Contact Information Thomas E. Blum Office: Olney-333 Office Hours:
e-mail: blum@lasalle.edu Web: http://www.lasalle.edu/~blum Topics: Problem solving and programming using problem-based learning; programming in an integrated development environment, such as Visual Basic .NET; control flow, iteration, modules, arrays, file processing, classes and objects, basic graphical user interface concepts (forms and controls). |
Assessment: |
There will be a weekly lab as well as a weekly homework. There will be four open-book, open-notes exams in which you will write code and a final of the same format. The various components of the course will be weighted as follows:
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Printing: |
Note that a student is allotted 400 sheets of paper per semester to be printed in the classroom labs, open labs and library. A student can pay more if he or she wishes to exceed this limit. Think about what you are printing and how you are printing it. | ||||||||||||||||
Classroom Behavior: |
While in the classroom, students should behave in a manner that is neither distracting to nor disrespectful to the professor or other students. Cell phones should be turned off. |
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Cheating: |
When using materials from a book, website, etc., the source must be cited, otherwise it is considered plagiarism. Claiming another's work as your own is cheating. A student caught cheating will receive a score of zero. Repeated cheating can result in a failing grade for the course. Asking another for help on a step or two in a many step homework is acceptable; handing in duplicate or nearly duplicate work is not. If you require a significant amount of assitance, you should seek my help. Finally, openly allowing your work to be copied is also cheating. |