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Engineering and Technology Management Program
E M 702 Project Option
Video
Introduction to the EM 702 Project (the Power Point Slides
and Streaming Video go together).
The
application for degree fee is currently $50.00
Please
note that the final semester of E M 702 for the project option may
not be taken during the summer session. The final
term must be spring or fall semester.
Deadlines and Procedures
Contents
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The Final Paper After final
approval of your paper, within 10 days of your oral presentation,
you must submit two copies of your paper to the Pullman office,
unbound, one copy on good quality paper. Please read the
directions. - formatting guidelines
dependent on the student's program chair, the project itself,
whether or not it will be published. Included here are one
set of guidelines See Number 5 for another set of
guidelines.
5. See
"Guidelines for
Authors", IEEE Transactions for Engineering Management
if you plan to publish in this journal
Downloadable Grad School forms:
http://www.gradsch.wsu.edu/current-students/formsfordegree.html
The Paper
Trail
OR
How to graduate from Washington State University with a graduate
degree: Master of Engineering and Technology Management
...... in just 30-40 easy steps
The Paperwork
described below is just that - paperwork. The bulk of the work of
the project itself is described in Section 2. The information on
the format of the final paper is (still under construction)
described in Section 3.
- NOTE: The
dates listed on the Tabular Summary provided by the
are drop dead dates and far from realistic for the
project.
- Be
admitted to the program as a REGULAR graduate student. Have any
contingencies taken care of (e.g. receipt of transcript from all
colleges attended) These would have been noted on your admission
letter from the Graduate School.
- As early
as is reasonable, but no later than 2 weeks into the first
semester of E M 702, notify the E M office of your intended
committee, committee chair, mentor, project title and a 2-3
paragraph project summary -- via e-mail. This is a
departmental requirement and is needed to assist the student
in finalizing committee members, for disseminating information on
the web, and keeping all faculty apprised of student projects.
- Submit
completed Graduate School program
of studies form
to the Patti by email attachment. This lists all classes you are required
to take, including core selectives and electives and E M
702 credits. It lists the members and chair of your graduate
committee ( Patti will get the signatures from your committee for
you.) This can be done as
early as your second semester as a regular graduate student, and
must be done at least one full semester prior to graduation. You
can get a record of all the courses taken, the titles, the grades,
the semester at www.my.wsu.edu
- Once the
Program of Studies is approved, students can submit the
Application for Degree. The Application for Degree form
generates a To-Do List, from the Graduate School to the
student and copied to the department. NOTE: The dates listed on
the Tabular Summary provided by the Graduate School are drop
dead dates and far from realistic for the project. This
should be submitted at least a full semester prior to graduation
to confirm that you and the program and the committee chair and
the Graduate School all have the same expectations.
Please note that the final semester of E M 702 for the project
option may not be taken during the summer
session. The final term must be spring or fall semester.
- Students
will be required to complete all classes listed on the program
with a B or better unless a Change of Program
form is
submitted with proper signatures. Again, if needed, contact the Program
Support person or help.
- Payment
of Graduation Fee (currently $50.00) must be submitted at the
beginning of the graduation semester or earlier. It is easily
remembered if submitted with the application for degree form.
This can be sent directly to the Engineering and Technology Management Program
for a receipt or directly to the Graduate School. Clearly
indicate your student ID and that it is for the graduation fee.
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Scheduling of Final Exam form. This form also requires
signatures. The program will complete this form on your behalf
and get the signatures. BUT.....it is your responsibility
to begin the process early enough that faculty members, mentors,
managers can attend. NOTE: If you wish to get cooperation
from very busy individuals (yourself, your mentor and
all committee members, your manager), and schedule time on the very busy
WHETS system, you must begin the first few
weeks of the final semester. While I can facilitate this process,
it is the student's responsibility to work closely with me via email to get this scheduled.
- Final
Examination/Oral Presentation: All students who complete an
engineering report will be required to present an oral defense of
their project. This will most likely be via WHETS.
