Course Syllabus

Object-Oriented Programming Methodologies in Java
CS1A (Online Hybrid Z Section)

Mandatory Whole Class Zoom Meetings: Mondays and Wednesdays 2PM-3:50PM PST

This is an online course with no on-campus class meetings. However it is a 12 week course and is NOT self-paced. You must complete each module on the Modules page in order to proceed to the next module. Whole class online Zoom meetings and online student team meetings are mandatory.

Course Description

Systematic introduction to fundamental concepts of computer science through the study of the Java programming language. Coding topics include Java control structures, classes, methods, arrays, graphical user interfaces and elementary data structures. Concept topics include algorithms, recursion, data abstraction, problem solving strategies, code style, documentation, debugging techniques and testing.

Required Materials

Free Textbook:

Java: Learning to Program with Robots
Author: Byron Weber Becker
Publisher: Course Technology; 1st edition (February 16, 2006)
ISBN: 0619217243
Note: This book is now out of print, and the author has generously decided to put the entire book online, for free. It is also available from this course's Canvas website as two PDF files:

  1. Textbook main content: wholething.pdf [PDF, 24.4 MB]
  2. Appendix F: LayOfTheLand.pdf [PDF, 834KB].

You should also check the Textbook Errata page (the list of errors discovered after printing and shown with corrections).

Computer:

You will need to use a desktop or laptop computer and Internet access (a tablet or mobile device will not likely be sufficient). Chromebooks will also usually not suffice. If you don't have a desktop or laptop computer where you have full administrative access, I do have an alternative that will work for you for the first few weeks of the quarter, so email me about that.
For required meetings with me, for working with students online, or meeting with me during online office hours, it is also best if you have headphones and a microphone (microphones are sometimes built into modern laptops).
Contact me immediately if you don't have the needed equipment so I can try to get you some assistance from Foothill College!

Removable media for backup of your work or files:

USB thumb drive, a portable external hard drive,  or a cloud service because you are responsible for backing up all of your work.

Class Info

Instructor: Dr. Baba Kofi Weusijana
Pronounced: Bah-bah Co-fee Way-ou-see-jah-nah
Please call him "Dr. Weusijana" or "Baba"

Profile of Dr. Weusijana: I was born in California and was a student at Foothill College where I earned my A.S. in Computer Science.


Communication

Office Hours: My regular office hours will be held online. I can also meet students by appointment via Zoom (even at night or over the weekend) so contact me for an appointment.
I also reserve the right to schedule online meetings with you, so check your email and Pronto daily for such requests.
Contact Info:
The best way to contact me (and your fellow students) is by using the integrated Pronto tool. I reply to such messages within 1 business day. You can also contact me through Canvas by adding a comment while submitting to the relevant assignment (you can submit partial work, with comments, as early and as often as you like to Canvas assignments). If you use the Canvas Inbox, or e-mail, I might miss your message and might not have the proper context for it. I might take 2 business days to respond to Canvas Inbox and e-mail messages. You can forward text messages to my email.

To contact me anonymously use this Google Doc form.

Announcements & Course Backup Plan:

I will make announcements to this class via email or Pronto, so keep an eye out for those.

Each day please log into this course's Canvas website and also check Pronto and the email account you gave registration. That way you will be able to get any announcements from me, including instructions for how this course will continue in the event of an emergency.

Foothill College instruction and services are generally virtual at least through Spring Quarter 2021. For information on Foothill College's services and changes during the COVID-19 crisis, please read our Virtual Campus page!

Course Discussions:

Students are required to utilize the Pronto tool that is integrated with Canvas (and can be installed on mobile devices) to provide a way for students to communicate with each other and with me. You are required to make at least 4 posts (of any length) in Pronto before week 5 and another 4 posts after that. Please see the Get Setup with Pronto page in the Introduction Module.

The Online STEM Center:

The Online STEM Center is offering drop-in tutoring online via ZOOM. Our instructors are scheduled throughout the day to help you one-on-one. Don't be stuck or fall behind. Take advantage of this wonderful free service Foothill College makes available to all students. They hope to see you soon!

