1. BRIEF
This work is to be carried out individually, both tasks to be
completed by all students. Part A and Part B have equal marks
allocated.
Part A:
The subject development relates to the construction of 18 timber
framed homes in Manchester, see details in the appendix below
and at URL:
http://www.hdawards.org/archive/2011/winning_schemes/projec
t_winners/new_is lington.php
Produce a production method statement for the construction of
the 18 houses, see below and the appendix for details. The
method statement should contain all construction process
matters and should have a strong emphasis on health and safety,
environmental concerns and innovative production processes. A
cost for the houses is not required. The method statement should
not be a site health and safety plan and it should not be a site
waste management plan, however it may make reference to
these two documents.
The method statement should be in written report form; however
it may contain sketches, calculations and other techniques for
explaining the method of operations. Research should be carried
out on best production practices and Harvard referencing should
be used to cite all sources. The word count for the method
statement should be 3000 plus or minus 200 words.
1
For details on Harvard referencing see the Study Skills tab on
the Blackboard home page.
Part B:
A production time schedule (programme) is needed for the
development.
Your work should include:
a) A production time schedule using Microsoft Project, note that
the schedule (programme) will be scrutinized as both a Gantt
chart and a network
b) Resources needed to construct the 18 house, resources should
be labour, plant, major materials, management but no costs
The production schedule can be completed for individual houses
or for blocks of houses. As a guide 50 trade activities per house
can be taken as a minimum number of activities.
The plot of land that the houses are to be built on has been
cleared and remediated by others, therefore the work will not
involve any soil/land movement/work, demolition or ground
remediation. Your schedule should include roads and sewers
and all mains services will be required.
Concrete strip foundations will support masonry walls up to
ground level. There will be a ground bearing concrete ground
floor slab. A timber frame built in panels will include the inner
skin of the external wall, main internal walls and the roof
skeleton. The external skin will be masonry, with either a facing
brick or render finish. The roof finish will be interlocking clay
tiles on timber battens on sarking felt. Internally all finishes are
traditional with wall finishes of water based paint on a plaster
skim on plasterboard sheets, fixed to timber framing by drywall
screws. Assume that the houses once complete, will be ready for
occupation.
IMPORTANT NOTE
The site is a live site and students
MUST NOT
approach the site or the project
team (designers, clients, contractors) with requests for
information or site visits.
2
2. SUBMISSION REQUIREMENTS
FORMAT
All submissions should have a cover sheet identifying the
module, the date and
the student’s name and roll number. In addition to the in
-text citations, all submissions shall have a reference list (and
an optional bibliography), listing the sources used in the
preparation of the report. [The School has adopted the Harvard
system (APA 6th) as standard
LENGTH
The word count for the method statement should be 3000 plus or
minus 200 words excluding references, bibliography, cover
sheet or appendices (if any).
SUBMISSION
This assignment MUST be submitted electronically through
Turnitin®
Further information and support for students using Turnitin can
be found here:
http://www.salford.ac.uk/library/help/blackboard-and-
collaborate
3. ASSESSMENT CRITERIA Method Statement
Technology (25%):
The method statement should be well presented and should
cover all construction production aspects. It should have
Harvard referencing to support the research and any reference to
external documents. It should record how all the key tasks will
be achieved and reveal the overall site strategy, which will be
used in producing the programme (Part B).
Health and Safety (20%):
The method statement should have health and safety,
environment and innovation throughout to support best
construction practice. You may wish to identify site wide
processes, rather than include these items with every task
method.
Programme and Resource analysis-
Programme (25%):
The method statement must support the programme and the
programme should be demonstrably formulated as a result of the
method statement. The network should show a logical flow of
activities with an appropriate critical path. The programme
should be well presented with clear descriptions; activities
should be of appropriate duration with all logic linked arrows in
place
Resource Allocation (20%):
All resources should be identified and should be summarized,
either on the programme or by separate resource histograms.