The student should plan for about 20 to 30 minutes or less of a
professional presentation complete with slides or overheads,
including a brief question-and-answer period to follow. The final
paper with all suggestions, corrections, etc. must be submitted
to the department as specified within five days of the oral
defense. More information on this paper is included below.
Please note that the final semester of E M 702 for the project
option may not be taken during the summer
session; the final term must be spring or fall semester.
The
application for degree fee is $50.00
Submitted by Patti Elshafei , as always, subject to
modification.
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2.
The Project
by
James Holt
The
EM 702 Project will be completed on a topic of interest to the
student and will demonstrate the breadth and depth of studies
during the masters program. The project should include a breadth of
topics touching at least three different courses (e.g., finance,
organizational management, and project management). The project
should also focus on one specific skill and expand in depth on that
topic much more than would have been expected by a typical class
project. In other words, the EM 702 project integrates skills from
several different classes and at the same time extends the students
learning in on specific topic. In most cases, the project will be
directly work related. This allows the student to select meaningful
problems from the work environment and integrates the project with
day-to-day work duties.
The
EM 702 Project should be a workable topic that the student can
complete within a two semester time period. While some topics may
take longer and others shorter, the intent is to encourage the
student to ponder the problem, solution and implementation for a
period of time but not to belabor the topic. Projects can be:
a continuation of an in-progress class project with additional
effort required to develop, integrate and finalize the report, or
the beginning phase of a significant study to be completed later,
or
a succinct project with a start, process and end.
By carefully selecting the project topic, the student will be
working on problems of importance to their current employment. This
means much of the work can be done as part of normal working hours.
This helps the student get through as well as provide a valuable
product to the employer.
The
following mechanics are suggestions to keep the student moving
towards a completed project, and the committee to contribute
positively to the work.
A. Discuss your proposed project with several faculty members in
advance of choosing a committee chair. Typically, this will be
about one year before intended graduation. Use these discussions to
probe the project topic dimensions and to identify faculty
interest.
B. Choose a faculty member to act as the Chair of your committee.
The Chair should be quite interested in your project and have
talents that can contribute to your expected needs and have the
time to communicate with you in a timely manner.
C. Submit a one page proposal to Patti Elshafei at the Engineering
Management Department in Pullman at the beginning of the first of
the two semesters you will be formally working on the project. This
proposal should state the intention of your project and suggested
Chair and committee members.
D. Establish a standard for communicating with your Chair. You may
choose to meet with your Chair bi-weekly or talk on the phone
periodically. Remember, the Chair may be following several projects
at once. The Chair is your major focus and director for the
project. You will do the work, not the Chair. If your Chair is not
informed and involved, you are doomed for trouble.
E. You should keep the whole committee apprised of your progress
and plans as you go. I suggest a brief, monthly written summary of
progress the previous month, plans for the next month and a
statement of elements learned to date. This is to protect you and
your committee. It protects you by telling them what you are doing
and moves the obligation of changing direction into their court. It
protects the committee by keeping them informed (they know what is
going on). It is very, very poor etiquette to have a committee that
knows nothing and contributes nothing. If this happens, both
student and committee are on the spot at the final oral briefing.
Most student failures come from lack of committee awareness, not
from lack of student effort.
F. Have an overall plan. A simple Gantt chart or time line will
work. Update it as you go. The typical project flow includes:
1. First Semester
a)
Project topic approved
b) Project plan approved by Chair
c) Preliminary data collected, analyzed
d) Solidification of project scope and direction
e) Plan clearly defined.
f) Execution of plan
g) Present preliminary results to Committee |
2. Second Semester
Please note that the final semester of E M 702 for the project
option may not be taken during the summer session.
The final term must be spring or fall semester.
a)
Complete execution of plan
b) Document efforts, success, failures
c) Prepare draft journal article
d). Incorporate Committee comments
e) Prepare final written journal article
f) Prepare and present oral presentation
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G.
Buffer your efforts. Remember you are working with an oversight
group who needs time to do their thing as well as you doing your
thing. Give adequate time for comments along the way and especially
at the end. Complete all your project work at least a month before
you anticipate graduating.
H. The written document that comes out of an E M 702 will NOT be a
thesis. It should be a nice, clear, understandable document
suitable for submission to a professional journal of your choice.
