Syllabus

Course Goals

By the end of this course, you will be able to:

Pandemic Changes

While the course of the pandemic has improved, we still are prepared to adapt to health issues (both individual and broader).

What happens if I get sick?

Remember to follow the university policies (which include rules on reporting positive tests if you've been on campus, restrictions on when you can return to campus, and some times when masking may be required for you, even if not for everyone).

Late days are intended to handle "normal" issues during the quarter. Additional accommodations (e.g. extra late days or longer extensions on specific assignments) may be possible if you have an extended illness. Contact Robbie as soon as possible if your illness is beyond

We will be recording lectures and posting to panopto so you can keep up/catch back up when you're healthy.

What if I get sick right before an exam?

Don't come to the exam if you're sick! Contact Robbie once you know you're too sick to attend, and we'll schedule a makeup exam for when you're ready to return to campus.

If your illness hits for the final, we may utilize other options like remote exams or temporarily giving an incomplete until you're well enough to return and take the exam. We will work with you to decide which accommodation is appropriate to your illness.

What if I'm not sick, but won't be comfortable in a large lecture hall?

Lectures will be recorded; we won't track in-person attendance for lectures.

We expect the final to take place in person.

We will have some accommodations available for people with significant reasons to not attend the main exam (e.g., a conflict exam for illnesses), but these will be limited.

If you have a health condition (mental or physical) that means you should not be in a large lecture hall, you should contact DRS (see Accomodations) to investigate accommodations.

What happens if a staff member gets sick?

Depending on who is sick (and how sick they are) we may find a substitute or convert an in-person meeting to zoom. In extreme circumstances, we may cancel a section or office hour, but we do not expect that to be common. Any such changes will be announced via Ed.

If Robbie has an extended illness, we may switch to zoom lectures for a short time.

We are doing our best to learn and teach during a pandemic. But we are still in a pandemic! If unforeseen circumstances arise during the quarter, please do not hesitate to talk to the course staff. The sooner we are made aware, the more options we will have for designing accommodations. You can also send us anonymous feedback with ideas to improve the course.

Nonetheless, one of the main methods of learning is talking to other students in the course! We strongly encourage you to find study groups you can meet with (remotely or otherwise).

Assesments

Grades will be based off homework assignments, concept checks, a midterm, and a final.

Homework

There will be approximately eight week-long homeworks.

Homeworks are both a chance for you to improve your understanding and for us to evaluate how well you understand the material. For that reason, although you are encouraged to discuss the problems with one another, you must still write up solutions on your own. More details are included in the collaboration policy.

At the end of the quarter, we will add together all points you earned on the homeworks and divide that by the total number of points possible to get your homework average.

Concept Checks

For each lecture, there will be a small gradescope quiz reviewing the concepts covered in that lecture. The material in this course builds on itself quickly: concept checks are a good way for you to detect misconceptions and ask questions early. All the concept checks for a given week will be due the following Monday morning at 9:30 AM (even if that Monday is a holiday). Despite setting the due dates weekly, we strongly encourage you to do them between lectures (e.g. do the one released on Wednesday on Wednesday or Thursday).

Because the goal of concept checks is practice, we count them differently in the gradebook. At the end of the quarter, we will add together your points on all concept checks. Your `average' on concept checks will be min{1, points earned / (.8*points possible)}. That is, getting 80% of the points on concept checks is enough to get full-credit (and you cannot get extra credit by getting a higher score).

The goal is to make these assignments a low-stakes way to get quick feedback on what you don't understand.

Midterm

We will have an in-person midterm. We are working to find a room that will let both sections take the exam at the same time. The midterm will likely be in the evening of Wednesday May 3rd.

Final

We will have an in-person final exam. We are working on scheduling a combined final so both sections take the exam at the same time. We will announce the date as soon as we know it.

Assigning course grades

Your course average will be a combination of your scores on the homeworks and exams. We will weight those categories as follows:

Extra credit is incorporated after we have set the grade breaks according to the weights above. Extra credit has a minimal effect on grades (changing GPAs by 0.1 or less).

Students often wonder whether the class is "curved." For example, whether the median course grade must be some specified value, or if we have a maximum amount of "good" grades we can assign. We do not "curve" in either of these senses. We do, though, look at the performance of students this quarter relative to other quarters (especially where homework problems were similar) to try to keep grades consistent between different quarters (that is that similar levels of understanding of the content would lead to similar grades). This process means that before we have collected all the grades, we don't know exactly where gradebreaks will be.

Grade guarantees

In order to give you a sense of how you are doing during the quarter, we offer the following minimum guarantees. That is, if your course average (calculated as descrbed above) meets these thresholds, we guarantee that you will get a GPA of the grade shown or higher. These guarantees are intended to give you a simple way to interpret how you are doing throughout the quarter; we will still decide at the end of the quarter on exact grade breaks as described above. In the event that exams or homeworks (or both) turn out more difficult than intended, we may make grades higher than indicated here, but we will not make them less generous.

Course Grade GPA guarantee
90%3.5
80%3.0
65%2.0

Late Policy

Homeworks

You will have six late days to use during the quarter for homework assignments. A late day allows you to turn in an assignment up to 24 hours later without penalty. Simply submit late and we will keep track of your usage internally.

Regardless of how many late days you have, you cannot submit an assignment more than 72 hours after it is due without prior permission from course staff.

For example, an assignment due at 11:59 PM on Wednesday could be turned in at 10 PM on Friday with no penalty by using two late days. However, you cannot submit at 12:01 AM Sunday as it would be more than 72 hours.

If you run out of late days, you may still turn in an assignment late, at a penalty of 15% per day (but still may not turn in an assignment after the 72-hour-late-deadline without prior permission from the course staff).

Concept Checks

You may not use late days on concept checks during the normal quarter; instead, if you have any late days remaining at the end of the quarter (after counting all late days used on homeworks), we will autoamatically use any remaining late days to set a concept check to 100%. (One concept-check per late day). You do not have to redo the concept check, nor tell us which one to apply it to (we will apply it to the concept check that leads to the largest increase in grade).

Other accomodations

Late days are designed to handle the “normal” difficulties in a quarter (e.g. prioritizing different courses, fundraising for an RSO, a minor cold, or attending a relative’s birthday dinner). If your situation goes beyond those “normal” circumstances, you should contact the course staff as early as you can. Depending on the situation, extra late days, dropping assignments, or other accommodations may be appropriate. The earlier you contact us, the more options we will have available.

Academic Integrity

We want to make sure that you fully understand and internalize the approach to the materials. So, we take academic integrity very seriously. We may refer violations of our policies to the Office of Academic Affairs.

Collaboration

You are allowed (and encouraged!) to discuss homework problems with other students, as long as you:

If you are confused as to whether or not some collaboration is allowed, ask us! No set of rules will be completely exhaustive.

If something weird happens, please tell us too! We will not consider any action to be a violation of the academic integrity policy if you tell us about it before turning in the assignment.

Resources Outside of CSE 312

You are strongly encouraged to seek out resources beyond official course resources, with the following caveats: