Student industry projects

We invite proposals from industry for final year projects.

These projects offer an excellent opportunity to get access to top potential future graduate employees that already have some understanding of your company.

The projects can be viewed as a chance to propose a non-critical design challenge and see if the students can help you out.

It is expected that projects will offer sufficient scope for students to further develop their skills in design, building and testing of hardware as well as software systems to meet target specifications of the project. However, keep in mind that, while these are excellent students, they are yet to complete their engineering course and still have much to learn.

All students majoring in Electrical and Electronic Engineering (EEE) at the University of Melbourne are required to undertake a Capstone Project in their final year of study. Industry-based projects are conducted in small teams (typically two or three students) under the supervision of an industry supervisor and a member of academic staff. Projects are undertaken over a full academic year (March-October) and count as 25% of a full-time workload during this time, with some breaks for examinations and non-teaching periods. Facilities and resources are provided by the Department although use of industry facilities is encouraged. An agreement is entered into at the start of the project that assigns all project Intellectual Property (IP) to the industry partner. At the end of the project, the students will produce a written report, an oral report and a presentation at the end-of-year public exhibition, known as Endeavour.

Industry engagement in capstone projects

The Department of Electrical and Electronic Engineering welcomes engineers from industry who are interested in supporting the department’s capstone project program by supervising industry-based projects. This document is aimed at facilitating potential industry supervisors to propose projects that would be suitable for inclusion in the Capstone Project program. It describes the student academic background, laboratory facilities, supervision arrangements, assessment procedures, intellectual property agreements and EHS requirements of the program.

Project proposals

Industry engineers wishing to propose projects should put together a written proposal of about 150 words, indicating the main objectives. It should describe the proposed location of practical work. Work may be conducted at the engineer’s company facilities; however, the location should be within reasonable commuting distance from the university. Alternatively, work can be done at the University, or some combination of the two locations. The project description should aim to attract student interest, since students will be selecting projects according to their interests. If knowledge of a particular technical area is required, the proposal can state these; optionally, projects can stipulate pre-requisite (or co-requisite) subjects that are required for eligibility.

Example projects

Descriptions of current projects can be viewed on the Endeavour website.

Submit a project proposal

If you would like to propose a project, please complete and return the project proposal form:

Capstone project prosposal form (DOC 34.0 KB)

An academic staff member will get in touch with you to discuss the project and seek an academic staff member to co-supervise the project with you.

Co-supervision and time commitment

All industry projects will have a co-supervisor from the department’s academic staff. Industry engineers are welcome to approach staff members directly with a view to arranging co-supervision of their project. The subject coordinators are also available to facilitate the process of matching up industry supervisors with academic supervisors. Normally, supervisors meet with their students on a weekly basis during the Semester 1 and 2 teaching period, typically for a half-to-one hour meeting.

Student academic background

The capstone project students cohort will involve students taking the subject either in the final year of a four year Bachelor of Engineering (BE) degree or the final year of a two year Masters of Engineering (ME). All students will be enrolled in the subject ELEN 90067 Electrical Engineering Capstone Project.

Eligibility requirements are such that the students must have completed all, or nearly all, the relevant Electrical and Electronic Engineering subjects required at the penultimate year of their degree (third year for the BE students, first year for ME students). The ME students will generally have a stronger technical background.

A list of projects is provided to students who will be undertaking the Capstone Project in the following year. Students are required to form themselves into groups, which may vary in size from two to four students. Allocation of students to projects is made by students submitting their list of preferred projects, and the allocation of projects to students is based on academic merit, with higher ranked groups (based on GPA of Electrical and Electronic Engineering subjects at the penultimate year level) receiving preferential allocation to projects.

Budget

Each student is given a notional allocation of $130 towards cost of components and PCB manufacturing. For example, if there are three students in a group then $390 is available. Any expenditure above this allocation is to be met either by the students or the sponsors of the project.

Laboratory facilities at the Faculty of Engineering and Information Technology

The students work on their projects in the Design and Build Laboratory in the Old Engineering Building.

Facilities available to students include:

  • Workbench — equipped with a standard set of equipment:
    • Networked PC + monitor
    • Oscilloscope (Agilent 4-channel MSO3014As mixed analog-digital oscilloscope and built-in function generator)
    • Function generator
    • Dual variable 0-30V DC power supply
  • Additional bench equipment on request — oscilloscopes, function generators, spectrum analysers, power supplies, multimeters, high precision LCR meters, logic analysers, arbitrary waveform generators etc. — equipment that is commonly found in an electronics workshop/laboratory.
  • Soldering stations — standard and surface mount, plus fume extraction/filtration and relevant accessories.
  • A stock of a wide range of electronic components (resistors, capacitors, ICs including ATMEGA and PIC chips), connectors, and other related items such as breadboards, veroboards, J-TAG programmers, etc.
  • Toolboxes of standard tools (such as pliers, screwdriver sets, chip extractors, etc)
  • Dual and multi-layer Printed Circuit Board (PCB) development software (Altium) on all PCs in the lab, with the manufacture of such PCBs outsourced.
  • Hand tools such as hand saws, hand-held drills, hammers, etc., and a range of nuts/bolts/nails/etc for students to build simple mechanical contraptions or modify off-the-shelf enclosures
  • Access to experienced technical staff members (electronics technicians, fitter & turners, CNC machinists, welders) and a fully equipped and stocked Engineering Workshop for the design & fabrication of more complex/elaborate items.

Timelines

Indicative timelines for project proposals and allocation of projects are:

September–October

Subject Coordinators call for projects from academics and industry.

Mid-November

Project list released to the student group.

Late-December

Closing Date for students to submit their project application forms.

Late January

Project allocations finalised and released to students. Students contact supervisors, set up informal meetings, begin reading plans.

Early March

Semester 1 commences, students given access to the D & B laboratory, start work!

October–early November

Preliminary project report due, Oral Examination, Endeavour Exhibition, final report due.

Mid–Late November

All assessment reports completed, project examiners meeting to finalise grades.

Intellectual Property Agreement

A formal agreement about the ownership of intellectual property and other aspects of the projects will need to be signed by the industry partner and the university.

Vocation placement agreement (DOC 125.0 KB)

EHS requirements

When student project teams are based on the university premises, the academic supervisor shall assume the responsibility for all EHS matters. When students are completing work as part of the project on the premises of the industry partner, it is expected that there will be a nominated supervisor who will be responsible for EHS matters.

Further information

More detailed information about the Capstone Projects is available from any of the following staff members:

Associate Professor Marcus Brazil
Capstone Project Subject Coordinator
Phone: +61 3 8344 3829
Email: brazil@unimelb.edu.au

Prof Elaine Wong
Capstone Project Subject Coordinator
Phone: +61 3 8344 0238
Email: ewon@unimelb.edu.au