You should meet the format required by that journal. The sample
format provided by WSU is only a sample to be used in absence of
other journal formats. It is up to you to get the required format
from the journal you choose.
I. It is often nice to have a Mentor (strongly suggested of
students sponsored by Boeing). A Mentor is a person with a masters
degree or better who has completed a thesis or significant research
project. The Mentor is ideally from near the same area where your
project efforts focus. The Mentor is not the Chair. The Mentor
gives encouragement, helps find leads, maintains topic validity,
assists finding resources and is a shoulder to cry on. The Mentor
helps you get through this thing. Add your Mentor to the monthly
written report distribution list.
J. The E M 702 Project requires an oral report at the end of the
project. The oral presentation will be graded by members of the
committee. The best possible audience would include the full
committee, appropriate individuals representing the student's firm,
and peer students. It is not usually possible to achieve this
audience. Arrangements should be made early to allow the best
possible option (perhaps two presentations may be needed). Please
note that the final semester of E M 702 for the project option
may not be taken during the summer session.
The final term must be spring or fall semester.
The
Chair is responsible for grading the E M 702 project. The committee
as a whole accepts or rejects the final project.
A. Typically, no grade is given for the first semester of the
project. An in progress grade is reported at the end of the first
semester. The final grade awarded after the second semester will be
assigned to both semesters.
B. Grading criteria include (as a minimum):
1.
Effective Planning and execution
2. Quality of process development |
a. Demonstration of Depth and Breadth criteria
b. Completeness of research/application/academics applied
c. Appropriateness of effort in relation to topic
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3.
Quality of written project document
4. Quality of oral presentation
5. Consideration of comments by Mentor and committee members
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C.
Final Comments: The E M 702 project demonstrates your ability to
integrate and blend many different management skills from a variety
of courses towards a significant problem. This is a test of
management skills that will be of value to you and your employer.
In many cases, it will be possible to document the value of the
project to the employer. The student should try to identify the
significant contribution of this work. Contributions may include:
Elimination of costly problems, Increased value of the firm,
Improved processes, Easier management, Better quality, Reduced flow
time, Increased profits, Improved management control, or other
matters of import to the firm.
Prior to Enrolling in E M 702
1. Select a project topic
2. Select a mentor
3. Choose a chair and a committee
4. Notify Patti Elshafei of intention to register
5. Official Program of Studies submitted to WSU Graduate School
First Semester
1. Week 1 -Submit a one-page project proposal to Chair and Mentor
and to department (engrmgt@wsu.edu)
2. Week 2 - Apply for WSU Degree (submit form and fee)
http://www.gradsch.wsu.edu/AppforMasterDegree.doc
3. Week 3 -Project topic approved
4. Week 4 - submit project plan with timelines
5. Week 5 - Project plan and timelines approved
Final Semester
Please note that the final semester of E M 702 for the project
option may not be taken during the summer session.
The final term must be spring or fall semester.
1. Week 3 - Schedule Oral exam (submit form with committee
signatures)
2. Week 13 - Submit Completed Project
3. Week 14-16 - Final Exam via WHETS or travel to Pullman
4.
a. Submit two loose, unbound final copies of project on
quality paper to the EMP in Pullman. Be sure to include a
signature page with the mentor's signature - The program support
person can help you get the faculty signatures. This copy will be
professionally bound and kept by WSU Pullman.
b.
Your mentor or manager may also want a final copy. Provide
one copy of final document to your committee Chair. Work out the
details of binding the other copy with Chair.
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3.
E M 702
Project Information Sheet to be returned within the first two
weeks of the first semester:
Patti Elshafei, Program Support
fax 509-335-3818, email
engrmgt@wsu.edu, snail-mail
WSU Engineering Management
ETRL 336
P.O. Box 642785
Washington State University
Pullman, WA 99164 - 2785
Student name/date________________________
Chair of committee:________________________
Boeing Mentor & phone/email________________
proposed topic or title______________________
2-3 paragraph intro (abstract)________________
________________________________________
________________________________________
Other
EMP students on your "Project Team" if applicable:
__________________________________
Tentative Graduation Date:________________
4 .
