CS1371 - Computing for Engineers
Summer 2005 Class Syllabus
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Course Content
Concepts
The students will be expected to be familiar with the following concepts,
either by writing code to solve problems, or by diagramming the behavior of the
more complex algorithms.
General Principles:
- abstraction
- testing
- debugging
- problem solving
Concepts evaluated by coding:
- data types
- the use of variables for storing data
- basic mathematical and logical expressions
- arrays
- operations on arrays
- strings and character arrays
- structures
- file input and output
- conditional statements
- selection
- repetition
- functions and procedures
- variable scope
- plotting 2-D and 3-D data
- recursion
- manipulating images
Object-oriented concepts:
- classes and objects
- encapsulation
- queues and stacks
- methods
- inheritance
Concepts evaluated graphically
- sorting data
- lists and trees
- graphs (in the sense of generalized dynamic data structures)
- search techniques
Languages
Matlab® is an excellent first language for
engineers. It is an interpreted language that provides students immediate
feedback from their actions, and postpones many of the gory details of
correctness until a program is run. It is an ideal environment for
ordinary engineering computation. The course including
the section that introduces Object Oriented concepts is conducted from the Matlab®
environment. 'Matlab' is a registered trademark of The
MathWorks, Inc. Students who wish to work on their Matlab®
assignments on their own computers are required to purchase a Matlab®
license. For students not wishing to purchase the license, Georgia Tech provides
access to computers equipped with Matlab® licenses through a
licensing arrangement with The MathWorks, Inc.
Open Door Policy
Each of the instructors maintains an open door policy. You are free to
visit us during the posted office hours or, if you prefer a different time,
arrange an appointment with us. It is very important to contact us as soon
as you feel that you might need to. Problems, unlike fine wines, don't
improve with age.
Grading Policies
There is no curve in this course. However, we may elect to include extra credit
assignments at various times during the semester. The grading breakdown is as follows:
| Homeworks |
15% |
| Labs |
5% |
Quizzes |
45% (3 quizzes at 15% each) |
| Final |
35% |
Letter grade assignments are given according to the following cutoffs
with no rounding:
| 90.0 <= A <= 100 |
| 80.0 <= B < 90.0 |
70.0 <= C < 80.0 |
| 60.0 <= D < 70.0 |
| 0 <= F < 60.0 |
You have the right to question your grade on any assignment, but you
must initiate discussion about the grade within two weeks of receiving the grade. Should you find yourself having an issue with a
grade, contact your TA. If the issue remains, contact your Head TA and/or your instructor.
It is your responsibility to ensure that the grade posted in WebWork is the
grade you have recorded on your test paper. Discuss any discrepancy with
your TA or your Instructor before the beginning of Finals week.
Course Website
http://www.cc.gatech.edu/classes/AY2005/cs1371_summer/
Collaboration Policy
Homework and labs are designed to be learning experiences; they
are graded only to encourage students to complete the assignments
correctly. Collaboration is permitted and encouraged when working on your
homework and labs. However, the material you turn in must be essentially
your own work. Submitting large bodies of material written by others
without specifically attributing the authorship is plagiarism, and is not
permitted on this course, or anywhere else at Georgia Tech.
The quizzes and the final are our primary means of assessing your
understanding of course material. They will be taken in a supervised environment
during lecture periods.
Email Policy for this Course
You are encouraged to conduct all official email correspondence for
this course using your official GT email account; that is, your
prism-based email. This is to protect your privacy. Email with HTML
formatting should be avoided. Email from outside sources such as
hotmail, yahoo, and other personal accounts should also be avoided - many Spam
killers automatically reject mail from these accounts. For a quickest response, put CS1371 in the
subject of your e-mail. Most of the people involved with 1371 filter
their mail in some way, and having CS1371 in the subject will help
them see your e-mail sooner.
Lectures
Class meetings will be in two forms:
-
two large lectures a week intended to cover the
core material for the course, and
-
one small 120 minute recitation in which more interactive
discussion can take place led by two Teaching Assistants (TAs).
TA Access
TA hold help desk hours and are also available by appointment.
Help Desk
TAs are available Tuesday, Thursday, and Friday 2pm - 5pm in room CoC
347.
It is also common for us to offer help sessions for homework and (more frequently) for quizzes. The best way to know
of these help sessions and their details is to read the announcements posted on Webwork.
Due Dates/Times
Assignments are due electronically as indicated on the class Web
site or the announcements. Typically this is midnight on the date the
assignment states it is due (and this is also indicated on the
course calendar.) There is a 6 hour grace period that begins at the due time. You are free to turn things in early before the due
date, but once the grace period after the due date/time is over, no
more submissions are possible.
There are no redos allowed on any assignment!
Late Work Policy
No late homework, labs, tests or exams are accepted in this
class. Any request for exceptions to this policy due to
incapacitating illness, death in the family, or something similarly
serious must be accompanied by supporting documentation. If you miss your test
/ exam period without prior approval or a valid excuse, you may take the test
at a period following yours. However, you will be penalized 25% of your
test score.
CAUTION: the preprinted note from the infirmary stating that you
visited the infirmary is not sufficient documentation.
Please contact the Dean of Students with your excuse and they can
provide you with the proper documentation.
http://www.deanofstudents.gatech.edu/contact.html
Final Times and Places
Be aware that the final exam time shown at this point on Oscar is
tentative Do not make travel plans around it!!! The date
and/or time are subject to change. GA Tech announces the actual
final exam schedule much later in the semester.
Course Expectations
- Attend lecture on a regular basis and keep up with the reading.
These are the ONLY sources of new material to be learned.
- Participate in all discussions and ask questions about the material. This is your
best opportunity to review the material and see examples to
solidify your understanding.
- Visit your TA's and / or your Instructor's office hours with questions about grades and the
course materials. This is your chance to have one-on-one contact to take care of individual questions and issues.
- Refer to the course newsgroups to have discussions about course
material with your classmates and the TAs. This is where you can
have general-interest questions answered outside lecture and
office hours. You are also expected to follow good newsgroup etiquette, as per the newsgroup lab. This keeps the newsgroups
usable in a large class like CS 1371.
- Complete every homework assignment and use it as a learning
opportunity; use collaboration in order to gain a better
understanding, not to get the work done faster. This is your
chance to learn the material in preparation for the test; not
having a solid understanding of the homework *will* lead to poor
performance later (i.e. tests, other homework and the final exam).
- Take responsibility for your coursework submissions; it is your
job to make sure that you successfully turned in what you meant to
turn in and verify your submission by retrieving and checking your files. This is how you make sure that you get credit for the work you
do.
- Be prepared when you go to get help from a TA or your instructor with
specific questions. Bring your work (on computer media) and any other relevant materials to the
meeting.
- Take initiative. You will only get out of this class what you put
into it. Begin your assignments early and if you think you need
help, come prepared. Use the resources that are provided for you,
and be determined to succeed from the start.
Course Components
- Lectures - Attend, listen and learn. This is usually where we will introduce new material.
- Recitation periods - Example questions with discussion. Questions about the
homework and interactive solutions, taking advantage of the small
group setting.
- "Help Desk" - group-oriented help for *specific* hw and lab questions,
and more general help on other topics.
- Homework - learn ins and outs of the topics. Apply the material covered
in lecture to programming problems. Collaboration
encouraged here especially.
- Tests - should demonstrate your *understanding* of the course material.
Focus on applying concepts and skills learned in hw to novel problems.
- Labs - self-paced exercises in assorted computer-related topics.
- Final Exam - cumulative assessment of everything in the
course.
What to do in case of problems
If you need help, you should contact the following people:
| Your TA / Newsgroups (when appropriate) |
| Your Head TA |
| Your Instructor (e-mail addresses on the class web site) |
Miscellaneous Reminders
- You are responsible for turning in assignments on time. This
includes allowing for unforeseen circumstances.
- You are also responsible for insuring that what you turned in
is what you meant to turn in. WebWork includes a retrieve
submission feature. USE IT. This allows you to retrieve exactly
what you submitted and insure that the submission process was
complete. Every semester students manage to lose credit for
assignments because they unknowingly fail to complete the submission process. Following every
submission with a retrieval of that same submission will allow
you to be sure this does not happen to you.
- Finals and quizzes must be taken at the scheduled date
and time. Any change to your Quiz or Final time must be approved in
writing by your instructor. Please do not ask for special treatment because you have purchased non-refundable airline
tickets. The safe time to travel is after finals week. The
finals schedule published at the beginning of the semester is
TENTATIVE. The official schedule is published very late
in the semester.
- If you have any personal issues (family/illness/etc.) please
go to the Dean of Student's office located in
the Student Services Building (Flag Building) next to the
Student Center. They are equipped and authorized to verify the
problems and will issue a note to your instructors
making them aware of the problem and requesting whatever consideration is necessary.
- The announcements page should be read every day. Official
announcements about course matters will be posted there. The
general course newsgroup is for posting technical questions
about assignments, tests etc. Complaints, questions about your
personal problems, etc. should be discussed with your instructor
in person or via email.
Last Modified May 20th 2005:
by David Smith