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DEPARTMENT OF
COMPUTER SCIENCE AND INFORMATION SYSTEMS
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Spring 2008 |
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CSIS 2300/W05 |
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Online Class |
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Course
Description:
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CSIS
2300 Principles of Computing 3-0-3. Principles of Computing is the first course a
student should take to prepare for a career in computer science or
information systems. Topics include information systems in organizations,
hardware, software, database concepts, telecommunications and networks, the
Internet, systems development, security, privacy, ethics, programming logic,
algorithms, abstraction, and data structures. |
Prerequisites:
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A
credit-level mathematics course. |
Textbook and
Resources:
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Dale, Nell, & Lewis, John (2006). Computer science illuminated
(3rd ed.). Meyer, R. Mark (2003). Explorations in computer science: A guide to
discovery (CD) 2nd Edition. Boston: Jones and Bartlett
Publishers. |
Instructor:
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Sherri
Shade |
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Office:
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CL
3021 |
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Email
Address: |
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Phone: |
770.420.4474 |
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Office
Hours: |
By
Appointment |
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Fax
Number: |
770.423.6731 |
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Website
Address: |
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Learning
Outcomes:
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As
a result of completing this course, students will be able to: ·
Describe the integration of computing systems with people ·
Understand ethical and security issues related to computing ·
Explain the integration of the computing discipline(s) with career
paths ·
Gain a systems perspective of computing ·
Use Web resources to learn more about relevant topics ·
Complete laboratory exercises to illustrate and reinforce lecture
topics |
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Classroom Policies: |
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Diversity
Statement: All courses offered by the Computer Science and
Information Systems department will adhere to the KSU policy that prohibits
discrimination on the basis of race, religion, color, sex, age, disability,
national origin, or sexual orientation.
Withdrawal Policy: |
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A new
University Withdrawal policy is in effect Fall semester, 2004. Below is an
excerpt from the catalog. For further details, please refer to Academic
Policies at http://www.kennesaw.edu/academicaffairs/acadpubs/acadpub/ucat2006-07/i.acad_advise_pol.pdf
, page 45 or the 2006-2007 printed catalog. Students
may withdraw from one or more courses anytime before the last three weeks of
the semester. However, as of fall 2004, students will be allowed a maximum of
eight total withdrawals if they enter KSU as a freshman. Transfer students
will be allowed one withdrawal per fifteen credit hours attempted, for a
maximum of eight. Students who choose to pursue a second degree at KSU will
be allowed two additional withdrawals. Students who entered KSU before the
fall of 2004 will be allowed one withdrawal per fifteen credit hours
attempted for a maximum of eight after the institution of this policy. To
withdraw they should complete an official withdrawal form in the Office of
the Registrar. Students who officially withdraw from courses before
mid-semester will receive a in those courses and receive no credit. |
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Email Policy:
The instructor will reply to e-mails that list the
course number and section in the subject line of the e-mail (CSIS 2300/W05).
Emails with other subject lines may not reach the instructor's mailbox.
You
also must forward your WebCT mail to an
external account that you check frequently. Since I often check e-mail
outside of WebCT, if you do not forward your WebCT mail, I will not be able to respond to your
message. You will not receive an e-mail from me indicating that you need to
do this. It is your responsibility to make sure that your WebCT
mail is forwarded. To forward it within WebCT: Mail..Message..Settings..Forward mail
to:
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Classroom Behavior
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Students are reminded to conduct themselves in accordance
with the Student Code of Conduct, as published in the Undergraduate and
Graduate Catalogs. Every KSU student is responsible for upholding the
provision. For more details, visit http://www.kennesaw.edu/academicaffairs/acadpubs/acadpub/ucat2006-07/x.General_Policies.pdf . In a virtual classroom
as in a regular classroom, students should interact in a responsible,
professional manner, both with their peers and the instructor. Students who
are in violation of this policy may have their discussion board postings
deleted with a corresponding significant grade reduction for the assignment
in questions. Further, these students may be subject to disciplinary action
by the University. |
Student Email and Web Account Access:
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KSU uses a central authentication server that will allow one
username and password to be used by all KSU users to access an increasing
variety of applications (email, WebCT etc.). This
unified network identification is referred to as your "NetID." The source for university-provided email and
web space for students is located at http://students.kennesaw.edu .