Application for degree.
Please
note that the final semester of E M 702 for the project option
may not be taken during the summer session. The
final term must be spring or fall semester.
You
may download the form for printing : Or send me the information by
email or U.S. Mail. directly,
http://www.gradsch.wsu.edu/AppforMasterDegree.doc
Application for degree form. Please mail to the address below
Please complete and return to:
Patti Elshafei, Program Support
fax 509-335-4725, email
engrmgt@wsu.edu, snail-mail
WSU Engineering Management
ETRL 336
P.O. Box 642785
Washington State University
Pullman, WA 99164 - 2785
EFFECTIVE AUGUST 1, 2000, "graduate fee" is increased to $50.00
This is due the semester you graduate or earlier. Boeing Students
should send it to me and I will send you a receipt and Boeing will
reimburse you. Have it made out to WSU Grad School . Clearly
indicate on the check "graduation fee".
Additional fees are assessed if you wish to go through commencement
exercises (cap, gown and announcements, etc.).
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top
08/18/99
reviewed 7/13/00
5.
FORMAT FOR NON-THESIS ENGINEERING
REPORTS/PROJECTS
FORMAT
FOR NON-THESIS ENGINEERING REPORTS/PROJECTS
The
approved format for Engineering Reports (ER) is the use of articles
to be submitted for publication. The following guidelines are to be
followed :
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The ER shall consist of at least one publishable manuscript based
upon research done while attending Washington State University.
The format for this publishable manuscript may be different from
that stated in section 5. WORK CLOSELY WITH YOUR
ADVISOR/PROGRAM CHAIR.
-
The graduate student is to be the major contributor and writer of
the manuscript. In case of multiple authorship, the
contribution of each author is to be detailed in the Introduction
or separate Attribution page.
-
The graduate student is to provide a letter of copyright release
for previously copyrighted material.
-
The manuscript to be reviewed shall be formatted with one inch
margins on all sides and printed in a single font style
throughout, on one side only and copied onto appropriate paper
(100% bond paper for the Program copy and regular paper for
committee copies).
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Candidates planning to write an ER should consult with their
committee to determine the particular format
acceptable to the journal in which they plan to publish.
-
The ER is to include a title page, signature page, abstract, and
table of contents.
-
The type of degree, the date of degree to be awarded, and the
granting department on the ER must agree with the information on
the Announcement of Orals. Committee names must also agree. In
addition, the title on the title
page and the student's name on the title page must agree
word-for-word with the title and name on the abstract
page.
-
All number of words (including title and author's name) in the
abstract must not exceed 350.
-
The ER, including the manuscript, is to be paginated
consecutively.
-
Archival photographs of halftone information, properly
identified, are to be included in the manuscript. Photocopies of
photographs can be substituted only when of high quality.
-
The 100% cotton acid-free -bond copy (or other high quality
paper) of the ER must be turned in no later than five
working days after the oral defense.
-
The signature page must be signed in black ink.
Signatures will be procured at the final oral exam.
-
Please note the attached example of the format required for the
title page, signature page, and abstract.
-
Do not follow the format of someone else's ER. You may be
copying their mistakes and/or rules may have
changed.
-
In the case of Engineering Report composed of multiple
manuscripts, the student must include additional materials that
serves to integrate the presentation of the manuscripts. These
could include a General Introduction, Discussion and/or
Conclusion. Full citations of previously published work must be
included
.
-
When manuscripts are published (to be published) in different
journals where styles vary, the introduction must include an
explanation of the different formats. The manuscripts can,
therefore, be written in the style specified by the journal(s).
General Guidelines:
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Develop a written proposal, coordinating with Engineering and Technology Management Program faculty within the first two weeks of the
first semester of E M 702.
-
It is anticipated that projects will take more than one semester
to complete. Student must register for a total of four (4) hours
of E M 702.
-
Student should obtain a copy of the Tabular Summary the semester
before they expect to graduate. These are available at each
campus, the Graduate School, and the Academic Coordinator. It is
also provided to you by the Grad School when your program of
studies is returned after approval.
