Scholarship Skills Andrew Black 1 Lecture 1 Scholarship Skills Andrew P Black Winter 2013 All material © 1996–2012 David Maier, Tim Sheard, Andrew Black,

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Academic Honesty Perspectives and policies at Mälardalen University School of Innovation, Design and Engineering 2009.
Advertisements

Capital High School Online Credit Retrieval--APEX Index – Class Expectations: – How To Log in to the Site: – Getting Started: – Student Requirements: –
School of Electrical and Computer Engineering ECE 400 Seminar Fall 2012.
Plagiarism Plagiarism What It Is and How to Avoid It.
Group Project CVEN Mixing and Transport in the Environment. A River Dye Study.
Scholarship Skills Tim Sheard and Todd Leen 1 Lecture 1 Scholarship Skills Tim Sheard and Todd Leen 2006 PSU - OHSU All material © 1996, 1997, 1999, 2000.
CS 410 Applied Algorithms Applied Algorithms Lecture #1 Introduction, class information, first problems.
CS Computer Science I – Programming and Problem Solving Prof. Angela Guercio Spring 2008.
CS – 600 Introduction to Computer Science Prof. Angela Guercio Spring 2008.
MIS 470: Information Systems Project Yong Choi School of Business Administration CSU, Bakersfield.
WEEK 8: REVISION CALEB HUMPHREYS. FREE WRITE / READING (~10 MINUTES) Read the sample Draft 1.1 of the rhetorical analysis in your textbook. Pages
PROBABILITY AND STATISTICS FOR ENGINEERS Session 1 Dr Abdelaziz Berrado MTH3301 —Fall 09.
1 CS 709B Advanced Software Project Management and Development Spring 2009 Course Syllabus January 20, 2009.
CS 315 Theory of Programming Languages Winter Quarter 2015.
Plagiarism M. Kubus. A Fluid Term? OED: to take and use as one's own (the thoughts, writings, or inventions of another person); to copy (literary work.
A Brief Calculus Course
The Purpose of this course is the following:  To improve your speaking, pronunciation and listening skills  To develop expertise and awareness of.
COP4020/CGS5426 Programming languages Syllabus. Instructor Xin Yuan Office: 168 LOV Office hours: T, H 10:00am – 11:30am Class website:
RPED 251 Dr. Phillip Bogle, Ph.D. Program Coordinator.
The Chicago Guide to Writing about Multivariate Analysis, 2 nd edition. Paper versus speech versus poster: Different formats for communicating research.
Introduction to MA Day 1. Name: Charlotte Bailey Office: MATH 802 Office Phone: (765)
COMP 465W: Software Engineering Fall Components of the Course The three main components of this course are: The study of software engineering as.
Introduction to MA Introduction to Calculus
Cpt S 471/571: Computational Genomics Spring 2015, 3 cr. Where: Sloan 9 When: M WF 11:10-12:00 Instructor weekly office hour for Spring 2015: Tuesdays.
SYSC System Analysis and Design 1 Part I – Introduction.
Discovering Computers 2009 Introduction to the course.
Syllabus Criminal Procedure Spring 2006 Semester January 17 : May Professor Dr. Mamdooh Abdelmottlep Cell Phone :
ACIS 4684/5584 IS Security and Assurance. 2 Dr. Linda Wallace  Office: Pamplin 3092  
Academic Honesty in the UT Arlington College of Engineering.
Object Oriented Programming (OOP) Design Lecture 1 : Course Overview Bong-Soo Sohn Assistant Professor School of Computer Science and Engineering Chung-Ang.
Material developed by Tim Korb, Peter Hirst, and Jeff Stefancic
CST 229 Introduction to Grammars Dr. Sherry Yang Room 213 (503)
February 28, 2008The Teaching Center, Washington University The Teaching Citation Program & Creating a Teaching Portfolio Beth Fisher, Ph.D. Assistant.
COMP 465W Software Engineering Fall Components of the Course The three main components of this course are: The study of software engineering as.
1 CS 420/620 Human-Computer Interaction Fall 2015 Course Syllabus August 25, 2015.
Research and Writing Seminar Thursday, – 16 35, room C To find an up-to-date version of the schedule and to read the papers check the website
National Service Training Program. Classroom Management  The student is expected to come to class on time. Attendance will be checked every meeting.
Advanced Database Course (ESED5204) Eng. Hanan Alyazji University of Palestine Software Engineering Department.
Course Information Sarah Diesburg Operating Systems COP 4610.
CS 445 Theory of Computation II Winter Quarter 2013.
Object Oriented Programming (OOP) Design Lecture 1 : Course Overview Bong-Soo Sohn Associate Professor School of Computer Science and Engineering Chung-Ang.
CS255 Communication Skills Aidan Mooney
Computational Structures Tim Sheard & James Hook Portland State University Class Preliminaries.
Academic Integrity: Processes & Expectations at the College Level Andrea Goodwin Associate Director, Office of Student Conduct University of Maryland Diane.
Academic Integrity: Processes & Expectations at the College Level Dr. Andrea Goodwin Associate Director, Office of Student Conduct University of Maryland.
LANGUAGE AND CULTURE Syllabus: Session 1, LSA Summer, 2003 INSTRUCTOR PLACE OFFICE HOURS David Dwyer Wells Hall C310 Crossroads Cafeteria Office.
1 CS 320 Interaction Design Spring 2011 Course Syllabus January19, 2011.
3 rd Quarter Presentation. A Study of Colonial America A quarter-long cross curricular research project and oral presentation in Social Studies.
Dual Enrollment English 101 Valerie Best
SYSC System Analysis and Design 1 Part I – Introduction.
COP4610/CGS5765 Operating Systems Syllabus. Instructor Xin Yuan Office: 168 LOV Office hours: W M F 9:10am – 10:00am, or by appointments.
1 English 1010 Writing Workshop Spring 2013 Meet twice a week M, Th (Sec.1a) Monday 4:10-6:00 (2-116) Thursday 4:10-6:00 (2-221)
Academic integrity Let’s Talk 1. Topics to Discuss What is academic integrity? Why is this important to students? Or Why should students care about academic.
Friday, January 08, 2016Friday, January 08, 2016Friday, January 08, 2016Friday, January 08, 2016printing Syllabus CJ 477 – Special Topics in Criminal.
Teachers: Gary Betney & Lisa Roughsedge.  To make the course more interesting and relevant to you as I.T. majors we will be using a website for many.
Online Orientation Instructor: María L. Villagómez Contact Information: Office: BLDG. 800 (874) Telephone#:
Welcome to CITB223 Mngt. Info. System An Overview of the Course.
1 CS 381 Introduction to Discrete Structures Lecture #1 Syllabus Week 1.
CMSC 601 Basic Research Skills Spring 2011 Tim Finin
The Research Process: Finding, Annotating, and Organizing the Literature Created by Dr. Mary Clai Jones and Amy Miller November 2015 Created by Dr. Mary.
Course Information CSE 2031 Fall Instructor U. T. Nguyen /new-yen/ Office: CSEB Office hours:  Tuesday,
1 CS 709B Advanced Software Project Management and Development (ASPDM) Spring 2012 Course Syllabus January 24, 2012.
Computer Science I ISMAIL ABUMUHFOUZ | CS 180. CS 180 Description BRIEF SUMMARY: This course covers a study of the algorithmic approach and the object.
CSE6339 DATA MANAGEMENT AND ANALYSIS FOR COMPUTATIONAL JOURNALISM CSE6339, Spring 2012 Department of Computer Science and Engineering, University of Texas.
MMW 15 TA: Kyle Knabb Week 1.
Course Information Mark Stanovich Principles of Operating Systems
Avoiding Academic Misconduct
Rowan University Academic Integrity Skills Workshop
Academic Honesty: Plagiarism Primer
Presentation transcript:

