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Fall 2o12 – August 27, 2012
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CMPSC 202 First Day Handouts Syllabus Student Info Fill out, include all classes and standard appointments Return to front before you leave or turn in later this week if your schedule is changing Autobiography Do outside of class. Bring back 2 copies W or F. Index Card: Name Tag Write first name you want me to call you in big text Return markers to front
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Today’s Plan Introductions Some highlights of the syllabus Quick tour of course web site Lecture on background material Continues Wednesday
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Introductions Instructor: Doug Hogan TA Class Roster
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Out of Class Office hours (338c IST) Drop in. First-come, first-served Email – hogan@cse.psu.eduhogan@cse.psu.edu Best way to reach me outside of scheduled times Evening help session Work on assignments with someone around to help, ask questions Runs most Wednesdays from 8:15-9:30 in 113 IST Starts next week, not this week
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Prereq. & Appropriate Course Prerequisite: MATH 140 Mainly for mathematical sophistication Derivatives and integrals Introductory programming for engineers 200, 201, 202 are similar 121 is for CSE majors AERSP, C E, E SC, I E, NUC E allow this course
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Very High Level Plan 13 weeks – how to program, using Fortran as the target language 2 weeks – a taste of Matlab
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Books Fortran text – customized Optional Everything you need to know is on the web Book provides more examples, practice, and a second view You decide how to use it Matlab text – required Not needed until after Thanksgiving Buy it soon, regardless
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Class Conduct Be here before class starts, seated and ready to pay attention Remain seated during lecture and whole-class discussions If your monitor is on during lecture, only have the same thing on your screen I have on mine No web surfing, chat, doing assignments, etc. No cell phones. Keep them away and silent. Respect the room and your peers and us.
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Attendance Notes If you’ll miss a class, email or stop by the office no later than the afternoon before You’re expected to be here all classes If you don’t follow the rules above, you’re effectively not here
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In Class Labs Where you first get practice with new concepts An avenue for feedback Sometimes we mark up all labs, sometimes there’s an early deadline to get individual feedback – if you follow conventions Nearly always class-wide feedback Grading Check, check-minus, or no credit (incomplete, poor effort)
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In Class Lab Grade (# of labs with a check) – (# labs with check- minus)/4 Denominator is adjusted by 90% Everyone gets benefit of the doubt this way No late work, make-ups if you miss, etc. Counts 10% of final grade Lab and attendance percentage must be at least as good as overall grade
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Formal Assessments Two options: Standard assessments – all proctored – for up to B+ Out of class projects and programming exam for extra challenge and eligibility for A or A- Standard assessments: Two midterms – 30% Final – 25% Graded Programming Assignments in Class – 25% Quizzes – 10% (In Class Labs – 10%)
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Exams Mix of conceptual ideas and programming problems Cumulative 8:15 – 10:15 p.m. on 10/11 and 11/14 Conflict exam form on syllabus due two weeks in advance if applicable
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Graded Programming Assignments In class, proctored Five total A problem designed to be solved in 50 minutes if you’ve been keeping up with the course Generally every 3 rd Friday May use notes, but may not discuss with anyone Grading: ½ on our test of the program, ½ on programming practices
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Quizzes Short, about 10-20 minutes One every week there’s not another major graded event Lowest is dropped
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A-level Assessments Why? Different goals Different levels of time and effort you want to put in Higher-level skills Midterm take home project Proctored programming exam –planned for evening of 12/5, starting 6:30 p.m. Term project Need at least a B on all three and an A on two to be eligible for A or A-
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Academic Integrity Do your own work All proctored activities are individual The program output you say the program produced must have been produced by the program See syllabus for more It’s okay to discuss practice labs with classmates. It’s not okay to share code.
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Syllabus and Course Site Read the whole syllabus carefully. As questions later this week about anything you don’t understand. Course Web Site: http://www.personal.psu.edu/djh300/cmpsc202 http://www.personal.psu.edu/djh300/cmpsc202 Don’t use Internet Explorer Let’s take a quick tour…
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