Every attempt should be made to resolve resource conflict
issues, whilst taking care to ensure economy of use. E.g.
scaffold use.
3
Presentation (10%)
Including use of language, clarity of expression, diagrams;
structure of response and consistent use of Harvard referencing
system
MARKING SCALE
At Undergraduate Level 4, 5 and 6 the following marking scale
shall be used:
Outstanding Excellent Very good Good
Fair
Adequate Unsatisfactory Poor
Very poor Extremely poor
LEARNING OUTCOMES ADDRESSED
90%
–
100% 80%
–
89% 70%
–
79% 60%
–
69% 50%
–
59% 40%
–
49% 30%
–
39% 20%
–
29% 10%
–
19%
0%
–
9%
Knowledge and Understanding
On successful completion of the assignment a student will be
able to:
Scrutinise the operation of a variety of construction processes
and make appropriate selections for specific projects.
Select, plan, record and organise construction activities to meet
project goals
Make informed selections of, and practically apply, appropriate
planning techniques for a variety of construction processes
Consider and select construction resources appropriate for
activities, select suitable control techniques and have an
understanding of their impact on the project.
Identify and carefully review how environmental considerations
impact on construction projects.
Transferable/Key Skills and other attributes
On successful completion of theassignment a student will have
had the opportunity to:
Identify and select appropriate solutions for the planning of a
range of construction situations
Identify and develop individual tasks within a project
Sort and sequence tasks into practical construction process
arrangements
Prepare time-based schedules of tasks using a variety of
planning
techniques
Apply resource constraints and calculate their impact on
projects
Take account of environmental and other constraints on the
planning
process
4
Effectively communicate planning outputs to others
5. RETURN & FEEDBACK ARRANGEMENTS
Coursework marks and feedback will be available within 15
working days of your submission and will be loaded into
Blackboard.
IMPORTANT INFORMATION I. OBLIGATION TO KEEP
COPIES OF ALL WORK
Students MUST keep a spare copy of all work which they hand
in as well as the receipt which is issued to them at the time of
submission.
II. PROVISIONAL NATURE OF MARKS & GRADES
All marks and grades issued to students are provisional until
ratified by examination boards.
III. LAST DATE FOR SUBMISSIONS
Submissions made after 16:00hrs on the fourth working day
following submission will be deemed inadmissible and recorded
as a non-submission.
IV. ELECTRONIC SUBMISSIONS
If the submission document file up-loaded to Blackboard is
corrupt and cannot be viewed - This is
classed as a NON submission
. It is the responsibility of the student to ensure their
submission material can be opened by others.
To ensure your submission can be opened please follow this
simple step:
Go back to the submission area and the blue button that was
labelled Submit will now be a button labelled View
–
select this button and what you see upon doing so will be the
file/format that your Lecturer can see. If you can open and view
the document then so can the lecturer.
V. PENALTIES FOR LATE SUBMISSION
5
Where coursework is submitted late, the following penalties
shall be applied to the mark:
(a) if the work is no more than four working days late, then five
marks shall be deducted for each working day (08:30-16:00
Mon- Thursday or part thereof) , but if the work would
otherwise pass then the mark for the work shall be reduced to
no lower than the pass mark for the component
(b) if the work is no more than four working days late and
marked and the mark is lower than the pass mark, then no
penalty shall be applied;
(c) if the work is more than four working days late then it
cannot be submitted and shall be recorded as a non-submission
(NS).