Scholarship Skills Andrew Black 1 Lecture 1 Scholarship Skills Andrew P Black Winter 2013 All material © 1996–2012 David Maier, Tim Sheard, Andrew Black, Todd Leen. Module 1: Course Introduction

Scholarship Skills Andrew Black 2 Lecture 1 Acknowledgements Many thanks to David Maier who first developed this course. Many of the slides presented here were based upon slides developed by David Maier. Suggestions for improvement and additions came from Tim Sauerwein & Walid Taha Additional material Todd Leen Tim Sheard Andrew Black

Scholarship Skills Andrew Black 3 Lecture 1 Course Mechanics Instructors Andrew Black FAB Ralph London (classes on 24 th January and 7 th March) Time: Winter Quarter 2013 –Tuesday and Thursday, 10:00 – 11:20 –Classroom: Neuberger 458 –Class Web page:

Scholarship Skills Andrew Black 4 Lecture 1 Assesement Scheme No Exams Exercises –Usually due the class after the one in which they are assigned. –Often used in-class the day they are due for peer review activities. –graded on a “check off” basis Projects –Six projects: 1.Annotated bibliography 2.Revision of a 1-page summary 3.5-minute presentation of a paper 4.5-page paper on a technical topic 5.Revision of 5-page paper 6.15-minute presentation based on paper above –Presentations outside of regular class hours, all invited to attend. –One week or more allowed for each project. –Graded with points

