• Class Number 7637
  • Term Code 3160
  • Class Info
  • Unit Value 12 to 24 units
  • Mode of Delivery In Person
  • COURSE CONVENER
    • Dr Mina Henein
  • LECTURER
    • Dr Josh Andres
    • Dr Katherine Daniell
    • Dr Mina Henein
  • Class Dates
  • Class Start Date 26/07/2021
  • Class End Date 29/10/2021
  • Census Date 14/09/2021
  • Last Date to Enrol 02/08/2021
  • TUTOR
    • Matthew Phillipps
    • Memunat Ibrahim
SELT Survey Results

This is an annual course which enables students to create prototype cyber-physical systems in diverse teams under academic supervision.


This course will create disciplinary experts who have a hands-on understanding of new and emerging technological constellations and their separate components. Participants will complete a range of lab-based projects to develop a technical understanding of systems as designed objects which embody values. They will also gain technical skills in designing, building and understanding such systems, and understanding Cyber Physical Systems (CPS) from the ‘inside’, with an emphasis on making and building. This complements the approach in CECS6001 and CECS6002, which challenge participants to consider CPSs from the ‘outside’ via interrogating case studies.


Participants will not emerge from the course as qualified programmers or computer scientists. Instead, through learning-by-doing, participants will gain sufficient knowledge and practice to drive meaningful and accurate conversations and shape design decisions as a part of a multidisciplinary team developing new and emerging technologies.

Learning Outcomes

Upon successful completion, students will have the knowledge and skills to:

  1. Interrogate, using accurate terminology, the separate components of cyber-physical systems.
  2. Understand basic principles, capabilities and limits of common components of cyber-physical systems, as well as some of the the social, regulatory, and environmental factors that may shape the capabilities and limits of both the components and the systems they come together to create.
  3. Synthesize technical judgment with principles from concurrent 3AI masters level courses to generate and evaluate complex ideas and concepts through a holistic and accurate analysis of new and emerging technological constellations.
  4. Plan and execute a substantial research-based project to collectively design, build, manage, assess a cyber-physical system, and develop a standard approach that disciplinary experts can follow to document this process.
  5. Fluently apply teamwork and project management skills to enable a collaborative project leading to the creation of a prototype cyber-physical system.
  6. Critically assess information, including data sources, for accuracy, authenticity, and in consideration of principles of ethical use when creating a new cyber-physical system.
  7. Generate and communicate complex outcomes of cyber-physical research in relevant formats for diverse audiences.
  8. Work effectively with peers from a variety of backgrounds to share prior practical skills, learn from others, and deliver and take on critical and constructive feedback.

Staff Feedback

Students will be given feedback in the following forms in this course:

  • written comments
  • verbal comments
  • feedback to whole class, groups, individuals, focus group etc

Student Feedback

ANU is committed to the demonstration of educational excellence and regularly seeks feedback from students. Students are encouraged to offer feedback directly to their Course Convener or through their College and Course representatives (if applicable). The feedback given in these surveys is anonymous and provides the Colleges, University Education Committee and Academic Board with opportunities to recognise excellent teaching, and opportunities for improvement. The Surveys and Evaluation website provides more information on student surveys at ANU and reports on the feedback provided on ANU courses.

Class Schedule

Week/Session Summary of Activities Assessment
1 Modeling and Simulation
2 Modeling and Simulation
3 ML formulation, validation, and fairness
4 ML formulation, validation, and fairness
5 X-AI interaction
6 X-AI interaction
7 After ML
8 After ML
9 Cybernetic Studio
10 Cybernetic Studio
11
12

Assessment Summary

Assessment task Value Learning Outcomes
Fortnighly Homework 25 % 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8
Skills and Studio Session Contribution 10 % 1,2,3,4,6,7,8
Individual Learning Portfolio 20 % 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8
Maker Project 20 % 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8
Cyber Physical System project 25 % 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8

* If the Due Date and Return of Assessment date are blank, see the Assessment Tab for specific Assessment Task details

Policies

ANU has educational policies, procedures and guidelines, which are designed to ensure that staff and students are aware of the University’s academic standards, and implement them. Students are expected to have read the Academic Misconduct Rule before the commencement of their course. Other key policies and guidelines include:

Assessment Requirements

The ANU is using Turnitin to enhance student citation and referencing techniques, and to assess assignment submissions as a component of the University's approach to managing Academic Integrity. For additional information regarding Turnitin please visit the Academic Integrity . In rare cases where online submission using Turnitin software is not technically possible; or where not using Turnitin software has been justified by the Course Convener and approved by the Associate Dean (Education) on the basis of the teaching model being employed; students shall submit assessment online via ‘Wattle’ outside of Turnitin, or failing that in hard copy, or through a combination of submission methods as approved by the Associate Dean (Education). The submission method is detailed below.