-
The following must be taken care of:
a. Selection of official committee - student should work with
their Engineering and Technology Management Program advisor to select
appropriate committee members.
b. Approval of official Program of Studies submitted by Academic
Coordinator based on input from student's annual review response
and telephone interviews (at least one semester prior to
graduation).
c. Application for Degree submitted by Academic Coordinator after
approval of official Program of Studies at least one semester
prior to the oral exam.
d. Pay all fees before oral exam. (GRAD FEE $50.00
EFFECTIVE 08/01/2000)
e. Scheduling Final Exam will be done by Academic Coordinator in
conjunction with student.
NOTE TO STUDENTS: I HAVE NOT DOUBLE-SPACED THE DIRECTIONS FOR
EASE OF READING ON THE INTERNET. YOUR PAPER MUST BE
DOUBLE-SPACED. PE
the signature page is a NEW page and must have all the
committee. Engineering Reports
GUIDELINES FOR
(double-space, inverted pyramid, capitalize)
WSU STUDENTS (Replace with your title)
By
(double-space to name, capitalize)
JANE
ANN DOE
An
Engineering Report submitted in partial fulfillment
of the
requirements for the degree of
MASTER
OF ENGINEERING MANAGEMENT
(double-space to degree;
four spaces to university; single
space to department, college, or
program; double-space to date)
WASHINGTON STATE UNIVERSITY
Engineering and Technology Management Program
December 2001
(month
and year in which degree is granted, not the date of the final oral
examination)
the
gray line means to start a new page
To
the Faculty of Washington State University:
The members of the Committee appointed to examine the Engineering
Report of
JANE ANN DOE find it satisfactory and recommend that it be
accepted.
___________________________
Chair, James R. Holt (e.g.)
___________________________
Hal A. Rumsey (e.g.)
__________________________
E. Ray Ladd (e.g.)
___________________________
John A. Ringo (e.g.)
(You must secure original black ink signatures on both
the 100% cotton bond and the extra copy . The Graduate School
representative is not to sign this signature page. You may not have
more lines than necessary for signatures. e.g., if you have three
committee members, you may have only three signature lines).
Patti will assist in getting signatures of committee members not in
attendance, or participating electronically. Be sure to check
with Patti to get all the faculty names included.
ACKNOWLEDGMENT
This section entitled "Acknowledgments" should be used if the
writer wishes to acknowledge the assistance received.
The
entire thesis must be double-spaced. There is no limit to
the number of pages in this section, if the Acknowledgment section
is two pages long, the Abstract page will, of course, be numbered
v, instead of iv as in this sample. Likewise, if you choose not to
include an Acknowledgment section, the Abstract will be numbered
iii.
ENGINEERING REPORT GUIDELINES FOR
WSU
STUDENTS
Abstract
by
Jane Ann Doe
Master of Engineering and Technology Management
Washington State University
December 1993
Chair: Hal Rumsey (omit titles such as Dr., Professor or Ph.D.)
The
text of the abstract follows at this point. The abstract must be
under 350 words (counting everything).
The
purpose of the abstract is to give the reader a concise and
accurate synopsis of significant elements in the manuscript so that
the reader will be able to determine whether it is advisable to
read the complete thesis.
(The
entire ER, including figures, tables and the Appendices must have a
minimum one inch margin on all sides.)
For
the ER, the abstract should be included in the manuscript,
according to the instructions for authors of the pertinent journal.
TABLE
OF CONTENTS
note to students: I have placed the table of contents in
"boxes" for this web presentation only, (because I am new at WEB
design and wanted to make this line up as it needed to.)
Do not place your table of contents in boxes.
.................................................................................Page
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS. . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . .
|
iii |
ABSTRACT . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . .. . . .. . . . . .
|
iv |
LIST OF TABLES . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . .. . . . . . . .
|
vi |
LIST OF FIGURES. . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . .
. . . . .. . . . . . .
|
vii |
CHAPTER. . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . .
|
|
1. INTRODUCTION. . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . .. . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
|
1 |
Subheadings . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
|
2 |
2. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODOLOGY. .
