General

Time and Location

Days Time Location
TuTh 11:45AM - 1:00PM Hudson Hall 139

Staff

Instructor Afsaneh Rahbar

Teaching Assistant Amelia Cook


Organization

The course is a “studio” like course. Studio course is a concept that originated in art schools. In a studio course, the instructor presents basic techniques, discusses domain knowledge for specific projects, and then teaches with the help of student presentations.

Coding is all about comprehending code. Doing well with this task demands tremendous practice. Hence when your peers present code, it is critical for you to read, understand, and analyze their explanations and justifications: their problem analysis, their interface and protocol design, their component design, and their code. The presenters will learn to communicate about products to a team, to defend their design decisions, and to get help with weak spots. Conversely, the listeners will learn to analyze and to critique a product, helping the presenter uncover flaws. For details on how we will conduct the presentations, see the Project page.


Final Code Walks

Instead of a final, we will conduct an extensive code walk of your projects. If the course progresses on schedule, the final code walks will be held during the finals examination period. If the course progresses faster than anticipated, all final code walks will take place during the final week of classes.


Grades

The final grading scale is to be determined.

The goal is to run this course for adults who are enrolled because they have a deep, burning desire to learn. They respect a basic honor code, which includes neither Cheating nor helping in an inappropriate manner.

If these assumptions hold throughout the semester, the assignment scores and code walk grades will determine the final grade as follows:

Assignment Weight
HOMEWORK 45%
CODE-WALKS 15%
CODE-REVIEWS 15%
FINAL 20%
LAB-BOOK 5%

All aspects, except code walks and reviews, will be graded on an instructor-specified normal point scale. Each in-class presentation and paneling function is graded on the following scale: ok+, ok, ok-, and zero. For pairs that do not pair program we will reduce the grades for both partners. At the end of the course, the class as a whole will determine how these grades translate into numeric values.

If these assumptions are violated at any point during the semester, we will give a final exam that will count for at least 50% of the overall grade.


Cheating

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