Moderation of Assessment

Marks that are allocated during Semester are to be considered provisional until formalised by the College examiners meeting at the end of each Semester. If appropriate, some moderation of marks might be applied prior to final results being released.

Assessment Task 1

Value: 25 %
Learning Outcomes: 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8

Fortnighly Homework

Homework will be released on the first Monday of each fortnight and due 1 week Friday at 11:59pm. Work of relevance to this assessment category are varied; examples of the activities you will be assessed on may include coding exercises, worksheets, short-answer essays, hands-on activities, or readings.  

Homework is an individual exercise, though you are welcome to work with classmates as long as any materials you finally submit are your own. Assessment takes into account effort shown in submitted work. Please note we will provide assistance in completing any exercises in our tutorial sessions, office hours, and in-class skills sessions will build on homework tasks.  


In total, there’ll be 12 homework assigned for the year.  However, each student’s final homework grade for the course will be based on the best 10 out of the 12 submissions. 

Assessment Task 2

Value: 10 %
Learning Outcomes: 1,2,3,4,6,7,8

Skills and Studio Session Contribution

This task is meant to encourage active engagement in and contribution to the group activities held in the skills and studio session. Students will receive feedback on their performance and how they can improve in future blocks from the teaching team on a fortnightly basis.  For the studio session, each student will be asked to sign up to one or more sessions to co-develop and co-facilitate, with a fellow student, learning experiences for the cohort. We recognise that each of our students has a wealth of professional experiences and our intention is to draw on these experiences to enrich the learning for the entire cohort.

Rubric

Assessment Task 3

Value: 20 %
Learning Outcomes: 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8

Individual Learning Portfolio

Throughout the semester students will document and reflect on their learning practice across both CECS6001 and CECS8001. Grading for the CECS8001

components will consider the quality of portfolio template components on:

(1) design - which may include, but not limited to, any initial mapping of systems, story board, or prototype (including failed one). The design element should also address any constraint or scope which may affect design choice, as well as issues around safety, responsibility, sustainability and scale, processes and people;

(2) documentation of experimentation, processes, and other systemic and repeatable tasks with clearly described methods and justifications, as well as assumptions and perspectives that influence these activities;

(3) articulation of skill goals (consistent with the learning outcomes of the course), development plan for the goals, and evaluation of your own execution of the plan.

Students will submit their Learning Portfolio for feedback and indicative grading in term 1 of the semester. Revised and completed portfolios for the full semester will then be due at the end of the semester.

Assessment Task 4

Value: 20 %
Learning Outcomes: 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8

Maker Project

The goal of the maker project is to enable students to work on building skills and confidence in a variety of fabrication and/or programming techniques in a free and creative way. The goal is to build something that is related to the new branch of engineering. We want students to be creative and motivated to build something, so this link is very broad. It should be reasonably achievable within 10 weeks, fit within a $200 budget, and help students build new skills in additional to leveraging existing skills. 

The deliverables of the project will include a prototype, a short design brief presentation to an external panel, a demonstration of the object during exam period. A small component of the assessment is linked to feedback and help students provide to course colleagues, as a means of beginning to encourage and support group cohesion and capacity for delivering constructive feedback. 

Assessment Task 5

Value: 25 %
Learning Outcomes: 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8

Cyber Physical System project

Weeks 11-24 will be focussed on taking the skills you’ve learned in the first 10 weeks across both courses and applying them to build a working cyber-physical system as a team. Students will have their cyber-physical system assessed from concept to construction by another team using cybernetic principles and will have opportunities to respond to that assessment. Each team will also provide an assessment to another team. There will be significant creative freedom in this task, but each team’s cyber physical system will need to have the potential to make a significant impact in the world, as well as having the potential to scale (i.e., reach many places, markets, cultures and/or worlds). These requirements will be defined more clearly before the project commences. Teams will be formed in week 11 of semester 1 and will begin the design process around the system in preparation for presenting your design brief early in semester 2. Students will be assessed as a group on the design brief, building a successful and working prototype, a final presentation, as well as documentation of the assessment process. We will also assess students on your individual contribution to the group.  

Academic Integrity

Academic integrity is a core part of the ANU culture as a community of scholars. At its heart, academic integrity is about behaving ethically, committing to honest and responsible scholarly practice and upholding these values with respect and fairness.


