In House Practical Training 1
In House Practical Training 1
In House Practical Training 1
4 Registration date for In-house Practical Training 17th - 20th May 2019
5 Synopsis presentation for approval of Topic 21st – 24th May 2019
6 Final Synopsis presentation 27th May 2019
7 Submission of WPR’s Every Monday
8 Feedback by Faculty guide Every Wednesday
9 Submission of First Draft of report 30th June 2019
10 Feedback of Faculty guide on the First Draft 9th July 2019
11 Submission on Final Draft 16th July 2019
12 Plagiarism Check 17th – 20th July 2019
NTCC committee meeting to review the work and
13 access eligibility of student to be recommended to COE 22nd July – 25th July 2019
office
Submission of MOM along with the list of students to
14 31st July 2019
COE along with the relevant documents
15 NTCC Evaluation 5st Aug – 16th Aug 2019
UTTAR PRADESH
Course Objectives:
• To provide students with a comprehensive experience for applying the knowledge gained so far by
studying various courses.
• To develop an inquiring aptitude and build confidence among students by working on solutions
of small problems.
• To give students an opportunity to do something creative and to assimilate real life work
situation in institution.
• To adapt students for latest developments and to handle independently new situations.
To develop good expression power and presentation abilities in students.
Assessment Scheme
Submission Weekly
Compon Observation Plagiaris Synopsis Total
of draft on progress
ents of supervisor m report approval
time report (30
marks)
10 marks 5 marks 5 marks
Weightage 5 marks 5 marks
Final Assessment:
Final Introduction
Quality
Compo Report Viva Presentatio & Statement Total
of Work SLO
nents Assessment n of problem
Weightag
10 15 10 15 10 10 70
e
AMITY SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING AND TECHNOLOGY
The Practical Training, of 2 credit units, is of 3-4 weeks duration and is implemented during the summer
break after the second year of the 4 year B.Tech programme.
The Practical Training is exposure oriented and aims at experiential learning outside classroom through self
exploration, practical experience, Industry, field experience, live experience, research, design projects etc. The
educational process in the internship course seeks out and focuses attention on many latent attributes, which do
not surface in the normal classroom situations. These Latent attributes includes intellectual ability, professional
judgment and decision-making ability, inter-disciplinary approach, skills for data handling, ability in written
and oral presentation, sense of responsibility etc.
Most of the students will be undertaking the practical training using Labs/Library of the AUUP coupled with
industry visits. How-ever few students may get opportunity to work in the Government labs/industry, which
will be an excellent opportunity, and should not be missed by students. Students must discuss the opportunity
with faculty guide for formulating the topic/ problems which student can undertake. Due approval of HOI is
mandatory before proceeding for the Practical Training in the industry.
In order to achieve these objectives, a set of guidelines are formulated for conducting practical training program
and assessing the students’ performance. These guidelines are prepared within the broad frame work of
academic regulations applicable at AUUP.
2. COURSE OBJECTIVES
• To provide students with a comprehensive experience for applying the knowledge gained so far by studying
various courses.
• To develop an inquiring aptitude and build confidence among students by working on solutions of small
problems.
• To give students an opportunity to do something creative and to assimilate real life work situation in
institution.
• To adapt students for latest developments and to handle independently new situations.
• To develop good expression power and presentation abilities in students.
Following are the student learning outcomes from the minor and major projects:
a. Team working and team management.
b. How to develop components & systems in isolation which meets a common goal.
c. Practical application of engineering principles for designing, fabrication and testing of working models.
d. An ability to design a system, model, component or a process to meet desired/industrial/R&D needs.
List of the faculty guides will be available on AMIZONE. The orientation programme will be organized by the
department. The students will finalize the problem title in consultation with their faculty guide assigned by the
HOD. Overall Coordination will be done by the Programme Leader.
Incase a student is undertaking practical training outside in an industry or research lab or other university, the
students will have two guides – a faculty guide from the institution and an external guide from the concerned
organization. In such cases of joint guidance, the main guide will be faculty guide.
The faculty guide from Amity University must closely interact with the external guide and monitor the progress
of the student in practical training at the host institution/ industry/ research lab etc. Faculty guide must also
strengthen the relationship with the host organization of the student for future collaborative research and
placement of the student in that organization.
Briefing Sessions are very important for undertaking the Practical Training. Therefore, it is mandatory for the
students to attend the same whenever institution/faculty guide have scheduled the same: During such sessions
students should expect to:
4.3 REGISTRATION
For practical training, a student registers for the course “Practical Training” in their respective department.
The Synopsis must be submitted by the student duly approved by faculty guide within one week
of the last day of end semester examination to the Programme Leader.