VI. ACADEMIC MISCONDUCT
The University takes a serious view of all acts of academic
misconduct. Such acts are considered dishonest and as attempts
to gain unfair advantage. Acts of academic misconduct can take
many forms. They are likely to fall into one or more of the
following categories:
a) Plagiarism
Plagiarism involves taking the work of another person or
source and using
it as if it were one’s own.
b) Self plagiarism
Self plagiarism (or double submission) is resubmitting
previously submitted work on one or more occasions (without
proper acknowledgement). This may take the form of copying
either the whole piece of work or part of it. Normally credit will
already have been given for this work.
c) Collusion
Collusion occurs when, unless with official approval (e.g. in
the case of group projects), two or more students consciously
collaborate in the preparation and production of work which is
ultimately submitted by each in an identical, or substantially
similar, form and/or is represented by each to be the product of
his or her individual efforts. Collusion also occurs where there
is unauthorised co-operation between a student and another
person in the preparation and production of work which is
presented
as
the student’s own.
d) Falsifying experimental or other investigative results
This could involve a range of things that make it appear that
information has been collected by scientific investigation, the
compilation of questionnaire results etc whereas in reality it has
been made up or altered to provide a more favourable result.
6
e) f)
Taking unauthorised material (including electronic devices) into
an examination
Contracting another to write a piece of assessed work / Writing
a piece of assessed work for another
This involves any means whereby a person does work on behalf
of another. It includes assessments done for someone else in full
or in part by a fellow student, a friend or family member. It
includes sitting an examination for someone else. It also covers
obtaining material from
internet ‘cheat sites’ or other sources of work. Penalties for this
type of
unfair means will normally apply both to a student of the
University who does work on behalf of another and a student of
the University who has work done for him/her.
Copying from, or communicating with, another examination
candidate during an examination
Bribery
This involves giving money, gifts or any other advantage to an
academic member of staff which is intended to give an unfair
advantage in an assessment exercise.
Particular care should be taken in respect of the following:
Getting help from others / helping others
g) h)
VII.
a)
Students are encouraged to discuss and share ideas and
information, however those who knowingly assist others to
commit academic misconduct whether or not for payment (e.g.
by giving another student the opportunity to copy part or all of
a piece of work, by providing copies of assessments or by
providing bespoke assignments to another student) will be
subject to the same penalties as those who use unfair means.
Students must ensure that they protect their own work, submit it
themselves and do not allow other students to use their memory
stick and/or print off work on their behalf.
b) Use of Readers/Note Takers
Students with special learning requirements who require the
services of readers or note takers are advised to use
appropriately trained individuals. Further advice can be
obtained from the Disability Service Team within Student Life
Directorate.
http://www.advice.salford.ac.uk/disability
c)
Referencing
Students using work which has been produced by other people
within an assignment will need to ensure that they acknowledge
or reference the source of the work. Students should check with
their Schools for particular requirements. Marks may be
deducted for poor referencing. If poor referencing is extensive
throughout a piece of work it could appear that the student is
trying to claim credit
7
for the work and he/she may be deemed to have committed
plagiarism. Guidance on good referencing practice is available
from Schools or may be provided through research training
programmes, the Study Skills Programme located in Student
Life and on-line guidance provided by Information & Learning
Services. Some useful resources are:
http://www.advice.salford.ac.uk/
Penalties
If satisfied that unfair means has occurred, a penalty will be
imposed on the student. Penalties vary depending on whether
the matter is referred to the School Academic Misconduct Panel
or the University Disciplinary Committee and on the particular
circumstances. A range of penalties may be imposed including:
-
A penalty of 0% for the assessment
component
attempted using unfair means;
-
A penalty of 0% for the
module
affected by unfair means;
-
A penalty of 0% for the
module
affected by unfair means and the marks of
all other modules at that academic level
being capped at the pass mark
(40% for undergraduates, 50% for post graduates).
In the most severe cases, where there are aggravating factors
(e.g. that this is a repeated case of the use of unfair means by a
student at an advanced stage in their studies), a student found
guilty of using unfair means may be
permanently expelled from the University.
Further details of the Academic Misconduct procedure are
available from:
http://www.governance.salford.ac.uk/page/student_policies
Pre-submission checklist
Before submitting your assessment; ask yourself the following
questions, just to
be sure you’ve met all the requirements:
Have I correctly referenced all the sources which I have used?
Have I used Turnitin to check my referencing and bibliography
so that my
tutor knows where I have found all my information?
Have I completed the assignment within the word limit and/or
stated my
word count?
