The Computer Sciences Department
Rules to Live By
August 12, 2004
The Computer Sciences Department is a community of scholars and students.
Each of us thrives if the community thrives. Each of us thus has an individual
responsibility to strive, not just for our own goals, but for the goals of
the larger community. In this document, a group of the faculty have laid
out a set of ground rules designed to make our department the kind of community
in which we all want to live. If a professor in one of your classes has
pointed you here, you should view this document as part of the syllabus for
that class.
As a Student, What You Can Expect from Your Department
I. The CS Curriculum
- The faculty as a whole have the responsibility to formulate a
curriculum that will prepare you for a lifetime of work in the field of computing.
Yes, some of what you learn will get you a job right away. Some of what
you learn may seem more esoteric and less essential. But remember that the
faculty have lived through a lot of changes in the field. They’ve all had
to learn new ideas, new programming language, new architectures, and new
applications many times (and without the aid of classes or textbooks). They’ve
got a lot of first hand understanding of the fundamental concepts that make
it easiest to adapt as new things come along. Trust a bit and take advantage
of this expertise. Try to like every class you take.
II. Each Class that You Take
- The most important thing that each of your teachers should give you is
a guided tour through the subject matter of the class. After all, you can
go to the bookstore, buy books, read them, and write some code without ever
signing up for a class. But, whenever you do sign up for a class, you have
the right to expect that the instructor has read a lot of books, solved a
lot of problems, and then chosen, from all of that material, 14 weeks of
the most important ideas presented in the clearest fashion.
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You have the right to expect that every instructor will show up for class on time and be prepared to conduct the class.
III. Responsiveness from the Instructional Staff
- In most of your CS classes, you will have an instructor, one or more
TAs, and possibly a set of proctors. This group of people, working as a
team, have the responsibility to do everything they can to help you learn.
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Your instructor, TAs, and proctors should treat you with respect and encourage you to seek help when you need it.
IV. Grades
- Publication of the Grading Policy: You have a right to be told, within
the first four days of the semester, how grades in each class will be determined.
You will be told what the basis of the grade will be and how much weight
will be assigned to each component of the grade. In some classes, you may
be told even more, for example, what numeric scores will be assigned what
letter grades. But keep in mind that this isn’t always possible. Classes
that use different exams each semester may have very different score distributions
from one semester to the next so it isn’t possible to know in advance what
thresholds make sense.
- Fairness: You have a right to expect that grades will be assigned
fairly. Every student who turns in the same quality of work will receive
the same grade.
- Feedback: You have a right to see your graded work and to understand what, if anything, was wrong with the work you submitted.
- Punctuality: You have a right to expect that exams and assignments
will be graded in a timely fashion. It’s hard to be more specific on this
since the amount of time required to do a good job of grading depends so
heavily on the kind of work and the staffing level of the class. One concrete
thing you should expect is that you will have gotten some substantive feedback
on your performance in each class before the Q drop deadline.
As a Student, What the Department Can Expect from You
The University and the Department are committed to preserving
the reputation of your degree. It means a lot to you. In order to guarantee
that every degree means what it says it means, we must enforce a strict policy
that guarantees that the work that you turn in is your own and that the grades
you receive measure your personal achievements in your classes:
Every piece of work that you turn in with your name on
it must be yours and yours alone unless explicitly allowed by an instructor
in a particular class. Specifically, unless otherwise authorized by an instructor:
You are responsible for complying with this policy in two
ways: 1) You must not turn in work that is not yours, except as expressly
permitted by the instructor of each course. 2) You must not enable someone
else to turn in work that is not theirs. Do not share your work with anyone
else. Make sure that you adequately protect all your files. Even after you
have finished a class, do not share your work or published answers with the
students who come after you. They need to do their work on their own.
IMPORTANT: The penalty for academic dishonesty will
be a course grade of F and a referral of the case to the Dean of Students
Office. Further penalties, including suspension or expulsion from the University
may be imposed by that office.
One final word: This policy is not intended to discourage
students from learning from each other, nor is it unmindful of the fact that
most significant work in computer science and in the computing industry is
done by teams of people working together. But, because of our need to assign
individual grades, we are forced to impose an otherwise artifical requirement
for individual work. In some classes, it is possible to allow and even encourage
collaboration in ways that do not interfere with the instructor's ability
to assign grades. In these cases, your instructor will make clear to you
exactly what kinds of collaboration are allowed for that class.
Your instructor, plus any TAs and/or proctors assigned
to your class will work as a team to help you learn. But you need to interact
with them in a reasonable way. Specifically:
- Remember that the instructional staff are a team.
They will not all do everything. The instructor will tell you who will be
responsible for what. Respect that. If you ask the wrong person your question,
you probably won’t get a reasonable answer and you will waste their time
as well as yours. For many kinds of questions it really is better to ask
the TAs or the proctors. This is particularly true of nitty gritty questions
that arise in the labs, since the TAs and proctors are likely to spend more
time there than the instructor does. It’s their job.