Students can access information about the Online STEM Center in 2 ways:

  1. Click the Student Support Portal via CANVAS, Click "Go to Tutoring" on Tutoring Tile
  2. Click "Foothill Tutoring" menu option in your CANVAS course

Food Pantry

The Food Pantry provides groceries to any Foothill student enrolled in credit or non-credit classes. Students registered with our Virtual Food Pantry for Fall 2020 will receive, on an ongoing basis, an electronic gift card (e-Gift Card) for $50 for the purchase of groceries. The e-Gift Card may be used in-person at Walmart & Sam's Club and online at walmart.com.
The students can reach out to the pantry via email at foodpantry@fhda.edu and online at foothill.edu/foodpantry.

Assessment & Grading:

To Obtain Disability-Related Accommodations:

Please contact Disability Resource Center (DRC) as early as possible or as soon as you become disabled because DRC accommodations are not retroactive. To contact DRC, you may:

  • Visit DRC in Room 5400

  • Email DRC at drc@foothill.edu

  • Call DRC at 650-949-7017 to make an appointment

Keep in mind that a disability can be a medical condition (due to a car accident, pregnancy, certain diseases, etc.) or a learning disability (no matter what the cause). More information is available at foothill.edu/drc .
If you already have an accommodation notification from DRC, please contact me privately to discuss your needs.

Counseling services: For personal, career, and academic counseling see foothill.edu/counseling 

Assignments, Attendance, and Participation: Plan to attend all class meetings on time and complete all assigned works by their due date and time. A student or student group will review some assignments once they are due. Deliverable details and due dates/times will be available via the course website. I reserve the right to add, remove, or alter any assignments. Notifications or changes will be made via the course website and Pronto. You will be instructed how to configure all of your Canvas notification settings to at least "Daily" ("ASAP" is best, but "weekly" or "none" are not acceptable/useful). Please make sure that you have the foothill.edu domain in your Safe Senders list for the email account you gave the college.

I may take 2 business days to respond to Canvas Inbox and e-mail messages. For best results, follow the instructions above titled "Contact Info:".

Grading

Your course grade is built on three types of assessments: assignments, exams, and activities including quizzes and exercises. There will be bi-weekly exercises, assignments, and quizzes that cover the previous material and assigned reading.
NOTE: This course will use Foothill College's default grading scheme without curving any grades: If you get 100% of the points possible, you’ll get an A grade.  If everyone gets 100% of the points possible, everyone will get a A. Please make an A grade your goal, it is totally possible and common in my course.

Foothill's Default Grading Scheme
Current grading scheme for this course
Name: Range:
A
100 %
to 94.0%
A-
< 94.0 %
to 90.0%
B+
< 90.0 %
to 87.0%
B
< 87.0 %
to 84.0%
B-
< 84.0 %
to 80.0%
C+
< 80.0 %
to 77.0%
C
< 77.0 %
to 74.0%
D+
< 74.0 %
to 67.0%
D
< 67.0 %
to 64.0%
D-
< 64.0 %
to 61.0%
F
< 61.0 %
to 0.0%

Please note that the grades of A+ and C- are NOT available.

Assignments are weighted by group:

Assignment Group Weightings

Group

Weight

Large Assignments

40%

Quizzes & Exams

30%

Activities

20%

Participation and Other Assignments

5%

Video comments, Pronto & Canvas Discussions

5%

Total

100%

You can explore how the grading of particular items effect your overall score. Read:How to use "What-If" Scores

Assignments / Homework and Feedback:

The terms “homework” and “assignment” are interchangeable, and everything that I say here that applies to one, applies to the other.
I reserve the right to not just grade assignments, but also check to make sure that the homework is correct, and may then follow up with an electronic or in-person questioning of you. I might contact you (such as via Pronto, your email, text, or phone number) to setup an appointment to meet with you.
I reserve the right to assign you additional work, if I feel that your grasp of any concept is shaky.  This will be to your benefit, since the best way to learn how to program is to do it.  
Once homework has been graded, I’ll return it to the students, either electronically or in print (usually via the Java Code Critic so I can provide detailed feedback).  You might then have the opportunity to revise your work (in whole or in part), and re-submit your work for a re-grade.  
This approach to re-grades is sometimes referred to the “mastery approach”.  The higher grade of the two will be your final grade for that homework assignment.  
You have approximately 1 week (sometimes longer) from the time the students get the graded assignment returned to submit your revision.  This means that if you are absent or not paying attention on the day that an assignment is returned to you, and haven't made prior arrangements with me, then you will still only have 1 week after the rest of the students got their grades to do your revision. 
If you are not actively participating in the course, you might end up not having the chance to do a revision.  You may only submit one revision per assignment.
If you haven't submitted the initial version of the homework assignment by the time that I go to grade it, then you can still submit it on or before the deadline for the revision, and it will be graded without penalty but you will NOT BE ALLOWED TO REVISE that assignment.
If you haven't submitted a revision to a homework assignment by the time that I go to grade it then you will keep the initial grade for the homework (if you didn't submit the initial version either, this means that you will receive a zero for that particular assignment, and I hate to assign zeroes).
Late Policy:
Any work that is not submitted to me for grading will be assigned a grade of "0".
The general policy for work that is submitted electronically is that work is not late until I go to grade the work and find it to be missing.
In practical terms this means that if I haven’t graded something yet you can (typically) still upload the work and have it be graded as if the work had been handed in on-time (i.e., penalty-free).  I will wait until the work is due to grade it (of course), but I make no guarantees about waiting any longer than that.
In other words: for work that has not yet graded you can take your chances that I will be back-logged enough for you to get the work done and submitted but if I grade it before you can finish (including submitting) the work then you will get the zero for not having it in on time. I recommend you don't take such chances!

Quizzes and Exams:
I reserve the right to assign you additional work, if I feel that your grasp of a concept is shaky based on your performance on a assignment, exam, or quiz.
Students must participate in the Final Exam presenting in order to pass this course.

Missing Days and Make Ups:
If you notify me at least one week prior to an exam or quiz, it may be possible to take the exam or quiz at a different time than the scheduled date – this different time will be on the same day if possible, or typically on a day prior to the exam otherwise.  No make-ups will be given for quizzes, exams, presentations, assignment, or other such graded events, that were missed without prior notification to me (although most of my Canvas quizzes automatically allow you to retake them a specified number of times).  In any case, the notification of absence must be given at least 2 days before the exam/quiz/class event. The only exceptions are documented medical and other emergencies (you can forward text messages to the  my email). Detailed information about Foothill's Health Services are available at the Health Services website.
Grading Disagreements:
Any disagreements about your grade should be brought to my attention immediately (waiting is always a sad mistake). 
Unless stated otherwise, all work should represent your own original, independent thinking.  Unless stated otherwise, all assignments are not meant to be team projects. You are encouraged to either seek help or to offer help to other students(It’s a programming party)! It is okay to communicate with classmates to clarify conceptual understanding necessary to complete assignments.  However, copying another person’s work in whole or in part, either manually or electronically, it not acceptable; nor is copying and slightly modifying another person’s work acceptable. Type your own code! You are here to increase your own knowledge and understanding and your exams' scores will be based only on your own knowledge and understanding, so type your own code. In the event copying should occur: all participants in the plagiarism (both the person plagiarizing, and the person whose work was taken) will receive:
1. A 20% penalty on the first offense
2. A grade of zero for the second offense, and
3. For a third (and final) offense, all parties will be given the option of either withdrawing (if the drop deadline hasn't been passed) or taking a "0.0" for the term.
A description of all such incidents shall be forwarded to the Dean of Students office, where a file of such occurrences will be maintained. Second (and third) offenses include offenses from prior terms. 
Team projects are learning exercises like individual projects: every individual in the team is expected to understand all the material as if each person had done the entire assignment individually (which isn't hard if you are using pair-programming correctly). Therefore, it is fair game to ask any person in a team to explain any aspect of the assignment that the team has done.

