Capstone Projects (Fish 494-495)

Intent

The capstone, or senior research project, should be the culmination of the undergraduate experience in Aquatic & Fishery Sciences. The project should offer the student the opportunity to put class learning into practice.

If, after reading the following information, you have any questions about the Capstone program, please contact the Capstone Faculty Coordinator, Greg Jensen, gjensen@u.washington.edu.

Capstone Opportunities

All SAFS majors must complete a Capstone Project to graduate (minimum of 6 credits, typically over 2 quarters). Students should sign up for Fish 494 (3-9 credits) and Fish 495 (3 credits), which are numerically graded. Any SAFS undergraduate conducting independent research (FISH 499) or internship/experiential learning (FISH 498) may transition these experiences into the capstone project with faculty sponsorship, if appropriate, in subsequent quarters.

Students may choose from a variety of opportunities, including but not limited to:

As a starting point, SAFS maintains a webpage where each SAFS faculty member is profiled. The School also posts ongoing research opportunities there: Faculty Profiles.

Students may also contact the SAFS Faculty Capstone Coordinator—Greg Jensen, gjensen@u.washington.edu—to learn about opportunities that may be available in the School.

Students Are Ultimately Responsible for the Capstone Process and Completion. Students are required to:

*This PDF form can be filled out either online, or printed first and filled out manually.

Exceptional students may also have the opportunity to:

Faculty Sponsors

All students must select a faculty sponsor, who is required to sign the Capstone Contract. The faculty sponsor is responsible for the grading and granting of credit. At a minimum, faculty sponsors must:

Faculty sponsors may be drawn from the SAFS faculty (including postdoctoral fellows), and SAFS affiliate faculty holding major appointments in other departments.

Worksite Supervisors

Many times, students are working directly under the supervision of someone other than their faculty sponsor. In these cases, students will have a worksite supervisor who will work more closely with the students in the specific area of focus. Worksite supervisors must agree to:

In addition to SAFS faculty, worksite supervisors may be agency personnel (e.g., NMFS, WDFW), or SAFS staff scientists or postdoctoral fellows willing to abide by the terms of the contract.

Faculty Capstone Coordinator

Dr. Greg Jensen serves as the Faculty Capstone Coordinator for the School. He keeps apprised of research opportunities in the school, helps students set up projects, collects the paperwork, gives out entry codes, reviews research proposals and budgets, serves as a resource for students and faculty throughout the process, and coordinates the quarterly SAFS Capstone Symposium.

Greg Jensen can be reached by email, gjensen@u.washington, or phone, 206-543-6132.

Overall Timeline for Capstone Process

Most capstone research begins during an undergraduate student's junior year, with data analysis, graphic production, and writing the following year. Many professors, internships, and other academic programs offer research/data collection opportunities during the summer (especially field-oriented programs). However, research can also be conducted during the regular academic year. Students are encouraged to develop research ideas and talk with prospective sponsors by the winter quarter of their junior year. Students must meet with faculty sponsors at least once per quarter and with worksite supervisors at least three times per quarter. Students may take Fish 494 more than one quarter while working on data collection. Students should not be allowed to register for Fish 495 until their sponsor is quite certain their paper will be completed and their oral presentation made that quarter.

This timeline includes minimum requirements. Students will often negotiate additional benchmarks.

Wk 8 of quarter before starting project

Signed Capstone Contract to Greg Jensen's mailbox in FSH 115. Entry code will be eamiled to you.

Wk 3 of 494 quarter

Attend meeting with Capstone Faculty Coordinator, Greg Jensen; bring draft of Capstone Proposal

Fourth Friday of Fish 494 Quarter

Capstone Proposal to faculty sponsor/worksite supervisor

Fourth Friday of Fish 494 Quarter

Final Capstone Proposal to Greg Jensen

Wk 8 of Fish 494 Quarter

Meet with Faculty Sponsor (and worksite supervisor) to get signatures for Fish 495 form if student has made adequate progress. If not, student may fill out another fish 494 form (up to 9 credits).

Wk 3 of Fish 495 quarter

Attend meeting with Capstone Faculty Coordinator, Greg Jensen

Wk 7 of Fish 495 Quarter

Draft of paper to faculty sponsor/worksite supervisor

Wk 7-8

Oral presentation of project at approved venue

Wk 9 of Fish 495 Quarter

Final Paper to faculty sponsor
Electronic version of abstract to gjensen@u.washington.edu.

Checklist and Additional Resources

Components of Capstone Project

Fish 494 Preliminary Contract: This is a one-page agreement between student, faculty sponsor and worksite supervisor that indicates the plan to work together on Capstone Project. This contract authorizes the Capstone Faculty Coordinator to give an entry code for Fish 494.

Capstone Proposal: This is due by the end of the third week of Fish 494. It includes the research question, techniques, timeline, budget, anticipated issues, etc., and must be on file before students can register for Fish 495.

Fish 495 Form: One-page form showing that all parties agree student is likely able to complete project during next quarter.

Meetings: These should occur at least once per quarter with the faculty sponsor, and more often if faculty member is also worksite supervisor. The student should meet with the worksite supervisor at least 3 times per quarter. An evaluation meeting, attended by all project participants, should occur between week 8 and 10 of each quarter.

Registering for Subsequent Quarters

Toward the end of the first quarter, all members should meet to assess progress.

If the student is done with data collection, has started analysis AND it looks like the student can complete the project the following quarter, the faculty sponsor (and worksite supervisor) should sign the Fish 495 form and the student should submit the form to Greg Jensen and he will email the student the necessary code to register. Students may only register for one quarter of Fish 495.

If the student has turned in the proposal but is still doing data collection and analysis, and the completion in one quarter seems unlikely, the student may turn in another Fish 494 contract for a second quarter of Fish 494.

If student has not completed a satisfactory proposal, an incomplete for Fish 494 or a renegotiation of the project should take place.

Oral Presentation

All students are required to do an oral presentation. Most students will present at the SAFS quarterly undergraduate symposium, which general occurs during the eighth week of the quarter. Students may present at other forums instead (Alaska Symposium, FHL Symposium, UW Undergraduate Research Symposium, etc.) with permission. The oral component must be completed before student may be granted credit.

Optimizing Powerpoint Presentations

We have assembled a number of tips and webpage links to help you minimize the file size of your Powerpoint presentations while maintaining image quality.

Written Paper

All students must complete a written document (usually a scientific paper), which must be completed by the end of Fish 495 quarter, before being granted credit.

Honors Students

SAFS students enrolled in the COFS Honors Program must additionally do the following to receive credit for their Capstone Project for Honors:

  1. Honors students must have their papers reviewed by two additional professionals in the field and incorporate that feedback into their final papers.
  2. Honors students must also present a poster of their projects at the SAFS Quarterly Undergraduate Symposium. Funding will be provided for poster printing. Please send email to Greg Jensen, gjensen@u.washington.edu, for details prior to printing.

Capstone Funding for SAFS Students

Capstone Examples from SAFS Undergraduates

Degree and Research Programs

Last updated Wed, Dec 19, 2007
For Capstone issues, contact: gjensen@u.washington.edu
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