. . . . . . . . . . . .. . .
|
5 |
3. ANALYSIS. . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
|
10 |
BIBLIOGRAPHY. . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . .
. . . . . . . . .
|
20 |
APPENDIX. . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . .. . . ..
|
|
A. PILOT STUDY DATA AND MATERIALS. .
. . . . . . . . . . . .. .. .. . .
|
25 |
B. DIRECTIONS AND PROCEDURES OF
EXPERIMENTAL STUDY. . . .
. . . . . . . . . .
|
28 |
LIST OF TABLES
1. Amino Acid
Composition. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . .
|
7 |
2. Comparison of
Absorbencies of Dye Solutions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . ..
|
24 |
3. Funny Molecule Drawing
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . .
|
27 |
Dedication
This
dissertation is dedicated to my mother and father
who provided
both emotional and financial support
(This page is
optional)
CHAPTER ONE
INTRODUCTION
This may or may not be Chapter 1. Regardless of whether it is
called Chapter 1 or simply INTRODUCTION, the text begins on page
1 and is so numbered.
There are a variety of methods of dividing the paper. Students
should decide on a style to follow such as Turabian, Chicago Manual
of Style, WSU Thesis, APA Thesis, etc. The important thing is to
remain consistent throughout the entire ER.
May
be included if you need an introduction more extensive than that
presented in the actual journal manuscript.
CHAPTER TWO
ENGINEERING REPORT FORMAT NOTES
100% Cotton Bond Paper
The
Engineering Report, on 100% cotton bond paper, must be
submitted to Engineering and Technology Management Program five working days
following your final examination. 100% cotton bond paper refers to
the fiber content of the paper. Al paper which is 100% cotton can
be identified by holding the sheet of paper up to the light --
there must be water mark on the paper indicating "100%".
Please make sure that each and every sheet in your 100%
cotton bond set is on 100% cotton bond. Make sure that your
signature page is on 100% cotton bond with original signatures
in black ink. You may either copy onto the 100% cotton paper or
you may type directly onto the 100% cotton.
Style/Format of Manuscripts
Any
standard format such as A Manual of Style or Turabian, etc.
which is approved by your Committee is acceptable. Do not mix
styles; consistency throughout your manuscripts is essential.
Corrections
Strikeovers or noticeable corrections are not permitted. Use of any
cover-up or whitening substance (e.g., Liquid Paper, Snopake, etc.)
is not acceptable.
Page Numbers
The
page number is the only item designed to extend into the (minimum)
1 inch margins, however, there must still be a minimum 3/4" margin
around the page number. Placement of page numbers must be
consistent throughout the paper. You may number the pages in the
upper right header or centered footer. Each and every page must
be assigned a page number. On the title and half-title pages,
the number is not shown but must be accounted for.
Preliminary pages (abstract, acknowledgments, table of contents,
etc., are numbered with lower case Roman numerals (e.g., i, ii,
iii, iv, v, vi). The text beginning with the Introduction (the
first page which follows your "Dedication") is numbered with Arabic
numerals and always begins with page 1.
No Duplexing
The
entire ER must be printed or copied on one side only.
Duplexing or front and back copying is not allowed.
Binding
The
ER which is to be turned in to the Engineering and Technology Management Program
may be loose copy.
Fonts
The
font must be consistent throughout your pager. The finished ERs
must appear to have been prepared on one machine. Some exceptions
will be made for computer generated graphics and tables where it is
not possible to match fonts exactly.
If
you plan to use a dot matrix printer, please have a sample sheet
approved by your committee chair.
Handwriting
Handwriting is not acceptable in your ER (except in the Appendix).
Any graphics, drawings, figure labels, etc. must be generated by
computer, typewriter, Kroy lettering, or professional draftsperson.
Photographs
Photographs should be neatly mounted on the appropriate paper.
Please use a permanent adhesive such as Scotch Photomount Spray or
rubber cement. The adhesive must be spread on the entire surface.
There may not be any loose edges or corners.
APPENDIX
(This is a sample of a half-title page.
No page number is typed, but one is accounted for. It may be
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