He manako te kōura i kore ai
Wishing for the crayfish won’t bring it - You wont get your reward without hard work
Your final project in Year 10 is to produce a digital technologies outcome that will then be presented at the Technology Fair at the end of the year.
You will be marked on the outcome, process, and the presentation of the project.
You have learnt a range of skills over year 9 & 10 and this is your chance to focus on an area you enjoy and would like to explore further.
You will work through a condensed design thinking process over the final term of school.
You are going to document your design process in Google Slides. Remember to take lots of pictures of your outcome. Pictures look a lot better than lots of text on a poster.
At the end of the process you are going to make the poster look good with colours, font, and layout changes. But while you are working through the process dont worry about this.
If you leave the section labeled "DO NOT PUT ANYTHING IN THIS SPACE" blank and cut off this section, you can fit 4 slides on a NCEA Folio Boards (820x610). These boards can likely be reused from the art department.
At the end of this topic students will have had the opportunity to cover;
make decisions about creating, manipulating, storing, retrieving, sharing, and testing digital content for a specific purpose, given particular parameters, tools, and techniques PO2
understand that digital devices impact on humans and society and that both the devices and their impact change over time PO2
identify the specific role of components in a simple input-process-output system and how they work together, and they recognise the "control role” that humans have in the system PO2
select from an increasing range of applications and file types to develop outcomes for particular purposes PO2
follow a defined process to design, develop, store, test, and evaluate digital content to address given contexts or issues, taking into account immediate social, ethical, and end-user considerations PO3
identify the key features of selected software and choose the most appropriate software and file types to develop and combine digital content PO3
understand the role of operating systems in managing digital devices, security, and application software and are able to apply file management conventions using a range of storage devices PO3
understand that with storing data comes responsibility for ensuring security and privacy PO3
The progress outcomes describe the significant learning steps that students take as they develop their expertise in computational thinking for digital technologies.
At the end of this topic students will have had the opportunity to cover;
understand that there can be more than one algorithm for the same problem PO3
decompose problems into step-by-step instructions to create algorithms for computer programs PO3
use logical thinking to predict the behaviour of the programs PO3
develop and debug simple programs that use inputs, outputs, sequence, and iteration PO3
students decompose problems to create simple algorithms using the three building blocks of programming: sequence, selection, and iteration PO4
implement these algorithms by creating programs that use inputs, outputs, sequence, basic selection using comparative operators, and iteration PO4
debug simple algorithms and programs by identifying when things go wrong with their instructions and correcting them PO4
be able to explain why things went wrong and how they fixed them PO4
evaluate the efficiency of algorithms PO4
recognise that computers need to search and sort large amounts of data PO4
They also evaluate user interfaces in relation to their efficiency and usability P04
students independently decompose problems into algorithms. They use these algorithms to create programs with: inputs, outputs, sequence, selection (using: comparative and logical operators, variables of different data types), iteration. P05
determine when to use different types of control structures. They document their programs, using an organised approach for testing and debugging P05
develop programs considering human-computer interaction (HCI) heuristics P05