Have I used a spell checker and proof read my work?

More Related Content

DOCX
1 University of Salford School of Built Environ.docx
DOCX
School of the Built Environment BSc (Hons) Construction Project Ma.docx
DOCX
University of SalfordSchool of Built Environment BSc A.docx
DOCX
University of SalfordSchool of Built Environment BSc Archite.docx
DOCX
Built Environment BSc Architectural Design & Technology BSc Buildi.docx
PDF
Building Materials Course outline
PDF
Module outline enbe dmz 29012015 jan2015
PDF
Module outline enbe dmz 06082015 july2015
1 University of Salford School of Built Environ.docx
School of the Built Environment BSc (Hons) Construction Project Ma.docx
University of SalfordSchool of Built Environment BSc A.docx
University of SalfordSchool of Built Environment BSc Archite.docx
Built Environment BSc Architectural Design & Technology BSc Buildi.docx
Building Materials Course outline
Module outline enbe dmz 29012015 jan2015
Module outline enbe dmz 06082015 july2015

Similar to 1. BRIEF This work is to be carried out individually, both tasks t.docx (20)

PDF
ENBE MODULE OUTLINE
PDF
Module outline enbe dmz 29012015 jan2015
PDF
Module outline enbe dmz 29012015 jan2015
PDF
Module outline enbe dmz 29012015 jan2015
PDF
Module outline enbe dmz 29012015 jan2015
PDF
ENBE Module brief
PDF
ENBE Module Outline
PDF
ENBE Module Outline
PDF
Module outline enbe dmz 29012015 jan2015
PDF
ENBE Module Outline 0115
PDF
ENBE Module Outline
PDF
Module outline enbe
PDF
FNBE 0115 - ENBE MODULE OUTLINE
PDF
Module outline enbe dmz 29012015 jan2015
PDF
Module outline enbe dmz 29012015 jan2015
PDF
Module outline enbe
PDF
ENBE Module outline
PDF
Module outline building services august 2015(lecturer)
PDF
Building materials module outline
PDF
Enbe module outline
ENBE MODULE OUTLINE
Module outline enbe dmz 29012015 jan2015
Module outline enbe dmz 29012015 jan2015
Module outline enbe dmz 29012015 jan2015
Module outline enbe dmz 29012015 jan2015
ENBE Module brief
ENBE Module Outline
ENBE Module Outline
Module outline enbe dmz 29012015 jan2015
ENBE Module Outline 0115
ENBE Module Outline
Module outline enbe
FNBE 0115 - ENBE MODULE OUTLINE
Module outline enbe dmz 29012015 jan2015
Module outline enbe dmz 29012015 jan2015
Module outline enbe
ENBE Module outline
Module outline building services august 2015(lecturer)
Building materials module outline
Enbe module outline
Ad

More from corbing9ttj (20)

DOCX
1. Is a smile a universal nonverbal form of communication Why or wh.docx
DOCX
1. IntroductionWritten and Narrated by Professor Deni ElliottThe.docx
DOCX
1. IntroductionThe objective of this video is to introduce studen.docx
DOCX
1. In the following sentence, which words are used as adjectivesT.docx
DOCX
1. In the song Tonight from the musical West Side Story, the compo.docx
DOCX
1. IT Diffusion Models Please respond to the followingReview th.docx
DOCX
1. In many ways the underworld was considered dangerous, but there w.docx
DOCX
1. In Jules Henry’s view, how are values and drives related to e.docx
DOCX
1. If I wanted to test a certain chemical to see if it made mice run.docx
DOCX
1. Identify a community or aggregate you are currently involved wi.docx
DOCX
1. Identify and describe the steps of the scientific method. Which o.docx
DOCX
1. How many time zones are there across the world2. Which map wou.docx
DOCX
1. How has society responded to coastal changes initiated by sand tr.docx
DOCX
1. How has the economic geography of this region changed over the .docx
DOCX
