Students enrolled for 3 credits also have to turn their presentation into a final product.
You have to email me the final product by December 21.
The choice is largely up to you, but it should be something that is actually useful to you. For a research project, you should identify a conference or journal that you want to submit your work to, and specify that somewhere in your email. Possible products in that case:
An abstract, following the formatting guidelines of the conference (e.g. PLC, CLS, NELS, GLOW)
A short paper for work in progress (follow the ACL guidelines and use their template)
A long paper, 8 to 16 pages depending on the conference (ACL, FG, LACL; there's no MOL in 2020)
If your project was focused on code instead of research, you have multiple choices. You could create some Jupyter notebooks that act as a tutorial for working with a specific software package, or if it is your own code you could write detailed documentation and a getting-started guide for the users (see e.g. https://realpython.com/documenting-python-code/).
Students enrolled for 3 credits also have to turn their presentation into a final product. You have to email me the final product by December 21.
The choice is largely up to you, but it should be something that is actually useful to you. For a research project, you should identify a conference or journal that you want to submit your work to, and specify that somewhere in your email. Possible products in that case:
If your project was focused on code instead of research, you have multiple choices. You could create some Jupyter notebooks that act as a tutorial for working with a specific software package, or if it is your own code you could write detailed documentation and a getting-started guide for the users (see e.g. https://realpython.com/documenting-python-code/).
If you are unsure what to do, email me.