Computer Science with Applications 2
====================================
*Class webpage*: http://bit.ly/capp30122-win-20
This course is the second in a three-quarter sequence that teaches
computational thinking and skills to students from a wide-variety of
fields. Lectures cover topics in (1) data representation, (2)
relational databases, (3) data cleaning and presentation, (4) shell
scripting, (5) data structures, such as graphs, hash tables, and
heaps. Applications and datasets from a wide
variety of fields serve both as examples in lectures and as the basis
for programming assignments. In recent offerings, students have
written a course search engine and a system to do speaker
identification.
Students will program in Python and do a group programming project.
Prerequisite: CAPP 30121
.. include:: course-staff.rst
.. include:: times.rst
Course Structure
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The class meets three times a week for lectures, and once a week for a
lab session. Graded work includes programming assignments, and end-of-quarter group project.
Additionally, we provide practice problems for some topics.
Please see the calendar_ for more details on what is covered in each
lecture.
Programming assignments
-----------------------
We will be assigning five programming assignments_. You will be
allowed to work in pairs in some of these assignments. See the
calendar_ for details.
Programming assignment deadlines mainly be Fridays; however, some
assignments may fall other days. Please see the calendar_ for details.
The labs are used to provide additional support for these programming
assignments.
.. _assignments: pa/index.html
.. _calendar: calendar.html
Labs
----
We will perdiocally publish labs that will be intended to help you
build skills that are needed for the programming assignments (for
example, SQL) or that are discussed in class, but not covered by
any specific assignment (for example, regular expressions). These
labs will not be graded.
The class will have weekly lab sections. The labs will provide an
opportunity to get help with programming assignments and labs.
Project
-------
We will be assigning a final group project. We will be holding a
poster session for the group projects. We will post on Piazza with
the date, time and location soon.
Grading
-------
Your final grade will be based on the following:
+----------------------------------------------+-----+
| Programming assignments | 50% |
+----------------------------------------------+-----+
| Group Project | 50% |
+----------------------------------------------+-----+
Grades are *not* curved in this class or, at least, not in the
traditional sense. We use a standard set of grade boundaries:
* 95-100: A
* 90-95: A-
* 85-90: B+
* 80-85: B
* 75-80: B-
* 70-75: C+
* <70: Dealt on a case-by-case basis
We curve only to the extent we might lower the boundaries for one or
more letter grades, depending on the distribution of the raw
scores. We will not raise the boundaries in response to the
distribution.
So, for example, if you have a total score of 82 in the course, you
are guaranteed to get, at least, a B (but may potentially get a higher
grade if the boundary for a B+ is lowered).
*Students in the MS-CAPP program must take this course for a quality grade.*
Students in other programs may take the course pass/fail. A "pass"
requires a 60 in the course and an exam score of least 50.
Instructions for how non-MS-CAPP students can request to take the
class pass/fail will be sent closer to the end of the quarter. Please
do not send your instructor such requests until we have posted
instructions on how to do so.
Requests to withdraw must be sent to the instructor.
Late submissions
----------------
All students may use up to two 24-hour extensions for the programming
assignments during the quarter. These extensions are all-or-nothing:
you cannot use a portion of an extension and have the rest “carry
over” to another extension. If extraordinary circumstances (illness,
family emergency, etc.) prevent a student from meeting a deadline, the
student must inform their instructor *before* the deadline.
Books
~~~~~
We will be using a draft of a book that Anne Rogers and Borja
Sotomayor are writing for part this course. The book is available in
both `HTML
`_
and `PDF
`_
format. Note that you will be asked for your CNetID and password to
gain access to these files.
We will post readings for topics not covered in Rogers and Sotomayor
on Piazza.
Policy on academic honesty
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
We take academic honesty **very** seriously in this class. Please make sure to
read our `Academic Honesty `_ page.
Diversity statement
-------------------
The University of Chicago is committed to diversity and rigorous
inquiry that arises from multiple perspectives. We concur with that
commitment and also believe that we have the highest quality
interactions and can creatively solve more problems when we recognize
and share our diversity. We thus expect to maintain a productive
learning environment based upon open communication, mutual respect,
and non-discrimination. We view the diversity that students bring to
this class as a resource, strength and benefit. It is our intent to
present materials and activities that are respectful of diversity:
gender, sexuality, disability, socioeconomic status, ethnicity, race,
religious background, and immigration status. Any suggestions as to
how to further such a positive and open environment in the class will
be appreciated and given serious consideration.
Disability statement
--------------------
If there are circumstances that make our learning environment and
activities difficult, please let us know. We will maintain the
confidentiality of any such discussions. If you need accommodations
due to a disability you will also need to contact Student Disability
Services at 773-702-6000, or disabilities@uchicago.edu