Knowing if and why your project is successful is important; identifying how you will determine its success is critical. In fact, it’s hard for anyone to say a project is successful without knowing how to define it. If you’re involved in a project, you and others must decide what criteria should be used to define its success. Do this and you’ll have clarity for what is important, and will be able to articulate the project’s performance to others.
This course will help you select the performance measures need to evaluate the progress and success of your project. When should you perform this process? If you don’t have performance measures for your project, then any time is a good time. With that said, the closer to the beginning of the project the better. However, if you’re in the middle of a project, it’s not too late. You can still select performance measures and gain agreement from stakeholders. This will definitely help you as you complete the remaining work.
By completing this course, you will know how to identify the performance measures you will use to determine project performance.
Course Result: Identify the performance measures you will use to determine project performance.


Internships offer usually one discipline-specific, supervised, structured paid or unpaid, and for academic credit work experience or practice placement.
Work Experience intersperses one or two work terms (typically full-time) into an academic program, where work terms provide experience in a workplace setting related to the student’s field of study and/or career goals.
Community Service Learning (CSL) integrates meaningful community service with classroom instruction and critical reflection to enrich the learning experience and strengthen communities. In practice, students work in partnership with a community-based organization to apply their disciplinary knowledge to a challenge identified by the community.
Field Placement provides students with an intensive part-time/short term intensive hands-on practical experience in a setting relevant to their subject of study. Field placements may not require supervision of a registered or licensed professional and the completed work experience hours are not required for professional certification. Field placements account for work-integrated educational experiences not encompassed by other forms, such as co-op, clinic, practicum, and internship.