If you accept help from someone who is not trained to teach without giving away the answer, it will short-circuit your learning process -- you will actually learn less. For those of you wishing to give help, please do not give away the answer.  Either tell the person where they can look to find the solution, give them a general idea or ask them to ask me. Don't post actual assignment code. Do not look for answers on cheater web sites or pay-for-help web sites.

Electronic Submission:
I would like you to electronically submit all assignments.  You should type all assignments & homework answers into the computer (including essay questions), make sure it runs correctly, and submit the files for any given assignment. Usually this will be done using Canvas or the Java Code Critic.
Today’s technology is inherently unstable: Your network might go down, your Internet Service Provider might be down, the public library might not be open, you might be unable to get Microsoft Word to do exactly what you want. While you might have this happen to you, it’s not an excuse for handing in an assignment late! Knowing this, you should include time in your schedule to compensate for possible technological snafus. For assignments having a hard deadline, no leeway will be given for failing to hand in work because of technological problems. Foothill can often help students facing technical problems, so contact me immediately if a problem occurs.
Participation and "Attendance":
You are responsible for what goes on in our course. You are responsible for making up any work, assignments, quizzes, etc., if you miss something or get behind.
Participation is very important, since the course is structured to require active involvement and participation on the part of the student. It is difficult to make up missed material. Daily participation records will be kept and you will be assessed. See the rubric for the Course Participation assignment for more information.
Other Notes:

The number of projects and the points possible for exams, projects and activities are subject to change depending on the circumstances of the course. I reserve the right to modify any and all aspects of the course, any time, without prior notice, including this syllabus.

Conduct and Courtesies

Following these simple guidelines will help me to offer an enjoyable teaching environment for you. You are expected to come prepared for team meetings and office hours on time as scheduled. Coming late and/or unprepared is disrespectful and disruptive both to me and the other students in the course, and may result in point deductions. If you have any personal concerns, please feel free to communicate with me as soon as possible.

Please remember to respect the following list for me and the students around you during team meetings or office hours.

* Please remember to respect me, other students, and yourself by not using inappropriate language.
* Please silence your mobile devices such as cell phones.
* Do not play computer games or visit gaming websites.
* No chat or messenger programs unless its part of the course activity.
* Do not use personal audio devices such as MP3 players or cell phones.
* No Internet surfing, texting, or other mobile device activity that will distract people.

Withdrawals: If you decide to drop, it is your responsibility to submit an official drop to the Admissions Office. Do not assume that you will be dropped automatically.

Proactivity and Self-Starting

Rule #1: If you want to learn programming you MUST watch the videos and do the reading and you MUST do the exercises and you MUST take advantage of whatever resources and sources are available in order for you to deeply understand it. Programming does not come magically or trickle into your head by osmosis. You cannot skate. It takes work. You must dedicate hours each day reading about code, writing code, researching code, puzzling out code, working the code again and again, and wrestling it into place. Eventually you might even find yourself dreaming about code, and then waking up in the morning with a “solution” to the problem you went to bed with. There is no other way to learn it.
Rule #2: Search-it up! Answers from Stackoverflow.com are usually great if you read the whole page. Just don't use other students' work. That is plagiarism and it short-circuits your own learning (I've probably changed the assignment's requirements too).
Rule #3: Be resourceful, energetic, proactive, flexible, a self-starter, self-reliant, self-disciplined, and show drive and initiative! Show a friend (they don't even need to know how to program) how your program works and often you will realize the cause of your problem before you even finish your explanation!
Rule #4: Don’t get frustrated. Take breaks. Walk away from your code for an hour or two, and then come back to it refreshed and rejuvenated. It works!
Rule #5: Search for it again! And again! And again! Maybe you are in a Filter Bubble, so try another search service like StartPage or DuckDuckGo!

