COMS W4119 - Computer Networks

Professor Dan Rubenstein
Spring 2010


Grading Policy

Your grade consists of: Exams: I try to test your understanding of a concept, and not just straightforward regurgitation of formulae, i.e., why certain rules, laws, and techniques hold and are used. Hence, I try to design the midterm and final questions to test your understanding of the concepts, not your memorization skills. I realize that some memorization will undoubtedly be required, but hopefully the memorized concepts will be those that can be re-derived via your intuition. I usually take a problem covered in class and put a small ``twist'' on it, so that blind application of the method won't work, but if you have the kind of understanding I am looking for (e.g., the kind that the inventor of the method had), you will know how to adapt the method.

A note on effort: Your grade will mainly be a reflection of how you perform on the midterm and final. Homework grades don't have much of an effect, as long as homework is turned in (i.e., most students typically get most of the problems right). You should do the homework so that you learn the material. If you find yourself copying or getting solutions from someone else without putting in the effort of solving them yourself, you'll probably find yourself doing poorly on the exams. You won't get much sympathy from me if you come crying to me at the end of the term that you did well on the homework yet poorly on the midterm and final.

If you are a bad test-taker, there is hope! Show me (i.e., in office hours and class) that you understand what is going on, and I take that into account when assigning the final grade.

How much I care about helping students is directly proportional to how much you seem to care about the class (i.e., via attendance, homework, coming to office hours). I have nothing personal against students who think the class is a waste of their time or think they have better things to do with their time. I also have lots to do besides teaching, and will only make the extra effort for those students who earn it by putting in the extra effort themselves (active in class, active at office hours).

Cheating

We will follow the "Policies and Procedures regarding academic honesty'' laid out by the Computer Science Department