1. Important nurses of the 19th century are often overshadowed by Ni.docx
DOCX
1. In what ways did the Columbian Exchange impact the Americas, .docx
DOCX
1. How did the conditions of life among descendants of African Slave.docx
DOCX
1. If you adopt the _______ perspective, youll reject an emphasis o.docx
DOCX
1. How are information systems transforming business and what is the.docx
DOCX
1. How can Fiedlers theory of the least preferred coworker help man.docx
1. Is a smile a universal nonverbal form of communication Why or wh.docx
1. IntroductionWritten and Narrated by Professor Deni ElliottThe.docx
1. IntroductionThe objective of this video is to introduce studen.docx
1. In the following sentence, which words are used as adjectivesT.docx
1. In the song Tonight from the musical West Side Story, the compo.docx
1. IT Diffusion Models Please respond to the followingReview th.docx
1. In many ways the underworld was considered dangerous, but there w.docx
1. In Jules Henry’s view, how are values and drives related to e.docx
1. If I wanted to test a certain chemical to see if it made mice run.docx
1. Identify a community or aggregate you are currently involved wi.docx
1. Identify and describe the steps of the scientific method. Which o.docx
1. How many time zones are there across the world2. Which map wou.docx
1. How has society responded to coastal changes initiated by sand tr.docx
1. How has the economic geography of this region changed over the .docx
1. Important nurses of the 19th century are often overshadowed by Ni.docx
1. In what ways did the Columbian Exchange impact the Americas, .docx
1. How did the conditions of life among descendants of African Slave.docx
1. If you adopt the _______ perspective, youll reject an emphasis o.docx
1. How are information systems transforming business and what is the.docx
1. How can Fiedlers theory of the least preferred coworker help man.docx
Ad

Recently uploaded (20)

DOCX
Cambridge-Practice-Tests-for-IELTS-12.docx
PPTX
Chinmaya Tiranga Azadi Quiz (Class 7-8 )
PDF
Chinmaya Tiranga quiz Grand Finale.pdf
PDF
My India Quiz Book_20210205121199924.pdf
PDF
Hazard Identification & Risk Assessment .pdf
PDF
What if we spent less time fighting change, and more time building what’s rig...
PPTX
202450812 BayCHI UCSC-SV 20250812 v17.pptx
PPTX
History, Philosophy and sociology of education (1).pptx
PDF
Uderstanding digital marketing and marketing stratergie for engaging the digi...
PPTX
Introduction to pro and eukaryotes and differences.pptx
PDF
Trump Administration's workforce development strategy
PDF
BP 704 T. NOVEL DRUG DELIVERY SYSTEMS (UNIT 2).pdf
PDF
IGGE1 Understanding the Self1234567891011
PDF
HVAC Specification 2024 according to central public works department
PDF
ChatGPT for Dummies - Pam Baker Ccesa007.pdf
PPTX
B.Sc. DS Unit 2 Software Engineering.pptx
PDF
Practical Manual AGRO-233 Principles and Practices of Natural Farming
PDF
FOISHS ANNUAL IMPLEMENTATION PLAN 2025.pdf
PDF
International_Financial_Reporting_Standa.pdf
PDF
Paper A Mock Exam 9_ Attempt review.pdf.
Cambridge-Practice-Tests-for-IELTS-12.docx
Chinmaya Tiranga Azadi Quiz (Class 7-8 )
Chinmaya Tiranga quiz Grand Finale.pdf
My India Quiz Book_20210205121199924.pdf
Hazard Identification & Risk Assessment .pdf
What if we spent less time fighting change, and more time building what’s rig...
202450812 BayCHI UCSC-SV 20250812 v17.pptx
History, Philosophy and sociology of education (1).pptx
Uderstanding digital marketing and marketing stratergie for engaging the digi...
