution to the problem

Undertake the planning of a substantial project, identifying resources required, estimating effort and forming contingency plans for unexpected outcomes and problems arising.

Apply engineering principles to address the chosen problem and demonstrate the ability to make sound judgments in complex situations and in the absence of complete data

Select and deploy appropriate analytical and practical techniques applicable to advanced scholarship in the area of the degree course

Apply a holistic approach to the project brief by exercising professional judgments in terms of cost, market, environment, sustainability, safety and ethics

Deliver an oral presentation in order to communicate the technical information and findings of the project clearly to a combined specialist and non-specialist audience

Document the implementation and findings of the project in a substantial technical report

TypeTimingWeighting
Coursework10.00%
Coursework components. Weighted as shown below.
ReportT2 Week 11 100.00%
PresentationSummer Vacation Week 13 Fri 09:0020.00%
Dissertation (12000 words)Summer Vacation Week 13 Thu 16:0070.00%
Timing

Submission deadlines may vary for different types of assignment/groups of students.

Weighting

Coursework components (if listed) total 100% of the overall coursework weighting value.

TermMethodDurationWeek pattern
Spring SemesterProject8 hours11111111111

How to read the week pattern

The numbers indicate the weeks of the term and how many events take place each week.

Dr William Wang

Assess convenor
/profiles/101946

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The University reserves the right to make changes to the contents or methods of delivery of, or to discontinue, merge or combine modules, if such action is reasonably considered necessary by the University. If there are not sufficient student numbers to make a module viable, the University reserves the right to cancel such a module. If the University withdraws or discontinues a module, it will use its reasonable endeavours to provide a suitable alternative module.

School of Engineering and Informatics (for staff and students)

School Office:
School of Engineering and Informatics, ÈÕº«ÎÞÂë, Chichester 1 Room 002, Falmer, Brighton, BN1 9QJ
ei@sussex.ac.uk
T 01273 (67) 8195

School Office opening hours: School Office open Monday – Friday 09:00-15:00, phone lines open Monday-Friday 09:00-17:00
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