The ANU commits to assisting all members of our community to understand how to engage in academic work in ways that are consistent with, and actively support academic integrity. The ANU expects staff and students to be familiar with the academic integrity principle and Academic Misconduct Rule, uphold high standards of academic integrity and act ethically and honestly, to ensure the quality and value of the qualification that you will graduate with.


The Academic Misconduct Rule is in place to promote academic integrity and manage academic misconduct. Very minor breaches of the academic integrity principle may result in a reduction of marks of up to 10% of the total marks available for the assessment. The ANU offers a number of online and in person services to assist students with their assignments, examinations, and other learning activities. Visit the Academic Skills website for more information about academic integrity, your responsibilities and for assistance with your assignments, writing skills and study.

Online Submission

You will be required to electronically sign a declaration as part of the submission of your assignment. Please keep a copy of the assignment for your records. Unless an exemption has been approved by the Associate Dean (Education) submission must be through Turnitin.

Hardcopy Submission

For some forms of assessment (hand written assignments, art works, laboratory notes, etc.) hard copy submission is appropriate when approved by the Associate Dean (Education). Hard copy submissions must utilise the Assignment Cover Sheet. Please keep a copy of tasks completed for your records.

Late Submission

Individual assessment tasks may or may not allow for late submission. Policy regarding late submission is detailed below:

  • Late submission not permitted. If submission of assessment tasks without an extension after the due date is not permitted, a mark of 0 will be awarded.
  • Late submission permitted. Late submission of assessment tasks without an extension are penalised at the rate of 5% of the possible marks available per working day or part thereof. Late submission of assessment tasks is not accepted after 10 working days after the due date, or on or after the date specified in the course outline for the return of the assessment item. Late submission is not accepted for take-home examinations.

Referencing Requirements

Accepted academic practice for referencing sources that you use in presentations can be found via the links on the Wattle site, under the file named “ANU and College Policies, Program Information, Student Support Services and Assessment”. Alternatively, you can seek help through the Students Learning Development website.

Extensions and Penalties

Extensions and late submission of assessment pieces are covered by the Student Assessment (Coursework) Policy and Procedure. Extensions may be granted for assessment pieces that are not examinations or take-home examinations. If you need an extension, you must request an extension in writing on or before the due date. If you have documented and appropriate medical evidence that demonstrates you were not able to request an extension on or before the due date, you may be able to request it after the due date.

Privacy Notice

The ANU has made a number of third party, online, databases available for students to use. Use of each online database is conditional on student end users first agreeing to the database licensor’s terms of service and/or privacy policy. Students should read these carefully. In some cases student end users will be required to register an account with the database licensor and submit personal information, including their: first name; last name; ANU email address; and other information.
In cases where student end users are asked to submit ‘content’ to a database, such as an assignment or short answers, the database licensor may only use the student’s ‘content’ in accordance with the terms of service – including any (copyright) licence the student grants to the database licensor. Any personal information or content a student submits may be stored by the licensor, potentially offshore, and will be used to process the database service in accordance with the licensors terms of service and/or privacy policy.
If any student chooses not to agree to the database licensor’s terms of service or privacy policy, the student will not be able to access and use the database. In these circumstances students should contact their lecturer to enquire about alternative arrangements that are available.

Distribution of grades policy

Academic Quality Assurance Committee monitors the performance of students, including attrition, further study and employment rates and grade distribution, and College reports on quality assurance processes for assessment activities, including alignment with national and international disciplinary and interdisciplinary standards, as well as qualification type learning outcomes.

Since first semester 1994, ANU uses a grading scale for all courses. This grading scale is used by all academic areas of the University.

Support for students

The University offers students support through several different services. You may contact the services listed below directly or seek advice from your Course Convener, Student Administrators, or your College and Course representatives (if applicable).

Dr Mina Henein
u5941570@anu.edu.au

Research Interests


Dr Mina Henein

Tuesday 09:00 10:00
Wednesday 16:00 17:00
Dr Josh Andres
61256416
josh.andres@anu.edu.au

Research Interests


Dr Josh Andres

Dr Katherine Daniell
61256416
katherine.daniell@anu.edu.au

Research Interests


Dr Katherine Daniell

Dr Mina Henein
61256416
mina.henein@anu.edu.au

Research Interests


Dr Mina Henein

Tuesday 09:00 10:00
Wednesday 16:00 17:00
Matthew Phillipps
61256416
matthew.phillipps@anu.edu.au

Research Interests


Matthew Phillipps

Memunat Ibrahim
memunat.ibrahim@anu.edu.au

Research Interests


Memunat Ibrahim

Responsible Officer: Registrar, Student Administration / Page Contact: Website Administrator / Frequently Asked Questions