Introduction to pro and eukaryotes and differences.pptx
Trump Administration's workforce development strategy
BP 704 T. NOVEL DRUG DELIVERY SYSTEMS (UNIT 2).pdf
IGGE1 Understanding the Self1234567891011
HVAC Specification 2024 according to central public works department
ChatGPT for Dummies - Pam Baker Ccesa007.pdf
B.Sc. DS Unit 2 Software Engineering.pptx
Practical Manual AGRO-233 Principles and Practices of Natural Farming
FOISHS ANNUAL IMPLEMENTATION PLAN 2025.pdf
International_Financial_Reporting_Standa.pdf
Paper A Mock Exam 9_ Attempt review.pdf.

1. BRIEF This work is to be carried out individually, both tasks t.docx

  • 1. 1. BRIEF This work is to be carried out individually, both tasks to be completed by all students. Part A and Part B have equal marks allocated. Part A: The subject development relates to the construction of 18 timber framed homes in Manchester, see details in the appendix below and at URL: http://www.hdawards.org/archive/2011/winning_schemes/projec t_winners/new_is lington.php Produce a production method statement for the construction of the 18 houses, see below and the appendix for details. The method statement should contain all construction process matters and should have a strong emphasis on health and safety, environmental concerns and innovative production processes. A cost for the houses is not required. The method statement should not be a site health and safety plan and it should not be a site waste management plan, however it may make reference to these two documents. The method statement should be in written report form; however it may contain sketches, calculations and other techniques for explaining the method of operations. Research should be carried out on best production practices and Harvard referencing should be used to cite all sources. The word count for the method statement should be 3000 plus or minus 200 words. 1 For details on Harvard referencing see the Study Skills tab on the Blackboard home page. Part B: A production time schedule (programme) is needed for the development. Your work should include: a) A production time schedule using Microsoft Project, note that the schedule (programme) will be scrutinized as both a Gantt chart and a network
  • 2. b) Resources needed to construct the 18 house, resources should be labour, plant, major materials, management but no costs The production schedule can be completed for individual houses or for blocks of houses. As a guide 50 trade activities per house can be taken as a minimum number of activities. The plot of land that the houses are to be built on has been cleared and remediated by others, therefore the work will not involve any soil/land movement/work, demolition or ground remediation. Your schedule should include roads and sewers and all mains services will be required. Concrete strip foundations will support masonry walls up to ground level. There will be a ground bearing concrete ground floor slab. A timber frame built in panels will include the inner skin of the external wall, main internal walls and the roof skeleton. The external skin will be masonry, with either a facing brick or render finish. The roof finish will be interlocking clay tiles on timber battens on sarking felt. Internally all finishes are traditional with wall finishes of water based paint on a plaster skim on plasterboard sheets, fixed to timber framing by drywall screws. Assume that the houses once complete, will be ready for occupation. IMPORTANT NOTE The site is a live site and students MUST NOT approach the site or the project team (designers, clients, contractors) with requests for information or site visits. 2 2. SUBMISSION REQUIREMENTS FORMAT All submissions should have a cover sheet identifying the module, the date and the student’s name and roll number. In addition to the in -text citations, all submissions shall have a reference list (and an optional bibliography), listing the sources used in the
  • 3. preparation of the report. [The School has adopted the Harvard system (APA 6th) as standard LENGTH The word count for the method statement should be 3000 plus or minus 200 words excluding references, bibliography, cover sheet or appendices (if any). SUBMISSION This assignment MUST be submitted electronically through Turnitin® Further information and support for students using Turnitin can be found here: http://www.salford.ac.uk/library/help/blackboard-and- collaborate 3. ASSESSMENT CRITERIA Method Statement Technology (25%): The method statement should be well presented and should cover all construction production aspects. It should have Harvard referencing to support the research and any reference to external documents. It should record how all the key tasks will be achieved and reveal the overall site strategy, which will be used in producing the programme (Part B). Health and Safety (20%): The method statement should have health and safety, environment and innovation throughout to support best construction practice. You may wish to identify site wide processes, rather than include these items with every task method. Programme and Resource analysis- Programme (25%): The method statement must support the programme and the programme should be demonstrably formulated as a result of the method statement. The network should show a logical flow of activities with an appropriate critical path. The programme should be well presented with clear descriptions; activities should be of appropriate duration with all logic linked arrows in place
