Showing posts with label Neumont projects. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Neumont projects. Show all posts

Monday, March 11, 2013

Neumont Student Project Reviews: Project Showcase




Congratulations, the quarter is almost over and now it’s time to show off what you’ve accomplished, and check out the exciting projects other students are working on, at Project Showcase.

WHEN: Friday, March 15, 2013, from 2:00 pm – 4:00 pm - Project classes have mandatory attendance for Project Showcase instead of in-class work.  Showcase set-up begins at 1:00 pm on Friday in Room 200. Real estate for presenting your projects is first-come, first-served and you will need to prepare a poster or sign of some sort to clearly highlight your project name.

Please check your registration confirmation carefully to ensure it is listed and correct.  No changes may be made to your project designation after Thursday at 3:00 pm, and no more entries into Showcase are allowed after 11:55 today – NO EXCEPTIONS.

TECHNICAL SUPPORT AND MATERIALS: If you require any special technical support or supplies, please email mwhite@student.neumont.edu by Wednesday at 5:00 pm.

NOTE: Project Showcase will be part of Neumont FReX 2013 (Freshmen Experience Weekend). Following Showcase there will be a gaming night on campus and a pie launching contest using trebuchets.  Join us for a night of fun, food, and new friends from 6:30 – 10:3 0 in Room 200 and the Gaming Chamber.

Thanks and Good Luck
 

Friday, August 10, 2012

Project Showcase, Friday September 14


Project Showcase - September 14th


Project Showcase is an excellent opportunity for you to show off projects, compete for awesome prizes, and get involved in a little friendly competition.  It’s time to submit your Intent to Participate Form to the reception desk on floor three.

Event Details 

  • When:  Friday, September 14, 2012, from 2:00 pm – 4:00 pm - Project classes have mandatory attendance for Project Showcase instead of in-class work.  Enterprise Projects students are required to participate and must submit an Intent to Participate Form signed by Charlotte Westphal (University Relations). 
  • Where:  Room 200         
  • Who:  The Showcase is open to all students, and prizes will be awarded in 100-Level, 200-Level, 300-Level, Independent, and Enterprise Project categories.  You may enter an individual or group project that was done in class or on your own – just get a faculty sponsor to sign off on your project.  Class-assigned projects that go above and beyond may be entered.  Friends, Family, Alumni, and Neumont Industry Partners are all welcome to attend Project Showcase. 
  • How:  Submit a Project Showcase Intent to Participate Form, signed by a faculty sponsor, by Friday, September 7th, to the reception desk on floor three.

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

Neumont Project Showcase - September 2011

It's August and that means Fall Project Showcase is just around the corner, check out this video from our past Project Showcase to get a feel for the event. 




What is Project Showcase?

Neumont University is TechTopia, a haven for the technologically savvy — and Project Showcase, the Neumont student review, held each year in Spring and Fall is the perfect place to get a glimpse of what that really means. 

Project Showcase is an excellent chance to tour the campus, meet current students, and find out more about life and learning at Neumont University -- walk through rows of student projects completed in student's 1st - 10th quarters, you can even check out some of the Enterprise Projects that haven't yet been released to the public.  And of course, at the end of it all, there's a massive LAN party in our new Gaming Chamber.  

So click that little "register" button down yonder (it’s free) and we’ll see you on September 16th.


Monday, June 6, 2011

Wall Street Journal - Industry Puts Heat on Schools to Teach the Tech Skills Employers Need

For years, Neumont has been saying that our curriculum bridges the gap between what traditional universities are teaching, and what industry is looking to hire.  And, today's Wall Street Journal pointed out the exact problem Neumont was designed in order to try to addess:

Wall Street Journal Education Section, June 6, 2011
James Hagerty

Industry Puts Heat on Schools to Teach the Tech Skills Employers Need


Big U.S. employers, worried about replacing retiring baby boomers, are wading deeper into education and growing bolder about telling educators how to run their business. Several initiatives have focused on manufacturing and engineering, fields where technical know-how and math and science skills are needed and where companies worry about recruiting new talent. Their concerns are borne out by the math and science test scores of 15-year-old students in the U.S., which continue to lag behind China, Japan, South Korea and Germany, for example.

Photo: Wall Street Journal, June 6, 2011

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce released a report in May that said higher education had failed to "tap the potential of digital technology" in ways that would "transform learning, dramatically lower costs or improve overall institutional productivity."The Chamber report praised Internet educational institutions like Khan Academy, which built its reputation on YouTube.com math lessons.

The National Association of Manufacturers is leading a drive, partly funded by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, to establish standardized curricula at community colleges across the U.S. with the goal of preparing students to qualify for certification in industrial skills ranging from welding to cutting metal and plastics.

The association isn't pushing for an end to liberal-arts education, but has said bright students should be encouraged to consider alternatives that lead directly to jobs. "We need to move aggressively to competency-based education" based on mastery of skills at the student's own pace, rather than on an accumulation of credit hours, said Emily DeRocco, president of the Manufacturing Institute, a research arm of the group.

One such employer effort is the National Math and Science Initiative, launched in 2007. The program, with $163 million of funding commitments from companies including Exxon Mobil Corp. as well as foundations and the federal government, trains math and science teachers and gives more high school students a chance to enroll in college-level courses.

Read the Complete Article

Competency based education is what Neumont University is all about, although mixed in with the standard General Education courses students would take at any bachelor's degree granting institution.  Students work in project groups and are graded on project outcomes . . . how well can you apply what you've learned into building a REAL technology solution.  This ensures that students have not only the necessary theoretical foundations of a topic, but the applied knowledge of how those theories can be used in Industry.  This unique approach is changing the way the nation's employers look at the crop of 2011 graduates, and is just one reason 100% of Neumont's 2010 graduates accepted offers in field within six months of graduation.

Sunday, May 15, 2011

Neumont XNA Games, Project-Based Learning at its best

On Friday, students in Jamie King and Aaron Reed's XNA development class demoed their first XNA projects.  


This project (Infinecraft), created by Eric Freeman, Adam Veldhousen Jefferson Louis Wagner Jr Barry Nix Nathan Cifuentes, features the students inaugural foray in 3D game development (after only a few weeks) and features original music by Eric Freeman. 


The object of the game is to get to the goal without touching the water.




This project (Starfox), created by Mark Hennessy and Joshua Klein, Chris Parton, and Nate Hunter  was also presented, after just four weeks of project work.

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