Syllabus

This page includes course syllabus in its entirety. Please be sure to review the syllabus before the quarter begins so you know what is expected of you and what you can expect from us as the teaching staff.

Additionally, here are some handy reference links that will take you to each section of the syllabus (rather than having to scroll all the way down).

Course Goals

Morning Session Goals

By the end of the term, students will:

  • Employ the Problem Solving Process in computer science,
  • Employ Engineering Life cycle and time management techniques for software development,
  • Present a technical talk, run a technical discussion, as well as give and receive constructive feedback on their work,
  • Gain experience with the processes (particularly debugging!) used in the Allen School, and
  • Develop three projects
    • A personal "About Me" web page published on the student servers.
    • An “app” project that will focus on how users interact with apps on handheld devices.
    • A physical computing project.

Morning Session Topics

  1. Problem Solving Process and Reflection
  2. Teach the Class
  3. Personal Web Page (HTML/CSS)
  4. User Centered App Development
  5. Physical Computing

Afternoon Session Goals

  • Develop further insight into your academic and career path and how this relates to your own values, life, and professional goals.
  • Cultivate meaningful connections among peers, staff, and faculty as well as members of the broader computer science field.

Course Organization

Grading

The grade book will be kept on Canvas and will be updated regularly; please check it to be sure scores have been recorded correctly. Please contact the course staff (cse190e-staff@cs) if something has been recorded incorrectly. If you feel something has been regraded incorrectly, please refer to the re-grade policy below.

Grade Weights

The weighting for your grades will be as follows:

  • Assignments:
    • Morning assignments: 15%
    • Afternoon assignments: 20%
  • Projects:
    • Project 1 (HTML/CSS): 10%
    • Project 2 (App Development): 20%
    • Project 3 (Physical Computing): 10%
    • Teach the Class: 10%
  • Assessments: 10%
  • Effort, Participation, and Altruism (EPA): 5%

Morning session projects

Your larger projects for the morning will account for a significant portion of your grade. Each will be broken into three parts:

  • Design
  • Implementation
  • Presentation/Reflection

Morning session assessments

The purpose of the assessments is two-fold:

  • to assess your knowledge of the material being presented
  • to give you an opportunity to practice your study and test taking skills.

Some form of assessment will be given every Friday morning and may take one of these forms:

  • Resource based quizzes where you will be given access to resources such as books, computers, etc.
  • One-time in-class written quizzes (as a checkpoint for your knowledge)
  • "Perfect quizzes" where you are given multiple opportunities to get 90% or above on the quiz.

In class work and Effort, Participation, and Altruism (EPA)

In class work

CSE 190e will be an active learning class. As such, there will be as little direct instructor led lecturing as possible, and even when there is, it will be interspersed with times students are expected to think about and answer questions posed to the class.

Much of the work you will do in this class will be independent, pair, or group work. Much of the time you will be expected to do this work in order to further your own learning, and the product of the work will not be collected. Occasionally it will be as a check for understanding.

You will also be given a LOT of time to do your project work during class time. We expect that you will use this time effectively and appropriately.

EPA (Effort, participation and altruism)

  • Effort: Your effort in this class will be measured through your active engagement in the class work. It will also be demonstrated by attending office hour and keeping up with threads on the discussion board.
  • Participation: Your participation will be measured by your active engagement in class discussions, asking questions in lecture and on the discussion board, voting on peer instructions questions, and interacting with Startup Student Leads and other students. (For more details on what it means to be an "active participant" in the class, please see the Participation section.) Additionally, at least one assignment (Teach the Class) will also have a graded component based on your participation in that assignment in particular.
  • Altruism: Your altruism for the class will be measured by helping others in lecture, during office hours, and on the discussion board.

Participation

Your participation grade will mostly include your active participation in class and in the learning process. The questions below are designed to help you understand what it means to be an active participant in this class.

  • Did you come to class with relevant ideas, and questions related to the class topics?
  • Do you make at least one excellent contribution (e.g., insight or question) to each class without monopolizing discussion?
  • Do you give active nonverbal and verbal feedback?
  • Do you refer to other students by name and react to their contributions?
  • Are any email or message discussions held to our same class norms?

Participation Balance

In any group there will be those who speak more and those who speak less; this might be because of differences in personality, language fluency, or culture. Some people like to carefully think before they speak and some believe that interaction should be rapid and assertive. Be mindful that others have important things to say too, but they may need a bit more time to speak.

If you often find yourself dominating class discussions, or answering all of the instructors' questions, try limiting yourself to 3 really good responses, to give others a chance to participate. Remember, the silence is really OK, and it is sometimes needed for other students to feel comfortable speaking.

References

Some of the text in the Participation section was borrowed from Benjamin Mako Hill's Teaching: Assessment materials

Late Work

Late work is not accepted unless under special circumstances. If you need to turn in an assignment late under special circumstances, please email the instructor to schedule a meeting PRIOR to when the assignment is due in which we can discuss and determine if extra time is needed.