  • 4. Resource Allocation (20%): All resources should be identified and should be summarized, either on the programme or by separate resource histograms. Every attempt should be made to resolve resource conflict issues, whilst taking care to ensure economy of use. E.g. scaffold use. 3 Presentation (10%) Including use of language, clarity of expression, diagrams; structure of response and consistent use of Harvard referencing system MARKING SCALE At Undergraduate Level 4, 5 and 6 the following marking scale shall be used: Outstanding Excellent Very good Good Fair Adequate Unsatisfactory Poor Very poor Extremely poor LEARNING OUTCOMES ADDRESSED 90% – 100% 80% – 89% 70% – 79% 60% – 69% 50% – 59% 40% – 49% 30% – 39% 20% – 29% 10%
  • 5. – 19% 0% – 9% Knowledge and Understanding On successful completion of the assignment a student will be able to: Scrutinise the operation of a variety of construction processes and make appropriate selections for specific projects. Select, plan, record and organise construction activities to meet project goals Make informed selections of, and practically apply, appropriate planning techniques for a variety of construction processes Consider and select construction resources appropriate for activities, select suitable control techniques and have an understanding of their impact on the project. Identify and carefully review how environmental considerations impact on construction projects. Transferable/Key Skills and other attributes On successful completion of theassignment a student will have had the opportunity to: Identify and select appropriate solutions for the planning of a range of construction situations Identify and develop individual tasks within a project Sort and sequence tasks into practical construction process arrangements
  • 6. Prepare time-based schedules of tasks using a variety of planning techniques Apply resource constraints and calculate their impact on projects Take account of environmental and other constraints on the planning process 4 Effectively communicate planning outputs to others 5. RETURN & FEEDBACK ARRANGEMENTS Coursework marks and feedback will be available within 15 working days of your submission and will be loaded into Blackboard. IMPORTANT INFORMATION I. OBLIGATION TO KEEP COPIES OF ALL WORK Students MUST keep a spare copy of all work which they hand in as well as the receipt which is issued to them at the time of submission. II. PROVISIONAL NATURE OF MARKS & GRADES All marks and grades issued to students are provisional until ratified by examination boards. III. LAST DATE FOR SUBMISSIONS Submissions made after 16:00hrs on the fourth working day following submission will be deemed inadmissible and recorded as a non-submission. IV. ELECTRONIC SUBMISSIONS If the submission document file up-loaded to Blackboard is corrupt and cannot be viewed - This is classed as a NON submission . It is the responsibility of the student to ensure their submission material can be opened by others. To ensure your submission can be opened please follow this
  • 7. simple step: Go back to the submission area and the blue button that was labelled Submit will now be a button labelled View – select this button and what you see upon doing so will be the file/format that your Lecturer can see. If you can open and view the document then so can the lecturer. V. PENALTIES FOR LATE SUBMISSION 5 Where coursework is submitted late, the following penalties shall be applied to the mark: (a) if the work is no more than four working days late, then five marks shall be deducted for each working day (08:30-16:00 Mon- Thursday or part thereof) , but if the work would otherwise pass then the mark for the work shall be reduced to no lower than the pass mark for the component (b) if the work is no more than four working days late and marked and the mark is lower than the pass mark, then no penalty shall be applied; (c) if the work is more than four working days late then it cannot be submitted and shall be recorded as a non-submission (NS). VI. ACADEMIC MISCONDUCT The University takes a serious view of all acts of academic misconduct. Such acts are considered dishonest and as attempts to gain unfair advantage. Acts of academic misconduct can take many forms. They are likely to fall into one or more of the following categories: a) Plagiarism Plagiarism involves taking the work of another person or source and using it as if it were one’s own. b) Self plagiarism Self plagiarism (or double submission) is resubmitting previously submitted work on one or more occasions (without proper acknowledgement). This may take the form of copying
