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This is an old course web from 2008 |
Old 2008 Course Web: Main / OrganizationClass Organization and GradingThis year, I am trying an experiment to organize the assignments in the class a little differently. In the past, there has been 3 big projects, 2 exams (one year we had 3), and a number of smaller things. This year, I am trying to make more "smaller" projects that are not equal size. (3 smaller, and one not as small). The idea is to cut out a lot of the busy work in the projects, and let you focus on the important graphics stuff. The 4 projects should (roughly) divide the class into sections. In each section we'll have:
Some parts might have an extra written assignment, or skip the practice, or ... GradingThe majority of your grade comes from the programming projects and the exams.
For check/no-check grading, we'll either mark your assignment "acceptable" (check), "unacceptable" (no-check), "nothing turned in." We'll also keep track of whether or not you turned things in on time. (So, technically its a 3 tier system check/no check/not turned in - but I call it check/no check). Generally, for an acceptable assignment, we'll expect that you made a good faith effort and followed through on the parts of the assignment. If you do a particularly stellar job on one of the check/no-check assignments (like you make a particularly cool picture), we will note it. It won't count directly towards your grade, but we'll keep it in mind if you need the benefit of the doubt later. To use this in your final grade: we will penalize your project score for the project associated with the assignment. An unacceptable will hurt your grade .25 (on the A=4 F=0 scale), a "nothing turned in" will hurt your grade .5. We reserve the right to penalize you less if we're in a really good mood when we do final grading, but don't count on it. So the grading breakdown should be (subject to change if the actual assignments change):
A Note on GradesEach assignment is "curved" independently. The overall grades are sometime adjusted (upwards). My philosophy on grading is:
In the past, the median grade has been an AB. Generally, people work hard in this class, and I think that should be rewarded. |