Re-grade Policy

Reflecting on graded work and assessments is one of the most valuable ways you can learn from your mistakes, and we encourage you to do so. If you have a question about a grade you received or if you feel the grade you received is incorrect please email the instructor for an appointment to discuss the assignment and your grade in detail.

It is also possible for the graders to make mistakes. If that happens we certainly would like to correct the error. Please note the following:

  • When you request a regrade, we may look at the entire problem/lab/question/etc. This means that while it is possible for your grade to go up, it is also possible for it to go down.
  • We will be using Gradescope to grade homework, projects, and assessments. Gradescope has a mechanism for managing regrade requests (instructions). Via Gradescope, you will submit each request separately for each problem. Be sure to explain the reason why you want this problem regraded with clear details. The time by when you need to submit your regrade request will be set in Gradescope, but generally will be within a week of when the grade was returned.
  • For material that is graded through Canvas or other systems, send an email from your UW or CSE Net ID only to the TA who graded you (if known) and CC the instructor. Include a written summary describing why your work should be looked at again. Regrade requests must be submitted within a week of when the homework grade was returned. Failure to do any of the above may mean your work is not regraded.

Course Expectations

Communication

You, the student, are expected to...

  • Check our Ed Discussion board daily. Use our class Ed board to ask clarifying questions on coursework, engage in discussions and view class announcements.
  • Check canvas for course assignments daily.
  • Read emails that are sent to the course list (occasionally).
  • Respond to direct emails in a timely manner (using your UW or CSE Net ID only)
  • ASK QUESTIONS!!! particularly if part of an assignment or assessment is unclear.

As the instructors, we will ...

  • Do our best to write clear assignments and assessments.
  • Do our best to respond to student emails within 24 hours on weekdays, 48 hours on weekends.

Attendance and Punctuality

You are expected to attend all classes this session. Participation is part of your grade, and you can't be graded on participation if you're not present in class. In addition, our goal is to have this class be largely active learning, engaging, giving you the opportunity to interact with peers, and ask questions of the instructors and TAs.

All students are expected to arrive to class on time except for in cases of emergency. If you do arrive late, please respect the learning of other students . Do your best to catch up if we are in a direct instruction (lecture) portion, and ask for additional information and help if you need during our work periods or office hours.

Technology

(Portions heavily borrowed from Professor Hacker)

Technology in the classroom

This is a computer science class and somewhat obviously, we'll need to use technology in the class. However, it is to be used for adding value to your learning, not as a distraction. I understand that your phones connect you with your friends and family, our "classroom" (whether in person or virtual) should be a place apart, however briefly, from the outside world. You will learn more, in short, if you can concentrate on the course while you’re in the course.

The following are some guidelines:

  • Phones, tablets and other communication devices: This should go without saying: your cell phone and other devices should not be a distraction in class.
    • I am not asking you to turn your phone "off" (no one does when they're told to anyway), but your phone should be set to silent or vibrate before you enter the classroom and put away where it will not distract you (i.e preferably not in your pocket, but rather in your bag).
    • You should not be sending or receiving any messages (text, Snapchat, Facebook, etc).
    • If there is a somewhat emergent case where you do need to receive a phone call or text message, please speak with an instructor at the beginning of class to explain why you need an exception to these rules. Please make sure your mic is muted and your video is off when you take the necessary call.
  • Laptops: I'm sure you've heard all the research (like this, and this, and this) that you should really take notes with pen and paper, but you may use a laptop or tablet to take notes during this class. In fact, we'll be needing our laptops quite a lot to view lecture, do course work, test out theories, and even look up facts during class. However, in-class laptops also present temptations that many students find irresistible. You should not use a laptop during class to follow a game, use social media, play games, IM/DM, respond to email, etc, or even do work for another class! Such activities not only distract you (meaning you will be less able to participate meaningfully in the class’ conversations), they may also distract others.

Technology "woes"

Instructors have heard just about every excuse for why work is not turned in on time. Many of these excuses are technology focused, and even some of them were really out of the students' control. Professor Hacker says it: Let’s face it: technology breaks: servers go down, transfers time out, files become corrupt. The list goes on and on. These are not considered emergencies. They are part of the normal production process. An issue you may have with technology is no excuse for late work. You need to protect yourself by managing your time and backing up your work.

As such you are expected to...

  • Have and use anti virus software provided by the university,
  • Back up your work regularly using the ample "cloud" resources like Google Drive or Microsoft 365.

and... we expect that if your computer breaks, get lost, has trouble, and so on you will:

  1. Look into university resources to get it fixed/replaced (if you need to purchase a new machine check into the University's short term loan program). If this is not available, please email cse support (support at cs) to see if they have any equipment for loan available.
  2. If open and available, use the university lab resources through Odegaard or the Engineering lab to complete your homework for this class.

Academic Conduct

Integrity is a crucial part of your character and is essential for a successful career. We expect you to demonstrate integrity in this class and elsewhere.

The Paul G. Allen School has an entire page on Academic Misconduct within the context of Computer Science, and the University of Washington has an entire page on how Academic Misconduct is handled on their Community Standards and Student Conduct Page. Please acquaint yourself with both of those pages, and in particular how academic misconduct will be reported to the University.

