Readings are subject to change. Please always check the online syllabus.

CS 4472/6470: Design of Online Communities

Instructor: Amy Bruckman
Email: asb at cc.gatech.edu
Office: TSRB 338 (85 5th St.)
Office Hours: Find me after class, or email for an appointment.
TA: Rui Zhou
Email: r.zhou at gatech.edu
Office Hours: Find me after class, or email for an appointment.
TA: Hadizah Jolaoso-Perry
Email: hjolaosoperry at gatech.edu
Office Hours: Find me after class, or email for an appointment.
TA: John Ho
Email: jho49 at gatech.edu
Office Hours: Find me after class, or email for an appointment.
Location: Klaus 1447
Time: Tuesday, Thursday 12:00-1:15
Class Schedule: Calendar

Learning Objectives

Online communities are becoming an increasing part of how we work, play, and learn. But how are they designed? What are they really good for? Why are some communities more successful than others? What are the key issues in this field of research?

At the completion of this course, students will be able to:


Texts

Required:

Additional readings are on electronic reserve on the library website.

Recommended:


Assignments and Grading

Your grade is based on:

Assignments (except reading reflections) will be graded on a list of criteria (specified on the assignment) such as quality of writing, completeness, insight into design issues, insight into social issues, etc. For each criterion, you will receive either a check plus, check, or check minus. Most criterion will receive a check. A plus means "you impressed me." A minus means the assignment is incomplete, incorrect, or sloppy in some fashion with respect to that criterion. Your grade on an assignment starts at a 90 and goes up about 3 points for each plus and down about 3 points for each minus. This is not exact--it may be adjusted more. Generally, a 90 means your work satisifed what was expected and more than that means you impressed us; less means this not what we expected.

Extra credit towards the design assignment is offered for giving an in-class presentation about your design.

Late Policy

Assignments are due fifteen minutes before the start of class on the day they are due. Reading reflections are due 24 hours and 15 minutes before class. If you hand in a reading reflection after the deadline but before class, there will be a three point late penalty. Once class starts, the reflection will receive a zero unless you have a documented excuse (such as illness, job interview, conference attendance). Reading reflections may not use late days.

For all other work (other than reading reflections), over the course of the term, you have three "late days" where work may be late with no explanation needed. Once you have used up your late days, late assignments will be penalized at a rate of 3 pts (one grade step: A becomes A-) per day. Assignments more than one week late will not be accepted. Presentations may not be late. I suggest you save your late days for your larger assignments. We can't transfer them if you have used them and then are late on a later assignment worth more points.

Attendance

Class attendance is required. Please do not sign the attendance sheet if you are more than 15 minutes late. You may miss one two lectures with no penalty to your grade. Please do not have a friend sign in for you--we compare signatures, and if yours don't match, we may refer the issue to the Office of Student Integrity.

If you need to miss class for a legitimate reason, please email the head TA before lecture. Legitimate reasons for missing class include illness, a job interview, or attending a professional conference. Excuses that will NOT be accepted include for example picking someone up at the airport, having something due in another class, or having furniture delivered.

NEW: This attendance policy applies through March 12th. After March 12th, attendance will not be graded. Audio recordings of lectures will be provided for people who can't attend in person. Please do NOT post those recordings online--they are just for you. Email Rui with the date of the recording you need.

English as a Second Language

If Engish is not your first language, you may request to not be graded on your writing for a particular individual assignment. This means you won't be penalized for bad writing, but you also won't get credit for good writing. To take advantage of this option, you must mark "ESL" (English as a Second Language) on the first page of your assignment/paper. This option is not available for group assignments. We still of course expect you to try to write in correct English, and will do our best to offer useful feedback on your writing.

Reference format

Please use APA format for all references. APA format is described here.

No Use of Laptops or Phones in Class

Some evidence suggests that taking notes by hand on paper will lead to better retention of material than taking notes by typing. Also,in the past we have had issues with students not only not paying attention but also disrupting others during class-- by playing games, by accidentally clicking on a video with the sound on, etc. Requests to use laptops in class will be considered on a case-by-case basis. If you would like to use a laptop during class, please set up a time to meet with the professor. There will be no use of smart phones during class.

You may use your laptop in class for the purpose of referencing assigned readings.

Honor Code

This class abides by the Georgia Tech Honor Code. All assigned work is expected to be individual, except where explicitly written otherwise. You are encouraged to discuss the assignments with your classmates; however, what you hand in should be your own work.