Sophomore Engineering Clinic, Fall 2007

 

NotebookwikiRocket

Page history last edited by Roberta Harvey 2 yrs ago

Notebookwiki for Bottle Rocket Project

Team Notebookwikis

Note: the wikis are set to "private"--you will need to know the password to access it. Sign in with your full name and Rowan email address.

Section 1 (Wolff)

Team 1, Team 2, Team 3, Team 4, Team 5 

Section 2 (Harvey)

Team 1, Team 2, Team 3, Team 4

Section 3 (Harvey)

Team 1, Team 2, Team 3Team 4, Team 5, Team 6

Section 4 (Courtney)

Please use links from Dr. Courtney's page

Section 5 (Wolff)

Team 1, Team 2, Team 3, Team 4, Team 5, Team 6, Team 7

Section 6 (Courtney)

Please use links from Dr. Courtney's page

 

To write a report that accurately represents your design process, you will need to keep a detailed record of that process in the team’s lab notebook and notebookwiki. Your team will document the following:

 

  • Sketches and drawings (see below for advice on graphics and images in the wiki)
  • Tables of testing results
  • Calculations
  • Graphs
  • Responses to “Food for Thought” questions
  • Correspondence among team members or with faculty
 

In addition to providing notes to be used in writing reports, lab notebooks are also important for other reasons:

 

  • First, good records allow the team to frequently review progress and efficiently plan its next steps.
  • Second, in the event that a new member is added to a team or if advice is sought from an outside consultant, good records are necessary to quickly bring him/her “up to speed” with no loss of quality to the team’s work.
  • Finally, if something goes wrong with the design, good records are a “paper trail” that allows for a thorough review of the process to detect mistakes and, if necessary, determine liability.  For all of these reasons, you need to document your design process in a detailed and organized fashion. 

 

The typical standard for level of detail and organization is that someone else who has not been part of the team could reconstruct exactly what you did and reproduce the same results. Basic documentation protocols and practices will be covered in class. When in doubt, the more detail the better. Date and add your name at the bottom of every post you make.

 

Please note that an important assessment criterion will be how collaborative your notebookwikis are. That is, we will be looking to see how many members of your teams are actually posting. One team member should not be doing all the posting; everyone should be working with the wiki equally. 

A note for students in Dr. Wolff's sections

When you go to your team notebookswikis, you will see that I have set up a basic architecture, including sections on the front page which need to be filled in, a calendar for meeting and due dates, and a sidebar navigation scheme containing links to various pages. You will need to create more pages as you see fit. We will go over specifics in class.

 

A note for students in Dr. Harvey's sections

I have provided several suggestions for wiki content to get you started.  The specific organization of the wiki is up to your team to decide.  You will need to create additional pages to include all required project documentation.

 

A note for students in Dr. Courtney's sections

I have discussed in class several key components of the wikinotebook. The organization and design of the notebook are to be determined by your team. Please make sure, however, that it is logical and accessible for readers wishing to view the documentation of your project.

On Graphics and Images

An important component of the engineering notebooks are the graphics--sketches, photos, etc. Due to the size limitations of the wikis (10MB) your team may not have enough space to upload all of your image files. If this is the case, we suggest the following:

 

  1. In your HDrive, go to open the "public_www" folder (this will allow the images to be viewable via the Internet).
  2. Create a new folder called "sophclinic" and open that folder.
  3. Create two new folders: "rocket-images" and "crane-images."
  4. Place all images in these respective folders (it will be a good idea for backup purposes if each member of the team has a copy of each image stored in this way).
  5. When you wish to insert an image into your notebook, click on the Link icon, and then enter the URL for the image, which will be something like this: "http://users.rowan.edu/~yourusername/sophclinic/rocket-images/yourimagename.properfileextension"
  6. Readers of the page will be able to click on the link and see your image.

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