UMBC CMSC 202 Spring 2001 CSEE | 202 | 202 Spring 2001

Syllabus

Lecturers

Lecturer: Mr. Dennis Frey
Office: ECS 222
Office Hours: MW 3:00 - 4:00 PM, TuTh 2:00 - 3:00 PM
Telephone: 410-455-3540
E-mail: frey@cs.umbc.edu


Lecturer: Ms. Susan Mitchell
Office: ECS 225 L
Office Hours: Mon 9:30 - 10:30 AM, Tues 10:00 - 11:00 Wed 2:30 - 4:30
Telephone: 410-455-3099
E-mail: smitchel@cs.umbc.edu

Lecture Times and Places

1526] 0101 TuTh.......2:30pm- 3:45pm (LH5 ...) MITCHELL, S M.........10:00am-10:50am (FA 006) DIS [1527] 0102 TuTh.......2:30pm- 3:45pm (LH5 ...) MITCHELL, S W.........10:00am-10:50am (FA 006) DIS [1528] 0103 TuTh.......2:30pm- 3:45pm (LH5 ...) MITCHELL, S Tu.........4:30pm- 5:20pm (FA 006) DIS [1529] 0104 TuTh.......2:30pm- 3:45pm (LH5 ...) MITCHELL, S Th.........4:30pm- 5:20pm (FA 006) DIS [1530] 0201 MW.........5:30pm- 6:45pm (LH5 ...) FREY, D M..........7:00pm- 7:50pm (LH5 ...) DIS [1531] 0202 MW.........5:30pm- 6:45pm (MP 103) FREY, D W..........7:00pm- 7:50pm (ACIV305) DIS [1532] 0203 MW.........5:30pm- 6:45pm (LH5 ...) FREY, D M..........7:00pm- 7:50pm (SS 409) DIS [1533] 0204 MW.........5:30pm- 6:45pm (LH5 ...) FREY, D W..........7:00pm- 7:50pm (SS 409) DIS

Textbooks

Required

C++ How To Program, Third Edition by Deitel and Deitel, Prentice Hall Publishing

Data Structures and Other Objects Using C++ by Main and Savitch, Addison Wesley Publishing

Suggested References

Effective C++ Second Edition by Scott Meyers, Addison Wesley Publishing
More Effective C++ by Scott Meyers, Addison Wesley Publishing

Course Description

This course continues the development of programming and problem-solving skills, focusing on recursion, pointers, data abstraction, and procedural abstraction. Topics include: introduction to asymptotic notation; data structures including lists, stacks, queues, hash tables and elementary binary search trees; sorting and searching; and an introduction to the C++ language and to object-oriented programming. Programming projects for this course will use the C and C++ programming languages. This is the second course for students interested in pursuing further study in computer science. Prerequisites: CMSC 201 and MATH 151.

CMSC Gateway

For students who enrolled in college for the first time in Summer 1998 or later, you have two choices: pass both of CMSC 201 and CMSC 202 with a grade of B or better or don't graduate as a CMSC major. The registrar has very specific rules about repeating courses in sequence and if you were to have a C in 201 and then take and pass 202 expecting to retake 201, you can't. Since the classes form a sequence, you cannot retake an earlier class in the sequence once you've passed a later one.

Objectives

The objectives of this course are:

Lectures and Readings

You are expected to attend all lectures and discussions for the section in which you are enrolled. Although both classes will cover the same general topics, you are responsible for the specifics given during your sections. You may attend the other instructor's lectures for review purposes, but this is not a substitute for attending your section.

You are expected to attend all lectures and your weekly discussion session. You are responsible for all material covered in the lecture, even if they are not in the textbook. You are responsible for the material in the readings, even if they are not covered during lecture.

Assignments and Grading

Grading Criteria

Your grade in this course is based on projects, quizzes, and exams which are discussed in more detail below. The grades are broken down as follows: 8 Quizzes (drop lowest) = 10% 4 Projects (10% each) = 40% 3 Exams (15/15/20) = 50% Total = 100% Letter grades will be on the (fairly) standard scale: 0 <= F < 60 60 <= D < 70 70 <= C < 80 80 <= B < 90 90 <= A <= 100 Your grade is based on timely work accomplished during the semester; incomplete grades will only be given for medical illness or other such dire circumstances. Final grades will not be curved, so don't ask.

After each grade is returned, there is a grace period of one (1) week during which you may come speak to to your instructor about any problems you have with your grade. After that time, your grade stays where it is.

Projects

The critical programming skills cannot be learned simply by attending the lectures. You should budget enough time to work on the projects as well. Projects are due by midnight of the due date. If you fail to turn in a project on time, a late penalty will be assessed (even if it's only a few seconds late -- no excuses, no exceptions). Projects will be graded according to three criteria: correctness (50 %), design (30 %), CMSC 202 coding standards (20 %)

For details and an Important Warning , see Project Submission and Grading Policy.

There will be four (4) projects each worth 10% (40% total) of your final grade.

In addition, Project 0 is a mandatory ungraded project. The purpose of Project 0 is NOT to make sure you know how to use the submission system, but rather to make sure that the submission system is prepared to accept projects from your account. If you fail to submit Project 0, no future project submissions will be possible and your grade for those projects (which ARE graded) will suffer.

Network and computer failures at UMBC are a fact of life. They are out of your control and out of our control. However, they are not an excuse for a project to be submitted late, nor are they a reason for project deadlines to be extended, even if the outage occurs on the due date. Plan accordingly. Waiting to submit your project 5 minutes before your project is due is a recipe for disaster. In the event of network outages or computer failures that last less than two weeks, you are still responsible for submitting your projects on time. There are labs on campus even if your dialup or ResNet connections are down.

Exams

There will be three (3) exams -- two midterm exams worth 15% each and the final exam worth 20%. (Note that the last exam is given during the scheduled final exam time for the class) Make-ups for exams are given under only the most dire circumstances (almost never). Exams must be taken with your lecture session unless prior permission has been given (almost never).

Exams are not cumulative. Note that you may be required to use skills from earlier in the semester while solving problems on an exam, but each exam will focus on material that has not been tested on previous exams.

Unless otherwise noted, all exams are closed-book, closed-notes.

Quizzes

There will be eight (8) equally weighted quizzes. You must take quizzes in your own discussion section. The purpose of the quizzes is to help you make sure you're getting the right level of understanding from the required readings. Quizzes will cover only material from the text. To accomodate students with unforseen, but legitimate, reason to miss an occassional discussion, the lowest quiz score will be dropped. Quizzes make up 10% of your total grade.

Email Etiquette:

Email is great -- much better than voice mail. If you need to contact your instructor about this class outside of lecture and office hours, email is much better than the telephone. You should, however, observe the following etiquette: Before you send an e-mail to anyone, it is a good idea to ask yourself the following questions.

In addition, due to the volume of student email during each semester, please note the following:


CSEE | 202 | 202 Spring 2001