Syllabus and Course Policies
1 Basic Course Information
Please follow these links for relevant information:
2 Course Goals and Learning Objectives
Make you strong at fundamental programming techniques.
Teach you about basic algorithms and data structures, including their analysis.
Help you understand how computing relates to society.
Expose you a little to advanced or non-traditional programming ideas.
3 Keeping Current and Contacting Us
You must subscribe to and follow the course’s Campuswire board (the same one we used for summer placement).
You are welcome to post questions to the board. When you do, unless you have a particularly good reason for doing so, please make your question private to the course staff. If we feel the question is of general interest, we may choose to make it public.
Please contact us solely through Campuswire unless you have a very good reason not to. You are, of course, welcome to write course staff directly if you want to discuss a private matter. However, please do not write to staff individually for help with coursework: those requests should all go through Campuswire.
4 Class Meeting Times
Though this class is virtual, it will have live meetings. You can read more about them in a dedicated AFQ.
5 Assignments and Exams
The course has several Assignments.
There are no exams.
6 Anonymous Submissions
We expect you to submit all your work anonymously. This is to eliminate biases (both positive and negative) when grading, based on attributes such as race, gender, or even how you present yourselves in person.
To make clear we are serious, we will impose a small penalty if you do include personal identifying information (unless asked to). The penalty will escalate if you keep repeating this mistake.
Turning in work without your name on it may run contrary to what you’ve been told by countless prior instructors. However, because you’re turning in work electronically, not on paper, there is no danger we will “lose track” of whose work it is.
7 Time Allocation
The work load in the course is uniformly distributed across the semester. Students can expect to spend about 10 hours each week on assignments. Combined with the 2.5 hours spent per week in class, this translates to approximately 180 hours over the course of the semester.
8 Grades
Your grades from the placement process do not carry over to the semester. You start with a clean slate!
On most programming assignments, you will get two or more grades: usually one will represent the correctness of your solution, while others its code quality, efficiency, thoroughness of testing, and so on. We care about all of these. If you’ve had prior computing experience, it may have left you thinking all that matters is that a program has to pass some set of test suites that the instructor has, and nothing else matters. That is exactly the wrong position to take in this course.
Programs are not written only for computers: they are also written for humans. Humans have to review it, collaborate on its development, maintain it after you leave, etc. Your code structure, tests, and other aspects all impact this. That’s why we care about all these aspects.
You will also get grades for your written work. Here, we look for writing that is concise, concrete, and coherent. Just as with programs, we care that you write in a way that coveys your idea well to your reader.
Your overall course grade is a certificate of how you did: An A means you did
Excellent work, B means you did Good work, and C means you did Fair work. I
view it as a one-letter recommendation letter (a recommendation
letter—
It should then be obvious that your performance cannot affect that of your classmates, or vice versa. I therefore do not “grade on a curve”, because I consider the notion meaningless. By the same token, there is also no “default” grade in this course. At least in principle, everyone can do well.
There is only one way in which I look at the performance of the class. If a large portion of the class did poorly on an assignment, I assume there may have been a problem in the assignment itself, and I will check for that. If I find that we did indeed screw up in some way, I will lower my expectations for the assignment (i.e., lower standards for Excellent, Good, and Fair).
9 Grading Personnel
In this course, you will encounter undergraduate TAs (UTAs). UTAs are an important part of the educational mission of this department. We believe that students learn best by approaching material multiple times; we also know from personal experience that we learn best by teaching others. Therefore, UTAs undertake valuable personal learning by revisiting material some time after they first learned it, and by trying to explain it to others. In the same way, you may also encounter graduate TAs (GTAs).
These TAs also help with grading materials in the course. Their work is regularly reviewed by me. Grading is ultimately a collaboration in terms of setting standards, checking rubrics, reviewing work, etc.
However, TAs are not involved in any way in the creation of course grades. The course grade is entirely determined by me and nobody else, and is kept confidential from all TA staff. I have ultimate responsibility for the course.
10 Books and Materials
We will rely, wherever possible, on material that is available free-of-cost. We will use free software tools, and the textbook and other materials for the course are also provided for free. We will link to some third-party sites that are also available at no cost.
The primary course textbook is PAPL, and some new material that may be created as the semester progresses.
The primary course software is CPO, the on-line editor for the Pyret programming language.
11 Technologies and Sites
Please see this departmental list.
If you have difficulty accessing some of these, please get in touch with the course staff. We think most issues can be addressed so long as you can (a) access CPO and (b) ssh into the department’s computers.
12 Accessibility / Class Recording
Since the text for these is common across courses, to keep this document from becoming excessively long, I am linking to the the Sheridan Center site. The text on those pages should be considered included here.
Please do not assume that just because I have linked to that page instead of copying it’s text that I don’t take this content seriously. I am committed to working with students with accessibility needs. If you have such needs, please get in touch with me as early as possible and we will do everything we can to accommodate them.
Please be sure to note the copyright policy listed on the Sheridan site.
13 Timeliness
Many assignments in this course are accumulative: they are designed so that the learning in one assignment improves your learning in the next assignment, and so on. Therefore, turning in one late can force you to turn in the next one late, and so on, potentially leading to a difficult situation as the semester ends.
