Please add a couple of categories to your page, at least consider if the page falls into the category of
'''Welcome to our wiki for project work – an online resource for managing projects, programs, and portfolios.'''
*Project Management
<p style="text-align: justify;">This wiki is the result of the Technical University of Denmark's ProjectLab initiative to provide education in Project Management and make it accessible to everyone. The articles are exclusively student-produced, developed as part of the course *Advanced Project, Program & Portfolio Management* at DTU, where students are required to write about a specific aspect of the subject.</p>
*Program Management, or
*Portfolio Management
and whether it relates to
*Complexity
*Uncertainty, or
*Human Behaviour
other categories could also be
'''We have collected the best articles in the following ConceptBoxes for'''
<p style="text-align: justify;"> '''''*'''Disclaimer: The articles are created by DTU students. As part of the course, students are introduced to knowledge related to IP rights, plagiarism and copyright infringement. Additionally, the articles are a product of critical engagement of students with the literature review, and their aim is to contribute to the Project Management holistic field of science. If you discover any potential copyright infringement on the site, please inform thereof by sending an email to ophavsret@dtu.dk.''</p>
Consult the [//meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Help:Contents User's Guide] for information on using the wiki software.
Go to [[Help:Contents|Help]] or follow the link in the navigation bar to find instructions on basic configurations
== Wiki article requirements ==
The individual assignment consists of writing a Wiki-style article outlining either a project, program or portfolio management tool, concept or theory or documenting a relevant case.
The articles will become part of a DTU-Wiki on Advanced Project, Program and Portfolio Management and will serve as a resource to practitioners in industry and government, as well as future students. The best articles will be considered for publication in a handbook on the ISO 21900 Standard on Project Management.
[[File:Fig_1_Process.jpg|400px|thumb|left|Figure 1: Process for Individual Assignment]]
The primary objective is that the article is relevant to project, program or portfolio management practitioners and can contribute to a growing body of knowledge in the area. All articles should be concise, sharp, insightful, academically sound and relevant to practitioners, and target a length of approximately 3,000 words, excluding annotated bibliography (see below).
You can choose to work on one of two types of articles:
=== Article Type 1: Explanation and Illustration of a Method ===
The focus of a “method article” is on outlining a relevant project, program or portfolio management method (or concept, theory or tool). Examples are:
* Classic project, program or portfolio management methods, such as: Gantt Charts, Work Breakdown Structures, portfolio graphs, risk management, cost and schedule estimation methods, Key Performance Indicators, stakeholder matrices
* Key theories relevant to the management of projects, programs or portfolios, such as: theory of constraint, cognitive and decision making biases, communication theory, project management competencies, critical chain theory, or stages of team development.
The articles are expected to adhere to the following structure:
* ''Big idea'': describe the tool, concept or theory and explain its purpose. The section should reflect the current state of the art on the topic
* ''Application'': provide guidance on how to use the tool, concept or theory and when it is applicable
* ''Limitations'': critically reflect on the tool/concept/theory. When possible, substantiate your claims with literature
* ''Annotated bibliography'': Provide key references (3-10), where a reader can find additional information on the subject. Summarize and outline the relevance of each reference to the topic. (around 100 words per reference). The bibliography is not counted in the suggested 3000 word target length of the article.
=== Article Type 2: Description of a Relevant Case Study ===
== Getting started ==
The followin links can help you some of the settings available - otherwise google your issue and write mediawiki, this will also results in a lot of hits on how to do different things
**To create a reference link in the text like this <ref>[http://www.facstaff.bucknell.edu/ttoole/Toole%20PM%20Causal%20Loop%20Diagram.pdf A project management causal loop diagram, Toole, Michael, 2005.] </ref> write <nowiki><ref>[''link/title''] ''Name of link'' </ref></nowiki>
** Create a reference list like this one, by writing <nowiki><references /></nowiki> <references />
Latest revision as of 21:08, 8 August 2025
Welcome to our wiki for project work – an online resource for managing projects, programs, and portfolios.
This wiki is the result of the Technical University of Denmark's ProjectLab initiative to provide education in Project Management and make it accessible to everyone. The articles are exclusively student-produced, developed as part of the course *Advanced Project, Program & Portfolio Management* at DTU, where students are required to write about a specific aspect of the subject.
We have collected the best articles in the following ConceptBoxes for
Christian Thuesen, Associate professor | mep@dtu.dk
*Disclaimer: The articles are created by DTU students. As part of the course, students are introduced to knowledge related to IP rights, plagiarism and copyright infringement. Additionally, the articles are a product of critical engagement of students with the literature review, and their aim is to contribute to the Project Management holistic field of science. If you discover any potential copyright infringement on the site, please inform thereof by sending an email to ophavsret@dtu.dk.