Your academic conduct in this course is evaluated in at least the four areas described in detail below.

Honesty in Communications

Individuals are expected to be honest and forthcoming in communications with TAs and the instructors.

School Appropriateness of Content

Note that one of our course policies is to engender an inclusive environment. As such it is important that you are thoughtful about what you choose to use in your work. Please make sure that the images and text you are using are “school appropriate” and follow the guidelines of expected behavior. If you have any questions, please do not hesitate to ask a TA or your instructors. Inappropriate work submitted may be ineligible for credit on that assignment.

Collaboration Policies

"As a teacher, it’s not my goal in life to read a class’ worth of programs on a topic that all basically look the same. My goal is to assess whether you understand the material that we’ve taught in class enough, and you demonstrate that to me through the work you do. I can not assess that if you are turning in someone else’s work."

- Dr. Tom Butler, Lakeside H.S.

Computer science education is odd in that we expect you to turn in work that you do completely independently when in the "real world" that’s not how it works at all. In the real world, co-workers collaborate, bounce ideas off each other, and they look up parts of solutions on the internet. But in the "real world" the people doing the work have years of experience, they have proved themselves to their teachers, co-workers and bosses to where they are at that moment and most importantly, they know how to evaluate which of the solutions they are receiving is an appropriate one to solve the task at hand.

Your instructors need to be able to evaluate your work. Thus, unless otherwise specified (i.e. pair or group work), all work in this and other CS classes must be your own. You may wind up using other people or online resources to learn how to achieve new things, but we expect you to synthesize this work in your own way and learn to write your own code. You should never copy (plagiarize) homework or code from another person in this school (past or present) or that you find online directly and submit it as your own work.

Specifically, you must abide by the following:

  • You may not use code directly from any external sources (including copying lecture/section material in programming assignments).
  • You may not post your homework solutions on a publicly accessible (non-password-protected) web server or Git repository, during the course or after it has been completed. Please see the course website for acceptable ways to show your work to others.
  • You may not look at or use prior solutions from any source.

Important reading: Some students at Lakeside HS wrote the Collaboration Guidelines for CS document in 2016 (you need to be logged in with your UW NetID to read this). This document has some clear examples of what to do and not to do and will be required reading for Computer Science courses.

Privacy

To support an academic environment of rigorous discussion and open expression of personal thoughts and feelings, we, as members of the academic community, must be committed to the inviolate right of privacy of our students and colleagues. As a result, we must forgo sharing personally identifiable information about any member of our community including information about the ideas they express, their families, lifestyles and their political and social affiliations. If you have any questions regarding whether a disclosure you wish to make regarding anyone in this course or in the university community violates that person's privacy interests, please feel free to ask the instructor for guidance.

Knowingly violating any of these principles of academic conduct, privacy or copyright may result in University disciplinary action under the Student Code of Conduct.

Getting Help

Outside of class time there are a few ways to ask questions or discuss course issues:

Inclusion Statement

You all belong in this class and as such should expect to be treated by your classmates and the course staff with respect. It is our goal, as the course staff, to provide an interesting and challenging environment that is conducive to your learning. If any incident occurs that challenges this commitment to a supportive and inclusive environment, please let the instructor know so the issue can be addressed.

Expected Behavior

The Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) recently released guidelines of expected behavior as part of their Policy Against Harassment at ACM Activities . The ACM's description of expected behavior is as follows:

ACM's policy also has a detailed description of unacceptable behavior on the same page.

Wellness

It is very important to us that you take care of your mental wellness throughout the course. Everyone on the course staff is available to chat, and you can always attend office hours for a non-academic conversation if necessary.

Beyond the course staff, the University of Washington provides the following resources for mental health concerns. Your anonymity and privacy are protected.

If you have a temporary health condition or permanent disability (either mental health or physical health related), you should contact DRS at uwdrs@uw.edu if you have not already (see the accessibility section for more details). Additionally, if there is something we can do to make your experience better, please let us know.

Accessibility

The Disability Resources for Students (DRS) is a unit within the Division of Student Life and is dedicated to ensuring access and inclusion for all students with disabilities on the Seattle campus. They offer a wide range of services for students with disabilities that are individually designed and remove the need to reveal sensitive medical information to the course staff.

If you have a medical need for extensions of assessment times or assignment deadlines, these will only be granted through official documentation from DRS. Browse to here to start the process as soon as possible to avoid delays.

Note: Students with accommodations are solely responsible for submitting the Alternative Testing Contract and scheduling the exams with DRS well in advance of the exam dates, following the deadline guidelines on the DRS website.

Religious Accommodations

Washington state law requires that UW develop a policy for accommodation of student absences or significant hardship due to reasons of faith or conscience, or for organized religious activities. The UW’s policy, including more information about how to request an accommodation, is available at Religious Accommodations Policy. Accommodations must be requested within the first two weeks of this course using the Religious Accommodations Request form on UW's site.