Team Name: ARID

 

Date established: 08/30/22

Last updated: 11/17/22


 

GOALS: What are our team goals for this project? 

What do we want to accomplish? What skills do we want to develop or refine?

  • Manage / stay on top of deadlines by outlining HW assignments in the Slack / Doc, using a calendar. 
  • Value all team members, their ideas, and experiences they bring.
    • Use bi-weekly check-ins to gauge member satisfaction and evaluate whether individual/personal metrics/goals are being met to gauge member satisfaction and evaluate whether individual/personal metrics/goals are being met.
  • A final prototype is achieved.
  • Submit a design.
  • Be better educated on the chosen field of study / market as well as bioengineering as a whole.
  • Improve skills such as:
    • Team dynamics/Communication/Collaboration
    • Stakeholder interviewing
    • Problem discovery 
    • Large dataset analysis
    • Teamwork strategies
    • Project management skills
    • Device fabrication
    • Device testing/analysis
  • Become friends 🙂
  • Get a good grade.
  • Be passionate about the project.
  • Write a research paper if time allows.
EXPECTATIONS: What do we expect of one another in regard to attendance at meetings, participation, frequency of communication, the quality of work, etc.?
  • Come to group having looked at the agenda for the upcoming meeting
  • Team meetings must be focused on action items that need to be completed as a team using something similar to a Gantt Chart and priority rankings.
  • Minimum # of hours for each member to spend outside of class for every 2 weeks: 8 hours 
  • Be thoughtful and respectful in presentations of ideas and of team member time 
    • Respectfully “call-out” folks who may be speaking for too long / provide opportunity for more-reserved members to articulate their opinions 
    • All team members must speak at least once in each discussion and will be moderated by the assistant facilitator 
  • Everyone should speak/present their thoughts on EACH discussion at least once
  • Participate in team working meetings outside of class during lunch on Wednesdays  
    • discuss schedules for the week ahead and communicate any foreseeable issues
  • If at a design block or are stuck, use the slack channel specific for design/technical issues (MATLAB, code issues, difficult diff eq) to reach out for help
    • Slack channels for subteams and/or project sub-groups
  • Deadline renegotiations, for when a member knows in advance of a deadline that they cannot complete a task → A week notice
    • Academic or athletic exceptions and conflicts (exams, projects) should be discussed at the time of setting the deadline
    • Consequences for repeated failures to meet deadlines
POLICIES & PROCEDURES: What rules can we agree on to help us meet our goals and expectations? 

  • Order of priority for decision making:
    • Majority rules
    • Consent-based
    • Ranked choice
Agendas/Minutes?

  • Before every meeting the scribe for that week provides a quick bulleted agenda for the day

Goal / Objective for Tuesday meetings: Discussion and Planning 

Assign tasks and goals for the intraweek period

Present a brief overview of progress made in lab, compare work accomplished with goals set in the previous week

Goal / Objective for Thursday meetings: Grunt work

  • Build sessions
  • Sub-team work
    • Make sure sub-groups are working on distinct modules of the same project. Either a point person or the team as a whole, lets sub-groups know what they should focus on during that week.
    • Point person of the sub-team must write documentation outlining work completed, work-in-progress, and next steps. Can be used for the purpose of helping folks catch up / stay up-to-date on what that subgroup is working on. 
      • Include documentation of both successful and developed ideas in addition to ideas discussed but not developed/cut
    • Rather than forced sub-team rotation, provide an opportunity for team members to rotate sub-teams should they choose
      • Rotating members take primary responsibility to catch themselves up on existing material using common documentation, meeting minutes, and records of design history
  • Group problem solving 
  • Discuss sub team challenges/problems if needed

Goal / Objective for Friday – Monday Period: 

  • Sub-groups and sub-systems must check-in during the interweek time 
    • If issues arise / are discovered in the sub-teams -> communicate to general Slack to get feedback before the weekend

Quality of work standard policy

  • Rushed work and poorly planned work can lead to poor quality work, but poor quality can also just occur during prototyping. Have members of sub-system work to address issues raised (issues will likely be brought up by members of the sub-system or of another sub-system whose function is affected). 
    • If a part is unable to be made to the necessary quality, adapt/re-design (limitation of hardware, supplies, financial limitations,etc)
    • If a proposal/document is not to the expected quality, it should be discussed and revised before its final deadline. It is the responsibility of all of the sub-group to ensure that any work coming from their members should be of agreeable quality.
    • Define metrics for quality assurance: determine environmental hazards, create simulations and physical models; report probability of failure, safety factor, min/max forces or other stimuli acceptable
      • set goals for what metrics we want to achieve
        • example: IP Code, or Ingress Protection Code is defined in IEC standard 60529 (waterproof rating commonly used in electronic devices)
CONSEQUENCES: How will we address non-performance in regard to these goals, expectations, policies and procedures? 

  • An internal discussion, followed by a peer-mediated discussion, followed by a professor-mediated discussion
  • A consensus building approach, where common areas of agreement are identified and built upon until the conflict is resolved
  • Conflict will be resolved by a dance-off 
Bring food (!!!)

  • Donuts

Layers of consequences – Start with an oral warning, peer & self-evaluations to help Professor Rosario understand who is contributing / not contributing.

 

We share these goals and expectations, and agree to these policies, procedures, and consequences.

 

Alex Barlow

Grace Steurer

Bobby Oehrlein

Lauren Schuster

James Galbraith  

Zachary Fiske

Darby Aurelien 

Yizhu Chen

Nathan Bontje

 

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