- Email:
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The University's electronic mail policy
recognizes email as an effective way for your instructor and TAs to inform
you about important things that may be happening in class. You are responsible
for:
- Making sure that your instructor has a valid email address for you.
If you do not want to use the one that the university has on record, then
make sure to give your instructor another one.
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Reading your email every day.
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Guaranteeing that your mailbox does not overflow.
Excuses such as, "My email box was full", "I don't use that email
address any more", "I was too busy to check my email", "I was on an interview
trip and couldn't check my email", or "My computer crashed and all of my
email was destroyed" aren't acceptable. - Email is also a very valuable way for you to communicate with
your instructor and TAs. But be sure you use it appropriately. Specifically:
- Using email, it’s easy to ask a question or make a comment that you’d
never make in person. Be careful about this. If you think that what you’re
about to say wouldn’t be something you’d feel comfortable going to office
hours to say, you probably shouldn’t say it in email either.
- In particular, do not send email to your instructor (or anyone
else for that matter) when you’re angry. You’ll regret it when you calm
down and you’ll have antagonized someone who is important to you.
- Remember that the instructor has a permanent record of every email message.
- Feel free to use email to ask questions about projects and homework
assignments. But keep in mind that, although email is available, neither
the instructors or the TAs are responsible for replying to email the instant
it is sent. Don’t wait until the last minute before something is due to
ask your questions. Also, keep in mind that, if you ask a question that
has a nontrivial answer, it may not make sense for the instructor or TA to
write a small book for you. Sometimes it will be reasonable for them to
ask you either to bring the question to class or to come to office hours
to discuss it.
- Although it’s easy for you to dash off an email question, it takes
time for the instructor or the TA to answer it. Don’t ask questions to which
you can find the answer somewhere else. For example, don’t write to your
instructor to ask where the regularly scheduled final exam is. (It’s on
the Registrar’s web site.) Don’t write and ask how much the first midterm
counts. (It should be on the class syllabus.) Don’t ask what happened in
a class that you missed (unless you had an emergency).
- Office hours are there for you to use. You can expect that the
person who is teaching your class loves the material and wants to share it
with anyone who will listen. If you have questions about what’s been covered
in class or you’re interested in finding out more about something, go to
office hours and ask. You’ll probably find that it’s hard to get the faculty
to shut up. The one thing that most faculty hate is students who only come
to office hours to ask questions about grades. If there’s been a mistake
in grading your work, of course, go and ask (see below). But think twice
before you go to office hours to ask questions that give the impression that
you care less about learning than you do about grades. A few other points
to keep in mind about office hours:
- If you can’t make it to regularly scheduled office hours, ask for an
appointment. But don’t leave this to the day before the exam. It may not
be possible to find a suitable time on such short notice.
- Again, remember the team concept. The faculty and TAs for your
class will try to schedule their office hours to cover as wide a range of
times as possible. If you can’t make it to one person’s office hours, try
someone else.
- Unless an office door is already open, knock first and don’t go in until you’re invited to do so.
VI. Grades
- Grades are a necessary evil. You don’t like worrying about grades and
the faculty hate having to assign them. We’d all rather focus on the content
of our classes. But your degree is a commitment from the University that
you have achieved a certain level of expertise in the classes you’ve taken,
so we need some way to measure that. To make this process work, you need
to understand:
- The grade you are given, either on an individual exam or assignment
or as your final grade, is not the starting point of a negotiation. It is
your grade unless a concrete error has been made. Do not go to see your
instructor or your TA to ask for a better grade because you want one or you
“feel you deserve it”. Go only if you can document a specific error in grading
or in recording your scores.
- Your grade is a reflection of only one thing: how well did you
do in the class. Nonacademic circumstances have no bearing on your grade.
Don’t go to see your instructor and explain how important a better grade
is in your life. It would be unfair to other students and it would undermine
the meaning of the degree if the instructor responded to such issues.
- If you believe that an error has been made in grading your work,
you have one week from the time that the work was returned to the class to
file a complaint in writing to your instructor. Note that this is one week
from the time that the instructor made the work available to the class.
If you missed class and didn’t get your work until later, there is no extension
of the one week deadline. If you decide to submit a complaint about the
grading of your work, make sure to describe the issue clearly and return
the original work and your note to your instructor.
- Errors can certainly be made in grading. But keep in mind that
the errors can be made either in your favor or not. So it’s possible that
if you ask to have a piece of work regraded your grade will go down rather
than up.
- Remember that the most important characteristic of any grading
scheme is that it be scrupulously fair to everyone in the class. Keep this
in mind if you’re thinking of asking, for example, for more partial credit
points on a problem. The important thing is not the exact number of points
that were taken off for each kind of mistake. The important thing is that
that number was the same for everyone. So it can’t be changed once the grading
is done and the papers have been returned.
- You instructor will decide what it takes to get an A or a B or
a C or D in the class. Deciding the boundary cases is always hard. Your
instructor is under no obligation to make score cutoffs public or to tell
you how far away your were from the next higher grade.