Syllabus -- ENGR 1213 – Engineering Computing -- