EE Guide - DT v1
EE Guide - DT v1
Guidelines
Group 4 - Design & Technology
2010 - 12
INTRODUCTION........................................................................................................3
INTRODUCTION........................................................................................................4
The extended essay is:..................................................................................................4
Aims..............................................................................................................................5
Assessment objectives..................................................................................................5
Responsibilities of the student......................................................................................5
Recommended: things to do..........................................................................................6
Recommended: things to avoid.....................................................................................7
If you want to use the hyperlinks in this document, you may download it from
the library website - http://bislib.wikispaces.com/Extended+Essay+Skills
Introduction
The extended essay is an in-depth study of a focused
topic chosen from the list of approved Diploma
Programme subjectsnormally one of the students six
chosen subjects for the IB diploma. It is intended to
promote high-level research and writing skills,
intellectual discovery and creativity. It provides
students with an opportunity to engage in personal
research in a topic of their own choice, under the
guidance of a supervisor (a teacher in the school).
This leads to a major piece of formally presented,
structured writing, in which ideas and findings are
communicated in a reasoned and coherent manner,
appropriate to the subject chosen. It is recommended
that completion of the written essay is followed by a
short, concluding interview, or viva voce, with the
supervisor.
The extended essay is assessed against common criteria, interpreted in ways appropriate to
each subject.
In the Diploma Programme, the extended essay is the prime example of a piece of work where
the student has the opportunity to show knowledge, understanding and enthusiasm about a
topic of his or her choice. In those countries where it is the norm for interviews to be required
prior to acceptance for employment or for a place at university, the extended essay has often
proved to be a valuable stimulus for discussion.
Aims
The aims of the extended essay are to provide students with the opportunity to:
pursue independent research on a focused topic
develop research and communication skills
develop the skills of creative and critical thinking
engage in a systematic process of research appropriate to the subject
experience the excitement of intellectual discovery.
Assessment objectives
In working on the extended essay, students are expected to:
1.
2.
3.
4.
plan and pursue a research project with intellectual initiative and insight
formulate a precise research question
gather and interpret material from sources appropriate to the research question
structure a reasoned argument in response to the research question on the basis of the
material gathered
5. present their extended essay in a format appropriate to the subject, acknowledging
sources in one of the established academic ways
6. use the terminology and language appropriate to the subject with skill and
understanding
7. apply analytical and evaluative skills appropriate to the subject, with an understanding
of the implications and the context of their research.
Note: material has different meanings in different subjects. It may be data from experiments,
information from interviews, or secondary sources from reading.
Recommended: things to do
Before starting work on the extended essay,
students should:
choose a new topic and a research question that can be answered if there is a problem
with the original topic
plagiarize
The more background a student has in the subject, the better the chance he or she
has of writing a good extended essay. Choosing to write the extended essay in a
subject that is not being studied as part of the Diploma Programme often leads to
lower marks.
Title page
Abstract
Contents page
Introduction
Body (development/methods/results)
Conclusion
References & bibliography
Appendices
Students should use the chosen system of academic referencing as soon as they
start writing (MLA is preferred by BIS). That way, they are less likely to forget to
include a citation. It is also easier than trying to add references at a later stage. Most modern
word processors are helpful with this. Some students draft the introduction first. If students
do that, they must be prepared to revise it once the essay is complete.
The main task is writing the body of the essay, which should be presented in the form
of a reasoned argument. The form of this varies with the subject of the essay but
(see subject section), as the argument develops, it should be clear to the reader what relevant
evidence has been discovered, where/how it has been discovered and how it supports the
argument. In most subjects, sub-headings within the main body of the essay will help the
reader to understand the argument (and will also help the student to keep on track).
Once the main body of the essay is complete, it is possible to finalize the introduction
(which tells the reader what to expect) and the conclusion (which says what has been
achieved, including notes of any limitations and any questions that have not been
resolved). Any information that is important to the argument should not be included in
appendices or footnotes/endnotes. The examiner is not bound to read notes or
appendices, so an essay that is not complete in itself will lose marks.
Students need to check that they have cited sources for all material that is not
their own, and that the citations are complete and consistent with the chosen
referencing system. The bibliography should list only the sources used in the essay. The
whole essay needs to be proofread carefully (computer spelling and grammar checkers are
useful but will not do everything). Pages must be numbered and the contents page must be
completed.
The abstract is normally written last.
8
Contents page
A contents page must be provided at the beginning of the extended essay and all pages
should be numbered. An index is not required.
Illustrations
Presentation and overall neatness are important, and it is essential that illustrative material, if
included, is well set out and used effectively. Graphs, diagrams, tables and maps are effective
only if they are clearly labelled and can be interpreted with ease. All such material that is
incorporated into the extended essay must be directly related to the text and acknowledged
where appropriate. The use of photographs and other images is acceptable only if they are
captioned and/or annotated and are used to illustrate a specific point made in the extended
essay.
