Dr. Thomas E. Hicks
Computer Science Department
Trinity University
Course Description
Computer Networks shall examine topics such as local area networks, high-speed networks, bridges., wide area networks, internetworking, network protocols, network security, networking reliability, and network performance. Laboratory experience will include .NET network programming, installing and connecting operating systems, configuring NIC cards and adapters, configuring wireless networks, etc.
Required Textbook
Data Communications
and Networking
by Forouzan
| Exam | Date | MPoints |
| Exam I - 45 Minute | 9/16 | 150 Points |
| Exam II - 45 Minute | 10/7 | 150 Points |
| Exam III - 45 Minute | 10/28 | 150 Points |
| Exam IV - 45 Minute | 11/18 | 150 Points |
| Exam V - 45 Minute | 12/4 | 100 Points |
Revised Exam Schedule
| Exam | Date | MPoints |
| Exam I - 45 Minute | 9/16 | 150 Points |
| Exam II - 45 Minute | 10/7 | 150 Points |
| Exam III - 45 Minute | 10/28 | 150 Points |
| Exam IV - 45 Minute | 11/18 | 150 Points |
| Student Presentation | 100 Points |
Work Load
In order to do well in this course, most of you should plan on nine-ten hours a week reading chapters, studying slides, doing homework, using design tools, and doing design.
Lab Assignments / Projects
All Labs & Homework Due Next Class Period Unless Specified Otherwise On Class The Schedule Page!
Laboratory assignments/projects will be assigned regularly throughout the semester. Unless specified otherwise on the class schedule page, each lab is due at the beginning of the next lecture. It is your responsibility to check the class schedule page daily.
Labs submitted after the beginning of class are late! Do not come to class late or skip class in order to complete your assignments, this will put you behind on the new material!
No Projects/Labs will be accepted after the last class lecture. You may place your labs in a binder or you may staple them to the lab assignment sheet.
Late Lab Assignments / Projects
Normal late penalty shall be 20% Per Day (MTWRF
--> Saturday and Sunday not included)
Written Homework
All Labs & Homework Due Next Class Period
Unless Specified
Otherwise On Class The Schedule Page! Written homework will be assigned regularly
throughout the semester. Since there is little or no serious programming involved
in the homework, there is little
reason to give credit to late work. All written homework is to be completed
individually. None of the written homework assignments are team related.
The written homework should help review you for the
exam. No answer key will be provided. Homework will be spot checked for
completeness. Although Homework may be spot checked for accuracy, it will not be
graded question by question. If more than 10% of a homework assignment is late
or incorrect, the grade will be a 0.
No Homework will be accepted after the last class
lecture. Late Written Homework The only
reason I would take the time to write some review questions is to keep you
looking at the material throughout the semester. I do not accomplish this when a
student waits until just before the exam to do the homework. Thus late homework
is worth little. Normal late penalty shall
be 50% Per Day (MTWRF --> Saturday and Sunday not included) For Example When Homework Due
Attendance & Class Participation is worth 100 points. You may miss one week of class without penalty. Classes missed because you are representing the university on an athletic team, debate team, etc. are excused. One week of classes should suffice for personal business, normal illness, etc.
Classes Missed: Points For Attendance
0, 1, 2
50
3
40
4 30
5 20
6 10
7 or more
0
|
Attendance |
50 | points |
|
Exams |
700 | points |
|
Labs, Homework & Projects |
~450 | points |
| Total | ~1,200 | points |
The Final Grade
will be calculated by dividing the Points Earned By The Points Possible. Each
student should record their quiz grades and retain all graded assignments from the
entire semester. It is the responsibility of the student to maintain the
number of points they have earned so that they can do a current grade
calculation at any time.
Grading Scale
| A 93% - 100%
A- 90% - 92.9% |
B+ 87% - 89.9%
B 83% - 86.9% B- 80% - 82.9% |
C+ 77% - 79.9%
C 73% - 76.9% C- 70% - 72.9% |
D+ 67% - 69.9%
D 63% - 66.9% D- 60% - 62.9% |
F 0% - 59.9% |
Should university access to computer facilities significantly
effect your ability to complete an assignment, due dates will be appropriately
adjusted; these dates will not be altered if a lab is down for only part
of an evening. It is not necessary to call Dr. Hicks if the network goes
down. Labs should be done as scheduled!
Yes! I try to check my e-mail M-F but I am sometimes detained by students. I do answer many short questions. I do not debug programs mailed to me!
thicks@trinity.edu
http://carme.cs.trinity.edu/thicks [Primary]
http://krypton.cs.trinity.edu/thicks [Back-Up]
All students are covered by a policy that prohibits dishonesty in academic work. The Academic Integrity Policy (AIP) covers all students who entered Trinity before the fall of 2004. The Academic Honor Code covers all those who entered the fall of 2004 or later.
The Integrity Policy and the Code share many features: each asserts that the academic community is based on honesty and trust; each contains the same violations; each provides for a procedure to determine if a violation has occurred and what the punishment will be; each provides for an appeal process.
The main difference is that the faculty implements the AIP while the Code is implemented by the Academic Honor Council. Under the Integrity Policy, the faculty member determines whether a violation has occurred as well as the punishment for the violation (if any) within certain guidelines. Under the Code, a faculty member will (or a student may) report an alleged violation to the Academic Honor Council. It is the task of the Council to investigate, adjudicate, and assign a punishment within certain guidelines if a violation has been verified.
Students who are under the Honor Code are required to pledge all written work that is submitted for a grade: “On my honor, I have neither given nor received any unauthorized assistance on this work” and their signature. The pledge may be abbreviated “pledged” with a signature.
My recommendation for students cheating is an automatic "F" in the course, a letter submitted to student affairs, and the proper following of Trinity University academic integrity policy.
Take great care to erase all labs from university computers so that others may not submit your work as their own! Do not loan any lab or project to a fellow student! Do your own work!
Before you resort to turning in someone else's work as
your own, let's talk. If you are under undue pressure to aide other students
in such a way that your own security is threatened, let's talk. It
is not worth failing a three hour course and risking your entire academic
future!
Office Hours:- Halsell 339A [First
Come- First Serve]
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To |
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8:00 AM | 9:55 AM |
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11:30 AM | 12:30 PM |
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8:00 AM | 12:00 AM |
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8:00 AM | 9:55 AM |
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11:30 AM | 12:30 PM |
I am almost always in my office or helping a student in a lab during office hours; if I must miss my office hours, I generally post a note on the door and/or send mail to my students and/or notify students in lecture. If I am not physically in the office, I will have most often gone to one of the Halsell Labs to help one of my students. If I am not in my office, check the CS Majors Lab [Halsell 340], check the Classroom/ lab [Halsell 228], the Virtual Reality Lab [Halsell 200] or the University Lab [Halsell 226]. Please let me know that you are waiting to see me.