Scholarship Skills Andrew Black 5 Lecture 1 Grading Tentative Grading Scheme Exercises: 15% Projects: 85% Bibliography: 15% Revision of 1-page summary: 10% 5-min. Presentation: 10% 5 page technical paper: 15% Revision of 5 page research paper: 20% 15-min. Presentation: 15%

Scholarship Skills Andrew Black 6 Lecture 1 New this Year We will be writing a book! lectures are ineffective! class time is better used for interactive activities how do students become familiar with the basic material that used to be in the lectures? Each student takes responsibility for drafting a book chapter corresponding to a lecture. We will collectively improve the chapters in a writers workshop. Writing a chapter will take the place of some of the exercises wanted now: volunteer to be coordinator. knowledge of Redmine an advantage

Scholarship Skills Andrew Black 7 Lecture 1 Texts Required Texts: –Lyn Dupré. Bugs in Writing: A Guide to Debugging Your Prose (2 nd edition). Addison-Wesley, ISBN X Other Useful Books – see web page –Mark Zobel. Writing for Computer Science. Springer ISBN

Scholarship Skills Andrew Black 8 Lecture 1 Policies: All deadlines are firm, unless explicitly extended. We will be as flexible as possible in accommodating special circumstances; but advance notice will make this a lot easier. We follow the standard PSU guidelines for academic integrity. –Discussion with your classmates is good! –Reading and critiquing each other’s work is required. –Items turned in should be your own, individual work. Be extremely careful to avoid plagiarism – anything copied verbatim from another source must be typographically distinguished as a quotation; the source must also be cited. Paraphrasing and representing someone’s ideas as your own are also plagiarism.

Scholarship Skills Andrew Black 9 Lecture 1 Academic Integrity Students are expected to be honest in their academic dealings. Dishonesty is dealt with severely. Homework. Make an effort to complete every piece of work. Pass in only your own work. Writing assignments. Students are expected to do their own writing. Critique of your writing by others is encouraged, but you must fix your mistakes on your own.

Scholarship Skills Andrew Black 10 Lecture 1 PSU Code of Conduct The Office of Student Affairs at Portland State University maintains Code of Student Conduct and Responsibility. A copy of the full code can be found at The following conduct is proscribed by Portland State University; any student, or student organization, or group engaging in such conduct is subject to disciplinary action: All forms of academic dishonesty, cheating, and fraud, including but not limited to: (a) plagiarism, (b) the buying and selling of course assignments and research papers, (c) performing academic assignments (including tests and examinations) for other persons, (d) unauthorized disclosure and receipt of academic information and (e) falsification of research data. All expectations of the student conduct code will be enforced strictly in class.

Scholarship Skills Andrew Black 11 Lecture 1 Plagiarism The Writing Center at Portland State University has prepared PLAGIARISM: A Guide for Students to assist students in understanding plagiarism and developing strategies on avoiding it. A copy of this guide is available from Writing Center located in Cramer Hall 188F. Please read it carefully. See or x.htmhttp:// x.htm Scholarly work resulting from plagiarism or cheating will receive no credit.

Scholarship Skills Andrew Black 12 Lecture 1 The Writing Center Use it! The Writing Center | Contact Us

Scholarship Skills Andrew Black 13 Lecture 1 Projects Projects involve a technical topic of your own choosing, reporting on prior work in that topic area. 1. Annotated Bibliography –A bibliography of at least 10 references in your topic area. Citations and short written descriptions of each paper. 2. Revision of a 1 page summary –1-page (approx. 500 word) summary of one of the papers from your bibliography 3. 5-min. Presentation –A short (five-minute) presentation that corresponds to your summary paper (Project 2). Presentations will be scheduled outside of class time

Scholarship Skills Andrew Black 14 Lecture 1 Projects 4.First 5-page Paper –A background paper on a technical topic of 5 pages (~1500 words). It should be a complete paper with abstract, introduction and conclusions. 5.Revision of 5-page Paper –Based on the feedback you have received, and other comments that you have collected, revise P min. Presentation –Prepare and deliver a 15-minute presentation corresponding to your 5-page paper

Scholarship Skills Andrew Black 15 Lecture 1 Purpose of Course Make you better scholars better researchers better writers better presenters better reviewers Especially writing, and oral presentation

Scholarship Skills Andrew Black 16 Lecture 1 Learn to communicate Written papers and articles How to read How to write How to judge the writing of others Oral Presentations How to organize an oral presentation How to present an oral presentation How to listen to an oral presentation