Appendices, footnotes and endnotes
Appendices, footnotes and endnotes are not an essential section of the extended essay and
examiners are not required to read them, so care should be taken to include all information of
direct relevance to the analysis and argument in the main body of the essay. An essay that
attempts to evade the word limit by adding material in appendices risks losing marks under
several criteria. Unless considered essential, complete lists of raw data should not be included
in the extended essay. Students should not constantly refer to material presented in an
appendix as this may disrupt the continuity of the essay.
If you need more help writing, there are many writing guides on the library website:
http://bislib.wikispaces.com/Writing+Guides
The material gathered should be used in the essay in a logical order to create a strong
argument. Students should be prepared for things to go wrong. Sometimes they may
discover something later in the investigation that undermines their earlier work. If that
happens, the investigation plan needs to be revised with the supervisor.
11
12
Eldis
http://www.eldis.org/
Development & Environment news, dossiers on current issues, country profiles
Forced Migration Online
http://www.forcedmigration.org/
Refugees, health, education, human rights, etc - from Oxford University
Institute of historical research
http://www.history.ac.uk/projects/history-in-focus
Resources from their own history research, free online.
PsychWeb
http://www.psychwww.com/
A list of quality Psychology websites chosen by a professor in psychology.
VADS
http://www.vads.ac.uk/
A Visual arts & Design database. Contains pictures, weblinks and articles.
Sciences
Scirus
http://www.scirus.com/
Biggest science search on the internet. Searches journals & websites (websites are free).
arXiv.org
http://arxiv.org/
A Science & Maths database from Cornell University.
The national Digital Science Library
http://nsdl.org/search/
Aggregates documents from many other sources under one search engine
Loci
http://mathdl.maa.org/mathDL/23/
The Mathematical Association of America's online journal and collection of prize winning
articles.
LOC Virtual Reference Shelf
http://www.loc.gov/rr/askalib/virtualref.html#science
A list of free web resources that have been checked by science experts.
AMSER
http://amser.org/index.php?P=Home
A repository of maths documents for sharing.
14
Encyclopaedias
Also dont forget that the best overviews on a subject are always found in encyclopaedias.
Encyclopaedias are the best place to start research, but the worst place to finish it.
Encyclopedia.com
Columbia Encyclopedia, Oxfords World Encyclopaedia, Encyclopedia of World Biography and
Oxford Pocket Dictionary all in one place!
Magazines
Good quality news journals are a good source for your research, especially for current
information & trends. We have several good magazines available in the library, they cover:
science, economics, business, art, geography, history, and more. You can find them on display
in the library, or even better you can go to their websites and Google search all their past
issues for your topic. Go to this page for the addresses, passwords, etc:
http://bislib.wikispaces.com/Online+subscriptions
eBooks
Theres a lot of free books available on the internet. The advantage of an eBook is that you
can search all the text for your keywords, so its easy to find the sections you need.
Try these sites:
GoogleBooks
http://books.google.com/
Books available as full, preview, or no view. Select settings in the left column.
eScholarship Editions
http://publishing.cdlib.org/ucpressebooks/
Some pay per view, many free. Free books can be chosen as a browser setting when
searching.
Bartleby.com
http://www.bartleby.com/
Searchable library of full-text classic reference works, verse, fiction, and non-fiction.
Manybooks.net
http://manybooks.net/
This site offers free ebooks in many mobile formats.
Project Gutenberg
http://www.gutenberg.org/wiki/Main_Page
The first digital library of eBooks, offering more than 20,000 free public domain full-text
works.
15
What is referencing?
Referencing is a way of indicating to the reader where information has been obtained, and
provides all the information needed to find the source material. Usually the minimum
necessary is: author, date, and publisher. References must be given whenever someone elses
work, idea, or words, are quoted or summarized. References can come from many different
sources, including books, magazines, journals, newspapers, e-mails, Internet sites and
interviews. Internet references should include the web site address, the date it was accessed.
What is a bibliography?
A bibliography is an alphabetical list of every source used to research and write the essay.
Sources that are not cited in the body of the essay should not be included in the bibliography.
There are many different bibliography styles available, the only rule is that you must choose
one and use it throughout your essay; never change citation style half way. The school
supports any citation style but prefers MLA style.
What is a citation?
A citation is a short-hand method of making a reference in the body of an essay, which
provides enough information to find the full reference in the bibliography. Usually this is
author, date, and sometimes page number. The citation is short so as not to interfere with
ease of reading.
You must ensure that all ideas and evidence submitted are appropriately referenced
if they are not your own (i.e. come from researched sources). Every year students
fail to obtain their diploma because they have not fully
referenced their extended essay. It is vital that you do.
Go to the library website for tutorials, examples, and webguides that will help you write bibliographies:
http://bislib.wikispaces.com/Citation+%26+Bibliography
16
Achievement level
0
Comments
B: introduction
Descriptor
Little or no attempt is made to set the research question into context.
There is little or no attempt to explain the significance of the topic.
