After the implementation of the Bologna Process, the Final Year Project (FYP) is a mandatory course in all bachelor degrees in Spanish higher education system. Although the FYP is new for many degrees, it was already established in the previous education system for engineering degrees. The authors of this paper are lecturers in a bachelor degree in Computer Science at three different colleges of the University of the Basque Country UPV/EHU. In the last few years, they have supervised more than 80 FYPs and they have all faced similar problems during the supervision process. This paper presents a study conducted to determine if the observed problems are just a perception of the authors or whether they are general problems in the elaboration of FYPs. In the study, 60 former students and 27 lecturers took part. Four main categories of problems have been identified and a proposal to overcome them is presented.
The combination of virtual reality interactive systems and educational technologies have been used in the training of procedural tasks, but there is a lack of research with regard to providing specific assistance for acquiring motor skills. In this paper we present a novel approach to evaluating motor skills with an interactive intelligent learning system based on the ULISES framework. We describe the implementation of the different layers that ULISES is composed of in order to generate a diagnosis of trainees' motor skills. This diagnostic process takes into account the following characteristics of movement: coordination, poses, movement trajectories and the procedure followed in a sequence of movements. In order to validate our work we generated a model for the diagnosis of tennis-related motor skills and we conducted an experiment in which we interpreted and diagnosed tennis serves of several subjects and which shows promising results.
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