On this page:
1 Academic Honesty
2 Collaboration Policy
README
Violations
3 Distribution of Course Materials
4 Grading
Grade Components
Letter Grades
5 Homework Submission Policy
6 Late Policy
7 Lecture Policy
8 Quizzes

Course Policies

Last updated: Fri, 28 May 2021 10:45:09 -0400

This page describes the policies of the course. Please read it carefully.

1 Academic Honesty

Students are expected to follow the UMB Academic Honesty Policy.

In particular, note the list of Academic Honesty Violations.

Violations may result in failing grades, loss of course credit, and will be reported to the appropriate departments and the Dean of Students (DOS) Office.

2 Collaboration Policy

All submitted work be must your own, i.e., written from scratch, in your own words.

Discussing homework with other students, however, is allowed and encouraged.

You may also consult other reference sources to learn course materials, with the exception of "tutoring" sites like Chegg or Course Hero. You may not visit these sites and we will check and enforce this policy.

README

The only requirement is that you must disclose your collaborations and sources. Specifically, every submitted homework must include a README file with:
  • the names of other students you worked with; and

  • any books or websites you consulted (other than the textbook).

Violations

Again, all submitted work be must written from scratch in your own words.

Note that starting with someone else’s answer and then doing any of the following is not "your own words":

Violations of the course collaboration policy will result in:
  • (1st offense) loss of credit on the problem and a warning,

  • (2nd offense) zero for the assignment and reported to department and school,

  • (3rd offense) failing grade for the course.

3 Distribution of Course Materials

Course materials may not be distributed without permission from the instructor.

This means you may not post hw questions to mailing lists or websites like Stack Overflow, Chegg, Course Hero, etc.

Infractions will be considered academic honesty violations.

4 Grading

Grades will be computed at the end of the semester according to the following criteria.

Grade Components

Grades will be computed from the following:
  • Homework assignments: 80%

    This component of the grade will be computed by totaling all earned points on assignments and dividing by the maximum possible homework points.

    Note: The lowest homework grade will be dropped before final grade calculation.

  • Quizzes: 5%

    This component of the grade will be computed by totaling all earned points on quizzes and dividing by the maximum possible quiz points.

  • Class Participation: 15%

    This component of the grade will be based on lecture attendance, participation in lecture discussions and chats, office hour attendance, possible presentations, discussion board posts and responses, and overall engagement in the course.

There are no exams in this course.

Letter Grades

The final grade will be calculated approximately as follows:
  • A range: 90-100

  • B range: 80-90

  • C range: 70-80

  • D range: 60-70

  • F: < 60

Note: each of the ranges may be further split into the standard plus/minus divisions.

5 Homework Submission Policy

Homework is submitted to Gradescope, under the appropriate assignment label.

Homework solutions may be resubmitted as many times as needed, up to the deadline.

In addition to your solution files, each homework submission must include:

See the Collaboration Policy, and each individual assignment for more details.

6 Late Policy

Homework is due (typically) Sundays at 23:59 EST.

In general, late homework is not accepted, for many reasons:

Of course, unforeseen things will happen. Therefore, we’ve adopted the following rules:

Over the course of the semester, you can use up to three late days. These can be allocated however you want (all to one assignment, one to each assignment, etc.).

We strongly prefer you not use more than one per assignment, because it disrupts grading; nevertheless, if you do need to take more than a day on an assignment, you can.

Don’t ask for permission; don’t tell us your reason: any time you miss the submission deadline, we will assume you are using a late day. Each part of a day that you are late counts as a full day. However, if you take more than one day, you must inform us (post a private message on the forum) so we can keep track of your submission.

No exceptions allowed unless you have a Dean’s Note indicating family/health emergency.

Note: The course has enough homeworks that missing one is probably not going to affect your course grade too much (and the lowest grade is dropped anyways). It is far worse to fall behind. Therefore, if you miss a deadline, you may be best off catching up with the content (through class or talking to course staff) and moving on.

7 Lecture Policy

Lectures meet online via Zoom.

For security reasons, the University requires accessing Zoom lectures via Blackboard.

Each lecture will be associated with reading from some sections of textbook.

Students should come to class prepared with questions from the reading.

8 Quizzes

Each lecture will usually be accompanied by a very short quiz (one or two questions).

Though they are graded and worth a small fraction of the final grade, their primary intent is to help students pay attention in lecture and to make sure everyone is caught up on at least the most basic course topics.

All quizzes are open book but you will only have a few minutes to complete it.