Achievement Level
0
Comments
C: investigation
Descriptor
There is little or no evidence that sources have been consulted or
data gathered, and little or no evidence of planning in the
investigation.
Achievement Level
0
Comments
Achievement Level
Comments
0
1
18
E: reasoned argument
Descriptor
There is no attempt to develop a reasoned argument in relation to
the research question.
Achievement Level
Comments
Ideas are presented clearly and in a logical and coherent manner. The
essay succeeds in developing a reasoned and convincing argument in
relation to the research question.
Achievement Level
0
Comments
Achievement Level
Comments
0
1
2
19
H: conclusion
Descriptor
Little or no attempt is made to provide a conclusion that is relevant to
the research question.
Achievement Level
0
Comments
I: formal presentation
Descriptor
Achievement Level
Comments
J: abstract
The requirements for the abstract are for it to state clearly the research question that was investigated, how the
investigation was undertaken and the conclusion(s) of the essay.
Descriptor
Achievement Level
Comments
The abstract exceeds 300 words or one or more of the required
0
elements of an abstract (listed above) is missing.
The abstract contains the elements listed above but they are not all
clearly stated.
K: holistic judgment
(Objective 1)
The purpose of this criterion is to assess the qualities that distinguish an essay from the average, such as
intellectual initiative, depth of understanding and insight. While these qualities will be clearly present in the best
work, less successful essays may also show some evidence of them and should be rewarded under this criterion.
Descriptor
Achievement Level
Comments
The essay shows no evidence of such qualities.
20
Subject:
Title / Question:
Secondary research (What secondary sources have you identified? How do they help you answer
your research question?)
Supervisor signature:
Date:
21
Choice of topic
The chosen topic must be clearly concerned with issues relating directly to the subject.
Where the topic may be approached from different viewpoints, the treatment must be
approached from a design technology perspective. Students are expected to be familiar with
the design cycle, as claried in the current Design technology guide.
Students are encouraged to select a topic that is appropriate to their interests and abilities,
and the resources available. They should avoid topics of a purely historical nature that merely
document the development of a product or technology.
Essays may focus on systems design rather than a specic product, for example:
investigating the labelling of chemicals in transit, from the point of view of provision for
dealing with accidents
investigating and implementing a system for reducing food wastage in a school/college
canteen
evaluating the feasibility of a combined heat and power scheme for a local community.
When choosing a topic for a design technology essay, students should start by exploring
appropriate design contexts. For example, it may be worth considering:
artifacts that do not work properly or seem wasteful of resources
the needs of particular user groups such as the elderly, inrm or disabled
new technologies and how they might inuence or combine with existing technologies.
It is essential that the topic chosen is appropriate for a design technology extended essay and
not merely a review of a technological product or technological development. Moreover, it may
help if the student further denes the topic chosen for study in the form of a research
question, followed by a statement of intent that indicates which broad process is going to be
used in answering the question. In this way, the approach to the topic chosen may be even
further claried. Some examples of this could be as follows.
Topic examples
Topic
Ergonomic design of telephones for the physically impaired
Research question
How have ergonomic factors been considered in the design of a new telephone for physically
impaired people?
Approach
22
An essay that considers how ergonomics can be used to improve the design of a new
telephone.
Topic
Bicycle design
Research question
Has the introduction of new materials improved the performance of modern racing bicycles?
Approach
An essay that examines the use of new materials in the design of bicycles and their
components.
Topic
Automated textile production
Research question
Does an automated textile process provide better-quality products than a mechanized
process?
Approach
An investigation into a specic automated textile production process.
23
24
Criterion H: conclusion
Consistent is the key word here: the conclusion should develop out of the argument and not
introduce new or extraneous matter. It should not repeat the material of the introduction;
rather, it should present a new synthesis in light of the discussion.
Criterion I: formal presentation
This criterion relates to the extent to which the essay conforms to academic standards about
the way in which research papers should be presented. The presentation of essays that omit a
bibliography or that do not give references for quotations is deemed unacceptable (level 0).
Essays that omit one of the required elementstitle page, table of contents, page numbers
are deemed no better than satisfactory (maximum level 2), while essays that omit two of
them are deemed poor at best (maximum level 1).
An extended essay in design technology lends itself to many forms of graphic presentation.
Most essays are enhanced by the use of charts, tables, technical drawings, sketches and
photographs. The graphical nature of many topics makes these essential.
Where possible, these should appear in the body of the essay, as close as possible to the
relevant text. Hand-drawn diagrams are acceptable. Raw data obtained through
experimentation, testing or surveys may be included within an appendix. Any material that is
not original must be acknowledged.
Criterion J: abstract
The abstract is judged on the clarity with which it presents an overview of the research and
the essay, not on the quality of the research question itself, nor on the quality of the argument
or the conclusions.
Criterion K: holistic judgment
The most successful essays contain original thoughts and ideas, demonstrating creativity and
innovation, normally resulting from practical activity. Outstanding essays demonstrate the
students ability to overcome and solve problems, and consider and evaluate a variety of
alternative solutions.
25