As a team, the course staff need predictability in their grading schedules. There is also benefit to locality: by grading all the submissions for an assignment at the same time, (a) the staff don’t have to “page in” the assignment’s content, and (b) they can handle all the submissions uniformly and thus fairly.
You have five late days that you can use at (almost: see below) any time during the semester. You do not have to give us any reasons; you don’t even tell us you’re using them. Just use them in the approved ways.
Note: There are a few rules and exceptions:You may not take more than two late days on any assignment.
You cannot take any late days on the last assignment of the semester. This is so that course staff can finish grading on a reasonable date while attending to their own other needs.
If you are taking a late day, you can submit after the deadline even if you have submitted something before the deadline. You don’t need to notify us if you do this. Just submit and we’ll automatically count your late day(s).Excused absences are when you have a reason that is justifiable by a note from a Dean or Health Services. (If you are home, you can submit a letter from a local doctor.) Excused absences do not count against your late days.
Note: When this happens, it’s usually because you are facing some adverse situation, sometimes an emergency. Follow the principle of “forgiveness, not permission”. That is, if you are in a crisis, focus on your needs. (If you have a moment to drop us a note telling us you will be delayed, that’s helpful, but in an emergency, don’t worry.) You can submit your note later. But you do need to submit official documentation for this delay to not count; otherwise it will be counted against your late days.
Per the university’s Religious Observance policy, if a religious event overlaps with half or more of the duration of an assignment being out, you can have as many days as you missed extra to complete the assignment. You are responsible for giving the staff a full list of the expected religious absences that require extensions before Sep 23.
14 Due Dates
These are available from Assignments.
15 Academic Integrity
Brown University has an Academic Code that governs all our transactions. This Code includes a section on Respect for the Integrity of the Academic Process, which establishes its policy on cheating. We expect that you, as students and scholars, will abide by this faithfully and fully.
You should be extremely careful when using Internet resources for assistance other than those specifically linked from the course website or specified in the assignment. You are welcome to use reference material, e.g., programming language documentation or an encyclopaedia. Be aware that performing a generic Web search may get you to much more, such as solutions. (The one exception is when an assignment explicitly tells you to search for information on the Web.) If you accidentally find a solution and choose to use it, document that you are doing so. You will lose some credit for the assignment, but at least you won’t be in violation of the Code. You shouldn’t post looking for solutions on mailing lists or Web sites, either.
Unless stated otherwise, assignments must be done alone. You are welcome to discuss any parts of the assignments with course staff. With your friends, you may talk about the assignment: e.g., how far along you are, how long you anticipate needing, etc. You may not, however, discuss solutions. If in doubt about whether you can discuss something, ask us.
You are responsible for keeping your files private by setting the appropriate protections. If you fail and someone copies your work, you too will be held responsible. The same holds for other kinds of “sharing”, such as leaving your work visible in public places (whether computer screens or whiteboards). Another important kind of file-sharing is posting solutions on a publicly-visible version control repository site. If you host your work on such a site, make sure it’s in a private repository.
Regret Clause: Exceptions are possible only if you admit
your violation to the professor (not a TA) within 24 hours of the
assignment due time. This gives you an option if you cheated in
desperation the night an assignment was due, or allowed someone to
cheat from you, or something else—
16 Unusual Assignments
Unlike most other courses you take, this one may have some unusual assignments. For instance, you may be asked to do something impossible, or you may be given a task that sounds significant but is actually trivial. In these cases, you should focus on providing a justification for your reasoning rather than a solution itself.
The purpose in having such assignments is to more accurately mimic the real world in which you will be asked to solve tasks: there are no “answers in the back”; some problems are trivial while others, which look similar, are impossible, and a priori you can’t tell which is which.
How will you know which assignments these are? You won’t. After you’ve wrestled with a problem for a while and built a hunch that this is one of them, ask the course staff to confirm your hunch. They will ask you to justify your reasoning. If you do and are on the right track, they’ll tell you that you’ve understood the real point of the problem and inform you about how to write up your (non-)solution.
17 Legal and Ethical Issues
This text is based, with thanks, on text from CSCI 1660.
Some of the material covered in this course may be usable to create attacks on computer systems or on people. It may be unethical and/or illegal to use or apply it in contexts beyond the course itself. Breaking into, misusing, or harming computer systems, networks, or people can be illegal and punishable by law. You may also run afoul of Brown’s computer use policy, which can have disciplinary consequences.
18 In-Class Electronics Use
Please see the separate page on it [Electronics Policy].
19 Diversity and Professionalism
Please see the separate page on it [Diversity and Professionalism].
20 Semi-Anonymous Feedback
If you run into any issues that you wish to report to the course’s head course staff, you can report them using this form. We will be discreet in how we use this information. In particular, we will discuss our plans with you before we contact anyone named in the form.
21 Counseling
If you feel yourself falling behind, needing to talk to someone about personal problems, or in general want a supportive ear, the university has extensive Counseling and Psychological Services. Please don’t hesitate to use these: everyone finds them helpful at some time or the other, and they’re part of what you’re paying for to attend Brown. Make the most of them.