4.5 ATTENDANCE
The students are required to follow the timings given by their respective Department. Student must be present in
all activities (such as gap lectures, quizzes, lectures by experts etc,) announced by faculty guide/HOD. Students
who have planned to do their practical training in the industry, they must workout weekly schedule of
reporting with the concerned faculty guide. Duly approved schedule must be submitted in the office of
HOD.
a. Commencement of Practical training (Registration) : Next Working day after the Last
End Semester Examination
b. Submission of Synopsis : Within one week after the Last End
Semester Examination
c. Periodic Reporting, quizzes, gap lectures etc : Schedule to be announced by
Concerned Faculty Guide/Deptt.
d. Submission of Draft Report to Faculty Guide: : One Week before the end of the
Practical Training
e. Submission of Final report : Last day of the Practical Training
f. Presentation and VIVA : First week of August (Schedule
to be issued by concerned
Department)
• Students who fail to be in regular touch with faculty guide and whose performance
during the practical training is not satisfactory, will not be permitted to appear for final
Presentation / VIVA.
• The students who fail in Practical Training will be required to repeat the year.
Ø Acknowledgements
Acknowledgement to any advisory or financial assistance received in the course of work may be given.
It is incomplete without student’s signature.
Ø Abstract
A good “Abstract” should be straight to the point; not too descriptive but fully informative, First
paragraph should state what was accomplished with regard to the objectives. The abstract does not
have to be an entire summary of the project, but rather a concise summary of the scope and results of
the project. It should not exceed more than 1000 words.
Ø Table of Contents
Titles and subtitles are to correspond exactly with those in the text.
Ø Introduction
Here a brief introduction to the problem that is central to the project and an outline of the structure of
the rest of the report should be provided. The introduction should aim to catch the imagination of the
reader, so excessive details should be avoided.
Note that in writing the various sections, all figures and tables should be next to the associated text, in
the same orientation as the main text, numbered, and given appropriate titles or captions. All major
equations should also be numbered and unless it is really necessary, do not write in “point” form. This
data interpretation should be congruence with the written objectives and the inferences should be drawn
on data and not on impression. Avoid writing straight forward conclusion rather, it should lead to
generalization of data on the chosen sample.
Ø References
References should include papers, books etc. referred to in the body of the report. These should be
written in the alphabetical order of the author’s surname. The titles of journals preferably should not be
abbreviated; if they are, abbreviations must comply with an internationally recognized system.
Examples:
For research article:
Voravuthikunchai SP, Lortheeranuwal A, Ninrprom T, Popaya W, Pongpaichit S, Supawita T,
(2007) Antibacterial activity of Thai medicinal plants against enterohaemorrhagic Escherichia
coli O157: H7, Clin Microbial Infect, 8 (suppl 1): 116-117.
For book:
Kowalski, M.(1976). Transduction of effectiveness in Rhizobium meliloti. SYMBIOTIC
NITROGEN FIXATION PLANTS (editor P.S. Nutman IBP), 7:63-67.
§ A4 Size Paper
§ Font: Arial (10 Points) or Times New Roman (12).
§ Line spacing: 1.5
§ Top and bottom margins: 1 inch/2.5 cm; Left and right margins: 1.25 inches/3 cm
8.1 Introduction
The practical training is a vehicle through which one can effect meaningful innovations in methods of student
learning and evaluation to bring them closer to real-life situations. The concept of continuous evaluation is
followed since the courses seek out and focuses attention on many latent attributes that do not surface in the
normal classroom situations. These are intellectual ability, professional judgment and decision-making ability,
inter-disciplinary approach, skills for data handling, ability in written and oral presentation, sense of
responsibility etc. and are judged by the faculty though various instruments of evaluation, namely, quiz,
seminar, viva, project report, observation of the student’s performance, and project diary.
Instrument Weightage
A. Continuous Internal Assessment (30%)
1. Observation, Weekly Progress Report, 20%
Attendance
2. Daily Project Dairy, quiz, innovation etc 10%
The break up (components and their weightage) of Continuous Internal Assessment shall be as
under:
Continuous Assessment:
Final Assessment:
Introduction Total
Quality of Final Report
Viva & Statement
Components Work Assessment SLO Presentation
of problem
Weightage 10 15 10 15 10 10 70
9. PLAGIARISM
The practical training report must be written in student’s own words. However, if required to cite the words of
others, all the debts (for words, data, arguments and ideas) have to be appropriately acknowledged.
It is mandatory that each project report shall be checked for plagiarism through Turnitin or similar software
before submission. The content which is based on existing published work must come from properly quoted
material and from the references cited section. After checking the accuracy of the citations and references of
such content the plagiarism report should not return similarity index of more than 15% in any circumstance.
However, if the matching text is one continuous block, the index of 15% could still be considered plagiarism.
Any report with higher than this percentage matching must be explained by the student. The details of copy
rights, professional ethics are given in Plagiarism Prevention Policy of the University.
Students must submit the 4 copies of final spiral bound project report (for Library, Academic and Faculty
guides) along with CD as per the Practical Training in following colour scheme:
a. MAE & CE – Yellow
b. ECE, EIE & EEE – Blue
c. IT – Green
d. CSE - Red
No report will be accepted after the due date. Academic Department copy will be finally housed in departmental
library. The evaluations of the Practical Training will be done by a board comprising of internal and external
faculty and experts. The faculty guide will submit the final marks (continuous and Final viva) to Exams
Department as per dates given along with project reports. The starting and the closing dates of the program
should be adhered to strictly.