Students have access to this system once they have established their NetID. This system will provide email service through a
web based interface, FTP and SFTP. To activate your NetID go to http://netid.kennesaw.edu and click on
the "Sign up Now!" link. You will be asked to provide information
to verify your identity and set your password. This password will only be for
NetID enabled applications. After you have activated your NetID,
you can look up other users by logging into http://netid.kennesaw.edu and clicking
on Directory Search. For student email, your NetID in
combination with the new email address would look like netid@students.kennesaw.edu . Web Address: For student web address, your NETID in combination with the new
server address would look like http://students.kennesaw.edu/~netid.
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Units and Due Dates (all
units due at 11:45 pm) |
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Due Date
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Unit |
Topics |
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1/14 |
1 |
Introduction
to the course |
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1/21 |
2 |
Ch
1: The Big Picture |
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1/28 |
3 |
Ch
2: Binary Values and Number Systems |
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2/4 |
4A |
Ch
3: Data Representation |
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2/11 |
4B |
Ch
4: Gates and Circuits |
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2/18 |
5A |
Ch
5: Computing Components |
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2/25 |
5B |
Ch
12: Information Systems |
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3/3 |
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Spring
Break |
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3/10 |
6A |
Ch
10: Operating Systems |
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3/17 |
6B |
Ch
11: File Systems and Directories |
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3/24 |
7 |
Ch
15: Networks |
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3/31 |
8 |
Ch
16: The World Wide Web |
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4/7 |
9A |
Ch
6: Problem Solving and Algorithmic Design |
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4/14 |
9B |
Ch
7: Low-level Programming Languages |
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4/21 |
9C |
Ch
8: High-level Programming Languages |
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4/28 |
10 |
Ch
17: Limitations of Computing |
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4/29 – 5/5 |
Final Exam |
Comprehensive – covers all units |
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Special Dates: |
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Last day to withdrawal
without penalty |
March
10th |
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Last day of class (University) |
April
28th |
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Holidays |
January 21st, March 1 – 7 Spring Break |
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Final Exams |
April
29th – May 5th |
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Graduation |
May
13 - 14 |
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Grades due to Registrar |
May
7 |
Class Format:
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This class uses an online format with
required laboratory exercises that students complete. This is a virtual
class, so we do not meet at all during the semester. Because of the virtual
nature of this class, it is necessary that you have the self-discipline to
stay on schedule and complete your work as assigned. It is also necessary for
you to fully participate in bulletin board discussions.
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Lecture Notes:
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Available
on WebCT with all course materials: http://courses.kennesaw.edu |
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Links:
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http://science.kennesaw.edu/csis
- CSIS Department main website. http://csilluminated.jbpub.com -
text book web site. |
Computer Labs:
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The labs on the
fourth floor of the LAB HOURS: https://its.kennesaw.edu/cms/index.php?id=1 Labs are open most holidays. Labs ARE NOT open during the semester
breaks. Science and Mathematics Building
The
lab in SC 228 of the Science and Mathematics Building is open as listed
below. The telephone number of the Science and Mathematics Building lab is
770-499-3351.
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Owl Printing System: |
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Assessment:
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Component |
Approx % of Total |
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Discussion
Board Activities |
20% |
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Chapter
Quizzes |
20% |
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Laboratory
Exercises |
25% |
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Web
Site Project |
10% |
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Final
Exam |
25% |
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TOTAL |
100.0% |
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* Students may earn extra credit by attending
IT-related and/or professional development events on campus. Students can earn ˝
point of extra credit applied to the final average for every event that
they attend and for which they submit a ˝ page discussion board write-up within
48 hours of the event. Students may earn a maximum of 4 points of extra credit
per semester. These events include (but are not limited to):
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Grade Evaluation |
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A |
90%
- 100% |
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B |
89%
- 80% |
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C |
79%
- 70% |
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D |
69%
- 60% |
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F |
59%
or below |
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Student Course Evaluation: |
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Acquiring Final
Grades:
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The
final grades for this course will be posted to the student’s permanent
record using the KSU Banner system. Students may acquire their final grades
by accessing their Banner account online. Grades are no longer mailed to
students. Students needing verification of grades or
enrollment should request either an official transcript or an
enrollment verification through the Office of the Registrar. |
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APA Documenting Examples: When
any portion of another author's work is used, whether it is from a course
textbook or outside work, including the World Wide Web, in whole, in part, or
paraphrased, that work must be cited. Proper citation formats are provided on
the reverse of this document. Failure to do so can result in Academic
Misconduct Proceedings. There
are two components to a proper citation: the text citation and the reference
or endnote. The text citation will usually consist of the author's or
authors' last name(s) and the year of the publication. The endnote citation
will read as follows: Books Last-name,
First-initial. (Date). Book title. City, State: Publisher. A reference for a
single-author book: North,
M. M. (1996). Virtual reality technology. A reference for a
multi-author book: North,
M. M. & Blade, R. A. (1998). How to build skills for research. IPI
Press. Journals Last-name, First-initial.
(Date). Article title. Journal Title, Volume(Issue), pages. Journal Reference: Here
is an article in Volume 45, Issue 3, spanning pages
54-61. Kelly,
F. G. (1997). Networking made efficient. Journal of Computer Networking,
45(3), 54-61. |
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APA
Documenting Examples Continued: |
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Conference Proceeding Vanner, F. D. (1996). A survey of medical issues using
virtual reality. Proceedings of the Virtual Reality Medical Technology. 119-132. Nice, World Wide Web (from http://www.apa.org/books/pubmant.html): Available references from the web include:
newspaper articles, newsletters, journals, research papers, government
reports, online books or brochures) Minimum requirements for documenting a reference
from the web should include: a document title or description, a date (either
the date of publication, update, or retrieval date), a complete URL. If
possible, identify the author(s) of the document. Entire site no specific
page. Last-name,
First-initial. (Date). Title. Publishing information. Retrieved from the
World Wide
Web on mm/dd/yy: URL. Kidspsych is a wonderful interactive Web site for
children (http://www.kidspsych.org). No reference entry is needed. Citing Specific Documents on a Web Site: American
Psychological Association. (1995, September 15). APA public policy action alert: Legislation would affect grant recipients
[Announcement]. Retrieved
http://www.apa.org/ppo/istook.html
. Individual document with
no author identified or date: ABC’s
Website Survey: (n.d.). Retrieved An independent document
(no author identified): 1 Electronic
reference formats recommended by the American Psychological Association. (2000,
August 22). Retrieved
http://www.apa.org/journals/webref.html. If the primary author is
not available for the body citation, the first key word is to be used: (Electronic,
2000). |
Academic Integrity Statement:
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Every
KSU student is responsible for upholding the provisions of the Student Code
of Conduct, as published in the Undergraduate and Graduate Catalogs. Section II
of the Student Code of Conduct addresses the University's policy on academic
honesty, including provisions regarding plagiarism and cheating, unauthorized
access to University materials, misrepresentation/falsification of University
records or academic work, malicious removal, retention, or destruction of
library materials, malicious/intentional misuse of computer facilities and/or
services, and misuse of student identification cards. Incidents of alleged
academic misconduct will be handled through the established procedures of the
University Judiciary Program, which includes either an "informal"
resolution by a faculty member, resulting in a grade adjustment, or a formal
hearing procedure, which may subject a student to the Code of Conduct's minimum
one semester suspension requirement. Students
are encouraged to study together and to work together on class assignments
and lab exercises; however, the provisions of the STUDENT CONDUCT
REGULATIONS, II. Academic Honesty, KSC Undergraduate Catalog will be strictly
enforced in this class. Frequently
students will be provided with “take-home” exams or exercises. It is the
student’s responsibility to ensure they fully understand to what extent
they may collaborate or discuss content with other students. No exam work may
be performed with the assistance of others or outside material unless
specifically instructed as permissible. If an exam or assignment is designated
“no outside assistance” this includes, but is not limited to, peers,
books, publications, the Internet and the WWW. If a student is instructed to
provide citations for sources, proper use of citation support is expected.
Additional information can be found at the following locations. http://www.lib.duke.edu/libguide/citing.htm http://bailiwick.lib.uiowa.edu/journalism/cite.html http://www.cas.usf.edu/english/walker/papers/copyright/ipdummie.html http://www.indiana.edu/~wts/pamphlets.shtml |
Acknowledgment and Acceptance
of Academic Integrity Statement:
In
any academic community, certain standards and ethical behavior are required to
ensure the unhindered pursuit of knowledge and the free exchange of ideas. Academic
honesty means that you respect the right of other individuals to express their
views and opinions, and that you, as a student, not engage in plagiarism,
cheating, illegal access, misuse or destruction of college property, or
falsification of college records or academic work.
As
a member of the
Read
the Academic Integrity Statement and then take the Academic Honesty Quiz in WebCT. You must complete this quiz during the first 2 weeks
of classes. I will not grade any of your work until this quiz is completed. You
are required to abide by these ethical standards while you are a student at
KSU. Your successful completion of the WebCT Academic
Honesty Quiz indicates that you understand the ethical standards expected of
you in this academic community, and that you understand the consequences of
violating these standards.