Location: | Classroom: ISAT/CS 243 |
Meeting Time: | Section 1, MWF 10:10-11:00AM |
Section 2, MWF 11:15-12:05AM | |
Prerequisites: | Grades of "C-" or better in CS 227/MATH 227 or MATH 245, MATH 231 or equivalent, and CS 159. |
Required Textbook: | We will be using an interactive electronic textbook developed by the OpenDSA project. The book will be made available through Canvas. |
Name: | Dr. Nathan Sprague |
Office: | ISAT/CS 226 |
Office Phone: | 568-3312 |
Email: | spragunr@jmu.edu |
Office Hours: | http://w3.cs.jmu.edu/spragunr/schedule.html |
Questions related to course content should be asked through Piazza. You may use email if you need to contact me directly.
You are welcome to call or stop by my office any time, with the understanding that I may or may not be available outside of my posted office hours. If you need to meet with me outside of my posted hours, email me to make an appointment.
The focus of this course is on solving computational problems that involve collections of data. We will study a core set of data abstractions, data structures, and algorithms that provide a foundation for writing efficient programs.
At the conclusion of this course students will be able to:A detailed schedule including reading and homework assignments will be made available on the course web page. That schedule will be updated throughout the semester and should be checked regularly.
This course combines an evidence-based teaching method know as Peer Instruction with in-class lab activities. The emphasis of this approach is on learning how to use and apply course concepts to solve problems.
Most assigned readings will include embedded quizzes or exercises. These will usually allow as many attempts as necessary for you to complete all questions correctly. These exercises should always be attempted before the start of class. If you are stuck on an exercise, you are free to postpone completing it until you have had a chance to ask questions in class. Exercises will have a final cutoff date approximately one week after the original deadline. No submissions will be accepted after that cutoff date.
It is important that you keep up with the readings in this course. You should not expect that every important point from the reading will be discussed in class.
Peer Instruction combines short lectures with multiple-choice questions that target common misconceptions. You will use a clicker-like app known as Socrative to respond to each question twice. The first response is ungraded, and will be followed by a short discussion with your peers. You will then respond again individually for a grade (2 points just for answering, 3 points if your answer is correct) and we will discuss the results.
Other in-class activities will involve breaking up into small groups to answer questions or to work on programming exercises.
There will be approximately five programming assignments over the course of the semester. Programming assignments in this course will be implemented in Java. Programs will be graded on correctness, efficiency, documentation, and overall code quality. All submissions must conform to the CS240 Style Guide.
Homework answers should be prepared using a text editor, and will be graded on the basis of both correctness and clarity.
The final course grade will be calculated according to the following distribution:
Canvas Quizzes and OpenDSA exercises | 10% |
In-Class Activities | 15% |
Programming Assignments | 25% |
Written Homework Assignments | 5% |
In-Class Midterm Exams | 25% |
Final Exam | 20% |
Letter grades will be assigned on the scale A=90-100, B=80-89, C=70-79, D=60-69, F=0-59, with potential minor adjustments after considering the overall performance of the class and actual distribution of numeric scores. I will use "+" and "-" grades at my discretion. I do not assign WP or WF grades except under extraordinary circumstances. A passing grade on the final is required to earn a grade of C- or better for the course.
Regular attendance and fully engaged participation is expected. Your grade will be partially based on in-class assignments, so attendance will affect your grade.
It is expected that your work in this course will comply with the provisions of the JMU honor code: http://www.jmu.edu/honor/code.shtml. It is not a violation of the honor code to discuss assignments and solutions with other students at a conceptual level. However, all of the work that you submit must be written by you, based on your own understanding of the material. Representing someone else's work as your own, in any form, constitutes an honor code violation. It is also a violation of the honor code to "render unauthorized assistance to another student by knowingly permitting him or her to see or copy all or a portion of an examination or any work to be submitted for academic credit."
A key component of academic integrity is giving credit where credit is due. If you receive assistance, either from another student or from some other source, you must acknowledge that fact. To that end, all programming and homework assignments submitted for this course must include a statement that acknowledges any assistance you received and must contain the statement: "This work complies with the JMU Honor Code."
For example, if I were submitting this syllabus for credit, I would include the following statement:
This work complies with the JMU Honor Code. I would like to acknowledge the assistance of Chris Fox and Michael Kirkpatrick. Portions of this document were copied directly from their syllabi.
-Nathan Sprague
I will prosecute honor code violations if they come to my attention. If in doubt about what is allowed, ask me.
If you are unable to take an exam at the scheduled time because of illness or other problems, you must contact me beforehand to arrange to take the exam at a different time. Failure to make prior arrangements for a missed exam will result in a grade of 0 for the exam.
It will not be possible to receive credit for in-class work that is missed due to absence. In recognition of the fact that absences are occasionally unavoidable, I will drop the two lowest scores in this category when calculating your final grade.
Homework and Programming assignments will be due at 11:00PM on the posted due-date. Assignments submitted after the deadline will be subject to a 25% penalty for the first day. The penalty will increase to 50% after 24 hours. No assignments will be accepted more than 48 hours after the deadline.
Except under extraordinary circumstances, I will not provide extensions for illnesses, extracurricular obligations, etc. Instead, you will have three "late days" which may be applied to any project or homework assignment (with some exceptions for assignments due at the end of the semester or immediately before exams). The use of a late day allows you to extend the deadline for an assignment by 24 hours. You may apply all three days to a single assignment or distribute them across multiple assignments.
I take an old-fashioned view of mobile devices. I see them as infernal distractions that disconnect us from our surroundings while chipping away at our very humanity. Phones should be silenced and put away during class unless they are being used for a course-related activity. If you violate this policy, I reserve the right to give you a long pointless lecture about the failings of your generation and the probable downfall of civilization. This will be embarrassing for both of us.
Fifty minutes is an extremely short period of time. Please be ready to begin work at the scheduled start of class and refrain from packing up to leave until the class period is over. In exchange, I will commit to ending class promptly at the schedule time.
Students are responsible for adding and dropping courses via MyMadison. Please consult the registrar's page of dates and deadlines for exact deadlines.
If you need an accommodation based on the impact of a disability, you should contact the Office of Disability Services (Student Success Center, Room 1202, www.jmu.edu/ods, 540-568-6705) if you have not previously done so. Disability Services will provide you with an Access Plan Letter that will verify your need for services and make recommendations for accommodations to be used in the classroom. Once you have presented me with this letter, you and I will sit down and review the course requirements, your disability characteristics, and your requested accommodations to develop an individualized plan, appropriate for this course.
This class will operate in accord with JMU's inclement weather policy available at http://www.jmu.edu/JMUpolicy/1309.shtml
I will give reasonable and appropriate accommodations to students requesting them on grounds of religious observation. If you require such accommodations you must notify me at least two weeks in advance.
Students learn to implement and analyze elementary data structures and the basic complexity classes of algorithms that use strategies such as greedy algorithms, divide-and-conquer algorithms, and backtracking algorithms. This analysis is especially applied to problems in searching, sorting, and parsing.