Course Outcomes:

Course outcomes are learning goals for students. The Student Learning Outcomes (SLO) for CS1A are:

SLO #1 -  Java Control Structures and Methods

A successful student will be able to write and debug Java programs which make use of the fundamental control structures and method-building techniques common to all programming languages. Specifically, the student will use data types, input, output, iterative, conditional, and functional components of the language in his or her programs.

SLO #2 -  Java OOP Design

A successful student will be able to use object-oriented programming techniques to design and implement a clear, well-structured Java program. Specifically, the student will use and design classes and objects in his or her programs.

 

Grading & GPA:

Academic Honesty: Take proper credit for your work in the course and honor the integrity of your learning. Please talk with classmates to clarify the course topics you are trying to understand as necessary to complete assignments. However, be careful to not represent another person's work, in whole or in part as your own thinking. Remember, copying and slightly modifying another person's work, is plagiarism and is not acceptable. Type your own code!
The College regards acts of academic dishonesty, including such activities as plagiarism, cheating and/or/violations of integrity in information technology, as very serious offenses. In the event that cheating, plagiarism or other forms of academic dishonesty are discovered, each incident will be handled as deemed appropriate. Care will be taken that students' rights are not violated and that disciplinary procedures are instituted only in cases where documentation or other evidence of the offense(s) exists. A description of all such incidents shall be forwarded to the Dean of Students office, where a file of such occurrences will be maintained. The college may institute action against a student according to the college's disciplinary policies and procedures. Your submissions should represent your own, unique thought and effort after you have dialogued with others to review and self-correct your efforts. Deliverables not meeting these requirements will not be graded until they have been completed to the specifications.

Learning Environment Policies

General Learning Policy: Our online course will be a pleasant "space" for learning, as such disorderly, abusive, or bothersome conduct will not be tolerated. Such behavior which interferes with the rights of others or which obstructs or disrupts teaching will result in immediate disciplinary action.

Work Together: Much of our time in this course involved teamwork online. Please use that time effectively to engage your team regarding group projects, and solicit assistance from me. I reserve the right to change seating arrangements and team memberships.

Drops and Withdrawal

For a complete reference of all withdrawal dates and deadlines refer to the Foothill College registration page at the college web site here:
https://foothill.edu/calendar

To stay enrolled in this course, you must participate regularly in class meetings, your lab assignments, team meetings, and quizzes. This is part of the course participation that online classes must possess in order to maintain their transferability and accreditation.

You will be dropped by me (perhaps without a warning) for any of the following:

  • Failing to meet with me online or missing a scheduled meeting with me or a class meeting.
  • Failing to make an introduction post in the "Introduce Yourself To Our Class!" discussion during the first week of the quarter.

  • Missing a scheduled exam or more than one quiz/survey in a row without prior notice.

  • If you do not login for seven (7) consecutive days.  (See exception below.)

  • If you receive a zero on any two of the large assignments. (See exception below.)

  • If you don't login and utilize our Canvas course website for more than 1 week or miss more than 1 quiz/survey in a row you will be dropped for non participation.

Exception to Above Policies: 

If the non-participation that has just been described occurs partially beyond the last date to drop, I may not be able to drop you, and you may receive whatever grade that your points dictate.  Therefore don't assume that you can simply stop participating late in the quarter and you will be dropped.  If you intend to drop please do so yourself, so you don't accidentally end up with an unintended "F."

If you decide to drop the class, please let me know.  I cannot allow anyone who has dropped to continue to have access to the course material.

Also: See exceptions above in the section "Missing Days and Make Ups"

Undocumented Students

The Foothill-De Anza Community College District Board of Trustees unanimously adopted a Resolution in Support of Undocumented Students and a Resolution in Support of DACA, the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program. Resources for the undocumented can be found at:

 


Typical Week

SimpleScheduleWinter2021.png

Tentative Course Schedule:

What follows is the auto-generated task list of everything that has a due date. The most important assessments are the 5 large assignments. My plan for those are in the simplified schedule above.

I reserve the right to change these items at any time:

Course Summary:

Date Details Due