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Progress

I. Methodology
1. Task assignment.
Task Đăng Đức Khôi Minh Thành Thư Tiên Trâm Vân
Preparepration
Set up drive and x
Canva
Content x x x x x x x x x
Sildes x x x x x x x x x
Questions x x x x x x x x x
Check content x
Check quiz x x
Quizizz x

Trial and errors


Fix slides x x
Fix questions x
Feedback at x x x x
rehearsal

Performance
Introduction x
Presenting x x x x x x x x x
Ending & host x
quiz
Timekeeper x x

Report
Content x x x x x x x x x
Synthesize x
Proofreading x
2. Content distribution and timeline.

March April
Tasks P.I.C
11 13 14 15 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 31 15 16
Introduction
Vân
Presentation

MARR (rv)
PW (rv)
Đức
FW (rv)
AW (rv) Trâm
Đăng,
IRR (1 problem)
Thành
Tiên,
ERR (1 problem)
Thư
The payback period- Khôi,
method (1problem) Minh.
Acknowledgement
Trâm
Abstract
Reason for
mode
Reason for Tiên
Introduction

chapter
Objective
Advantages
and
disadvantages Thành
Scopes and
limitation
Methodology
Report Đăng
Chapter
Progress

Overview
Application
Đức
Review
Presentation
Feedback
Results

Khôi,
Lesson Minh
learned
Improvement
Conclusion
Distribution Thư
References
Person who
covers review
section
30 prepare 4
Quiz Vân
questions questions for
their part.
Person who
covers main
section
prepare 3
questions for
their part.
Rehearsal All
Proof reading Thư
Demo quiz All

II. Chapter overview


1. Overview of chapter 5: Evaluating a Single Project
The return that a particular project will either create or should be considered in all
engineering economy studies of capital projects. A fundamental problem is
addressed in this book is that whether a proposed capital investment and its
associated expenditures can be recovered by revenue (or savings) overtime as well
as a return on the assets that uses.
Two major components which is used in answering this problem are the interest and
money-time relationships discussed in Chapter 4. As the pattern of each project is
different, there is no single method for evaluating ideally a project. Then a variety of
method is introduced in this chapter. Five methods described are Present worth
(PW), Future worth (FW), Annual worth (AW), Internal rate of return (IRR), and
External rate of return (ERR).
For the first three methods, they convert cash flows into their equivalent worth at
some point in time by using an interest rate called (Minimum Attractive Rate of
Return- MARR) to caculate the annual rates of profit or returns compared to the
MARR.
The payback period is a measure of the recover speed generated by the cash inflows.
This measure, commonly, ignores the time value of money principles. Thus, it is
often used to supplement information along with five primary methods.
2. Minimum Attractive Rate of Return (MARR)
In general, The Minimum Attractive Rate of Return (MARR) is defined by the
organization’s upper management after the consideration of following factors.
-

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