Updated:
2022-07-29 02:04 EDT[-0400]
DAT 2343 Course Home Page
|
|||||||||||||||
Class Notes arranged: Jump down to: |
Office Hours - Fall 2009See my Prof Timetable schedule to make an office appointment to see me. Important Dates for DAT2343 Students
Term Assignments and Projects will also be due every week or two (for a total of 30%). |
To permit me to concentrate on the content of your assignments, material handed in for marking must be easy for me to identify. I have prepared a set of Assignment Standards, which you will find as a button on my academic home page. In particular, for full marks, you must label all assignments submitted to me, on paper or electronically, using the exact eight-line Assignment Label specified, using the exact spellings given.
EMail is a critical part of course delivery for this course. You must have a working Algonquin EMail address for this course. You must read your EMail regularly (daily) during the school term.
You can forward your Algonquin EMail to any other address you wish. Search for "forward" in the ITS Mail Help . Please ensure that your email messages always originate from your Algonquin EMail address or else my spam blocker may throw away your unknown mail address as junk. Your "From:" address must be your Algonquin EMail address, not a Hotmail, Carleton, or other off-campus address.
You are responsible for keeping your own forwarding address accurate during the term. During the term, I will only send your marks to your (possibly forwarded) Algonquin EMail address.
You may wish to set your "alternate" EMail using Algonquin ACSIS while on campus. I may use your alternate EMail to inform you that your main Algonquin EMail account has a forwarding error; no personal data will ever be sent to the alternate EMail address.
Working together is not permitted except in assignments specifically labelled by the instructor as group assignments.
Even where using another person's material is permitted (from other students, books, the Internet, or even from the blackboard or posted course notes), copying material from other sources and submitting it without proper credit to the author is an academic offence called plagiarism. You must credit the source of material that you did not write yourself, no matter from where it comes!
Students working together without authorization or submitting work containing plagiarized material in the programme will be charged with academic fraud under Algonquin Academic Regulations. Read the plagiarism document for details.
See also: Algonquin College Academic Policies and Algonquin College Directives and Algonquin College Directive E43 - Plagiarism (PDF)
Web notes for this course are not kept at Algonquin College. I pay for them to be stored on a commercial Linux-based web hosting service, with backup copies located in other locations.
Write down the locations of the web notes and their backup copies from the list below. (You won't be able to get to this page if the main web site is down!)
Web Author: Ian! D. Allen
idallen@idallen.ca
Support
free and non-commercial
Internet.
This site works best in
Any Browser, a
campaign for
non-specific WWW.
This work is licensed under a
Creative Commons License.
The real
definition of Hacker