Final Project Description
Chapter 1. Final Project Description
🧭 Overview
🧠 One-sentence thesis
This final project requires students to research and publish an analysis of a U.S. environmental justice issue in an open-access e-book, using open pedagogy to contribute scholarly work to the broader community.
📌 Key points (3–5)
- Project goal: Research and analyze an environmental justice topic to help solve real issues, then publish the work in a college-level open educational resource (OER) e-book.
- Open pedagogy approach: Students learn to publish with open licenses, contributing to knowledge accessible to future students and the community.
- Flexible format: Students choose their medium (e.g., slides, podcast, infographic, case study, original research) and may remain anonymous, use a pseudonym, or use their real name.
- Core requirements: Define a relevant topic, describe affected populations and intersectionality, use evidence-based reasoning with cited sources, and apply an open license.
- Common confusion: Students may opt out of publishing at any time without grade penalty—the grade depends on completing the work, not on final publication consent.
🎯 Project purpose and pedagogy
🎯 What the project accomplishes
The purpose of this project is for you to research and analyze a topic in order to help solve an environmental justice issue in the United States.
- Students publish their work in a college-level open-access e-book that serves as an open educational resource (OER).
- The process is called open pedagogy: students contribute to scholarly work and knowledge about environmental justice for the broader community.
- By completing the project, students build academic confidence and create learning materials that benefit future students and the community at large.
🛠️ Skills students will use
The excerpt lists three main skill areas:
- Analyze and synthesize course concepts.
- Apply course concepts to real-world situations.
- Create learning materials with open licenses so future students can use the work.
📋 Format and submission options
🎨 Media choices
Students choose their own format. The excerpt provides examples from past students:
- GoogleSlides
- ArcGIS StoryMap
- Case study
- Short narrative topic/analysis
- Game
- Podcast
- Comic strip
- Infographic
- Song
- Painting, sculpture, or sketch
- Poetry
- Original research using Geographic Information Systems like EJScreen
- Interviewing a local environmental justice activist, tribal member, government official, or scholar
Note: Students may propose other media by consulting the instructor.
✍️ Special requirements for creative formats
Certain project types (comic strip, infographic, song, painting, sculpture, sketch, poetry) also require a short artist's statement that explains how the student synthesized course concepts in the creative process.
🕵️ Anonymity and opt-out
- Students may choose to make their work anonymous, use a pseudonym, or use their own name.
- Important: If a student decides their work will not be available to future students, this will not affect their grade.
- The note at the end of the tasks section repeats: "student/creator may decide at any time that they do not wish to publish final project work, and grade will not be affected."
Don't confuse: opting out of publication is allowed, but the student must still complete the project to earn the grade.
🗓️ Tasks and timeline
🗓️ Step-by-step process
The excerpt outlines seven tasks:
- Choose a topic related to environmental justice in the United States that interests you. (Examples of possible topics are linked in the excerpt.)
- Consult with Deron (the instructor) while choosing the topic.
- Submit proposed topic and format (Week Seven). Research tools from the college library are introduced in Week 7.
- Draft an outline/rough draft/raw footage and submit it on Moodle (Week Nine). This is the chance to draft ideas, identify sources, and consider the best format.
- Cite your sources using any citation style (such as APA or MLA). If unclear, ask the instructor for guidance.
- Upload your final product to Moodle and share your work with students during the Finals period (Week Eleven).
- Learn about different types of open licenses and choose how to license your work.
📅 Grading distribution
The excerpt provides a points breakdown:
| Points | What | When | Grading type |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10 | Topic Proposal | Sunday night, November 12, Week 7 | Completion |
| 20 | Outline | Sunday night, November 26, Week 9 | Qualitative grading |
| 10 | Present and participate in others' presentations | Tuesday, December 5, 2:30, Week 11 | Completion |
| 50 | Project submission | Tuesday, December 5, 2:30, Week 11 | Qualitative grading |
Total: 90 points (the rubric below shows 50 points for the final submission, which aligns with the table).
📊 Grading rubric
📊 Five criteria
The rubric has five rows, each with a weight and five performance levels (Doesn't, Partially meets, Fully meets, Exceeds, Excels):
| Criteria | Weight | What "Fully meets" requires |
|---|---|---|
| Topic is defined and relevant to course | 5% (2.5 pts) | Topic is clearly defined and relevant to the course the student is enrolled in. |
| Who is affected / intersectionality | 30% (15 pts) | Describes population and includes where it is, its demographics, and which groups are disproportionately affected. |
| Completion | 30% (15 pts) | Project completed in a surface way. (Higher levels require thoroughness and intentionality.) |
| Uses data and evidence-based reasoning | 30% (15 pts) | Adequate sources of evidence and/or data included. Sources are clearly cited if not the student's own work. |
| Conventions and Licensing | 5% (2.5 pts) | Few errors and all sources acknowledged; uses open sources or all original work. |
🔍 Key distinctions in the rubric
- Intersectionality: "Fully meets" requires describing the population (location, demographics, and which groups are disproportionately affected). "Exceeds" adds applying course concepts to explain why groups are disproportionately affected. "Excels" adds data, historical examples, and/or institutional/policy factors.
- Completion: "Fully meets" is "completed in a surface way." "Exceeds" means "thoroughly completed." "Excels" reflects thoughtfulness, intentionality, and following through on agreements with the instructor.
- Evidence: "Fully meets" requires adequate sources and clear citation. "Exceeds" requires multiple sources. "Excels" requires multiple sources used for analysis.
- Conventions and Licensing: All levels from "Fully meets" upward require using open sources or all original work, plus proper citation.
Don't confuse: "Fully meets" is not the highest level—students can aim for "Exceeds" or "Excels" by integrating course concepts more deeply, using more sources, and demonstrating intentionality.
✅ Final project checklist
✅ Submission and presentation
- Turn in the final project on Moodle and present it to students during finals period.
- Sharing format varies by project type:
- Infographic or cartoon: Make six copies and bring to class (or email to the instructor who will make copies).
- Narrative (mostly words): Select about one page double-spaced (about 300 words) to share. Make six copies and bring to class (or email to the instructor).
- Be ready to talk about the purpose behind your project, your experience, and give feedback to other creators.
🔓 Open licensing steps
- Select the license you want to use.
- Copy and paste the license icon onto the first page of your project.
- Example: The excerpt shows a CC-BY license icon.
- For art projects (e.g., painting): You may handwrite your license and attribution on the back of the painting and include it in your artist statement.
- Include an attribution statement: "by your name-license." Example: "by Deron Carter, CC-BY."
- Share your final project with the instructor in Google Doc editable version by placing it in a specified folder. Be sure it has your name and topic title at the top.
📝 Attribution
The excerpt ends with:
"Final Project Description" By Elizabeth Pearce and Deron Carter is licensed under CC BY 4.0.
This shows the assignment description itself is openly licensed, modeling the practice students will follow.