Grading Criteria:
| Effort: | 0 - 30 |
| Originality / Relevance: | 0 - 20 |
| Effectiveness of Tutorial: | 0 - 40 |
| Presentation in Class: | 0 - 10 |
Group 7 had a movie file that is too large at the moment. It'll be up later.
Here's the Sheet to fill out and send to me.
| Groups | Person # 1 | Person # 2 | Person # 3 | Person # 4 | Person # 5 |
| One | Chudnovsky | Padan | Henderson | Lowenstein | Shelton |
| Two | David Lee | Gonzalez | Kamil | Russo | Simmons |
| Three | Bhatti | Barrett | Campbell | Pang | Reyes |
| Four | Huynh | Smith | James Lee | Carpenter | Gelsomini |
| Five | Crawford | Foster | Kortz | Wolenetz | Roberts |
| Six | Flagg | Lomas | Ho | Strickland | |
| Seven* | Lim | Hanahan | Jariwala | Singh | |
| Eight | Might | Morber | Tran | Cox | |
| Nine | Vo | Im | Vu | Chun |
If you have a problem with your group, e-mail the professor and/or T.A. immediately!!
Other Helpful Information About the Project:
The class presentation is to be
done Monday, April 23.
The web tutorial is to be sent to Brooks no later than 23 April, 4 p.m.
The tutorial must be tarred up in the following
manner:
1) All your web pages must be located in a directory
labeled by your group number. Thus, if you are group 8, your directory
should be named Eight.
2) The starting page for your group should be
index.html
3) The name of your tar file should be:
Group_#.tar
where # is your group number.
4) The command should be (if you're group 4)
something like:
tar
-cvf Group_4.tar Four/
You must submit your grade of the groups no later than 27 April, 5 p.m.
The forms to fill out and mail to Brooks will
be up no later than 7 p.m. on Monday, 23 April. To view a group's
tutorial, click on the appropiate group in the above table. YOU MUST
GIVE A GRADE TO EVERY GROUP!!
The summary to be turned in by Friday, April 6, 10 p.m.:
1. What is the topic to be covered.
2. What is your team's specific contribution (text, code, images, interactive
examples, etc.).
Remember you can select ANY topic with the guidelines and restrictions
previously mentioned in class, newsgroup and/or web site. In
particular,
(a) remember you will be graded by your peers on the basis of
(i) degree to which others understand the subject
of the project,
(ii) the level of effort expended by the team.
Thus, your goal will be to create
a TUTORIAL to teach or explain to
others a particular subject.
Other guidelines and restrictions include:
(b) Selecting a doable project: you only have 2.5 weeks to do it! Thus,
your project need not be advanced or sophisticated (it can even be
a subject already covered in class/assignments with some extensions).
(c) Elect a manager to oversee the progress, call meetings, distribute
workload, assess each person's, progess, etc.
(d) There will be a presentation
of your team's topic on 23 April.
Thus, elect a spokesperson. The presentation will be about 8 minutes
and to some degree this is your first chance to "sell" and impress
your peers on your team's work. (Transparencies, web-based demos, etc.
are all OK.)
(e) Importantly, make sure you *acknowledge
and recognize* the source of the material
(code, text, imagery, etc.) your
team will use (if you don't do so and imply it's
your original work but it's not
yours, **each team member** will be committing
plagiarism and can be guaranteed
(at least) of receiving a zero).
This is an open-ended project: it's up to you to delimit the boundaries,
have your team perform the expected tasks, and do it all in a timely
fashion. It should be fun
but it takes time and work. Let Brooks
and I know if you have any questions.