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II1305 Project in Information and Communication Technology 7.5 credits

Course memo Spring 2026-60266...

Version 1 – 01/07/2026, 9:21:37 AM

Course offering

TCOMK (Start date 16 Mar 2026, English)
CINTE (Start date 16 Mar 2026, Swedish)

Language Of Instruction

English/Swedish

Offered By

EECS/Computer Science

Course memo Spring 2026

Headings denoted with an asterisk ( * ) is retrieved from the course syllabus version Spring 2021

Content and learning outcomes

Course contents

The course trains the students in methods for design of a technical system containing information and communication technology under resource and time constraints. The methods are among others development process, project planning, reflection methods and design methods for technical systems .

Intended learning outcomes

After passing the course, the student should be able to

  • in groups and with a structured developmental methodology carry out a project for development of a system with information and communication technology
  • reflect on the project as a basis for improvements of the working method.

Learning activities

The course runs in three phases.

The first phase of the course is preparation. You read up on the project methodology we use (Scrum), and the version management tool we use (Git). Also during the preparation phase, teams suggest and discuss product-ideas with the teachers. The teachers approves a product idea for the team, typically one of the team's own ideas.

The second phase is project work. Your team will design and implement the product in four so-called sprints. The length of each sprint is four working days. Only Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays are working days. On working days, students work full office-hours: from 8:00 to 17:00, with a lunch hour from 12:00 to 13:00. At the end of each sprint, the team reflects on which project-methods worked well, and which didn't, in order to improve the next sprint.

The third phase is for final reflection. The product (or prototype) that your team developed is now ready. All products are shown to the public at a project demo. You also submit a written individual reflection, which documents your own personal experience gained in the course.

Preparations before course start

Equipment

A personal computer is used for the project work. Using the computer rooms at KTH instead is not practical.

Examination and completion

Grading scale

P, F

Examination

  • PRO1 - Project, 7.5 credits, grading scale: P, F

Based on recommendation from KTH’s coordinator for disabilities, the examiner will decide how to adapt an examination for students with documented disability.

The examiner may apply another examination format when re-examining individual students.

If the course is discontinued, students may request to be examined during the following two academic years.

Grading criteria/assessment criteria

In the first phase, each student must complete all quizzes in Canvas, before the deadline given for each quiz. There must be at most one incorrect answer on each quiz. Furthermore, each student must do preparatory work in the assigned project group, and the project must be approved by the examiner.

In the second phase, attendance is obligatory on working days. All students work full office-hours: from 8:00 to 17:00, with a lunch hour from 12:00 to 13:00. Furthermore, each student must participate actively at no less than two of the sprint retrospectives.

In the third phase, each team must participate in the product expo. A list of requirements for the product expo is given separately. Furthermore, each student must submit an Individual Project Reflection. A list of requirements for the Individual Project Reflection is given separately.

Attendance and active participation require that students are physically present on campus. Any exception requires a written permission by the examiner.

Alternatives to missed activities or tasks

Quizzes in the first phase may be completed late, as long as all quizzes are completed no more than five days after the start of the second phase.

In the second phase, attendance is obligatory. All absence is treated equally - the reasons for absence do not matter.

Submissions in the third phase may be completed late, but always before the start of the next academic year.

The following rules apply to absence in the second phase.

  • If you are absent up to 8 hours (1 day), in total during the whole project, you and your group should agree on how you can work extra time to compensate.
  • If you are absent 8-32 hours (1-4 days), in total during the whole project, you must notify the teachers immediately by emailing F Lundevall. "Immediately" means as soon as you realize that you need to be absent (preferably well before the first time you are absent). You will perform extra work of some kind to compensate - see below.
  • If you are absent more than 32 hours (more than 4 working days), in total during the whole project, you fail the course and must take the course again next year.
  • You also fail the course if you are assigned extra work, or an individual task, but do not complete that work or task satisfactorily and timely.

Extra work to compensate for 1-4 days of absence can be either directly related to the team's project, or an individual task to be performed in early June. Tasks related to the team's project must be agreed on by the whole team and the examiner. An individual task to be performed in June is decided on in agreement between the examiner and the student (but the examiner will have the last word, of course).

An individual task to be performed in June, is typically to write a short report. The content of this report should be potentially useful to other people after the course. The task is designed so that the expected amount of work approximately equals the amount of absence from the project. The deadline for the task is normally in the re-examination period in June. Late submissions may be accepted before the start of the next academic year.

Reporting of exam results

During the course, intermediate results are available in Canvas.

Final grades are reported after the course, in June.

Ethical approach

  • All members of a group are responsible for the group's work.
  • In any assessment, every student shall honestly disclose any help received and sources used.
  • In an oral assessment, every student shall be able to present and answer questions about the entire assignment and solution.

Further information

Free use of generative AI tools

In the course, generative AI may be used at the students' own discretion in all examination and graded assignments, unless the use violates other rules or codes of conduct. The use of generative AI is considered to promote learning and the fulfillment of the course's learning objectives.

You as a student should decide for yourself how to use generative AI in a way that is ethical and promotes learning. Your decision must consider existing rules and codes of conducts at KTH, and it must be legally and ethically defensible, for example regarding the handling of personal data or copyrighted material. Make informed choices and stay up-to-date on relevant laws, court decisions, and other legal decisions surrounding AI and generative AI.

Note! Remember to critically review material created by generative AI. You as a student are fully responsible for all material you submit and must be able to defend and explain it completely without support from generative AI.

Round Facts

Start date

16 Mar 2026

Course offering

  • TCOMK Spring 2026-60266
  • CINTE Spring 2026-60336

Language Of Instruction

English/Swedish

Offered By

EECS/Computer Science

Contacts

Communication during course

For any questions regarding the course, please e-mail the course coordinator.

Course Coordinator

Teachers

Examiner