  • 8. either the whole piece of work or part of it. Normally credit will already have been given for this work. c) Collusion Collusion occurs when, unless with official approval (e.g. in the case of group projects), two or more students consciously collaborate in the preparation and production of work which is ultimately submitted by each in an identical, or substantially similar, form and/or is represented by each to be the product of his or her individual efforts. Collusion also occurs where there is unauthorised co-operation between a student and another person in the preparation and production of work which is presented as the student’s own. d) Falsifying experimental or other investigative results This could involve a range of things that make it appear that information has been collected by scientific investigation, the compilation of questionnaire results etc whereas in reality it has been made up or altered to provide a more favourable result. 6 e) f) Taking unauthorised material (including electronic devices) into an examination Contracting another to write a piece of assessed work / Writing a piece of assessed work for another This involves any means whereby a person does work on behalf of another. It includes assessments done for someone else in full or in part by a fellow student, a friend or family member. It includes sitting an examination for someone else. It also covers obtaining material from internet ‘cheat sites’ or other sources of work. Penalties for this type of unfair means will normally apply both to a student of the University who does work on behalf of another and a student of the University who has work done for him/her. Copying from, or communicating with, another examination
  • 9. candidate during an examination Bribery This involves giving money, gifts or any other advantage to an academic member of staff which is intended to give an unfair advantage in an assessment exercise. Particular care should be taken in respect of the following: Getting help from others / helping others g) h) VII. a) Students are encouraged to discuss and share ideas and information, however those who knowingly assist others to commit academic misconduct whether or not for payment (e.g. by giving another student the opportunity to copy part or all of a piece of work, by providing copies of assessments or by providing bespoke assignments to another student) will be subject to the same penalties as those who use unfair means. Students must ensure that they protect their own work, submit it themselves and do not allow other students to use their memory stick and/or print off work on their behalf. b) Use of Readers/Note Takers Students with special learning requirements who require the services of readers or note takers are advised to use appropriately trained individuals. Further advice can be obtained from the Disability Service Team within Student Life Directorate. http://www.advice.salford.ac.uk/disability c) Referencing Students using work which has been produced by other people within an assignment will need to ensure that they acknowledge or reference the source of the work. Students should check with their Schools for particular requirements. Marks may be deducted for poor referencing. If poor referencing is extensive throughout a piece of work it could appear that the student is trying to claim credit
  • 10. 7 for the work and he/she may be deemed to have committed plagiarism. Guidance on good referencing practice is available from Schools or may be provided through research training programmes, the Study Skills Programme located in Student Life and on-line guidance provided by Information & Learning Services. Some useful resources are: http://www.advice.salford.ac.uk/ Penalties If satisfied that unfair means has occurred, a penalty will be imposed on the student. Penalties vary depending on whether the matter is referred to the School Academic Misconduct Panel or the University Disciplinary Committee and on the particular circumstances. A range of penalties may be imposed including: - A penalty of 0% for the assessment component attempted using unfair means; - A penalty of 0% for the module affected by unfair means; - A penalty of 0% for the module affected by unfair means and the marks of all other modules at that academic level being capped at the pass mark (40% for undergraduates, 50% for post graduates). In the most severe cases, where there are aggravating factors (e.g. that this is a repeated case of the use of unfair means by a student at an advanced stage in their studies), a student found guilty of using unfair means may be permanently expelled from the University. Further details of the Academic Misconduct procedure are
  • 11. available from: http://www.governance.salford.ac.uk/page/student_policies Pre-submission checklist Before submitting your assessment; ask yourself the following questions, just to be sure you’ve met all the requirements: Have I correctly referenced all the sources which I have used? Have I used Turnitin to check my referencing and bibliography so that my tutor knows where I have found all my information? Have I completed the assignment within the word limit and/or stated my word count? Have I used a spell checker and proof read my work?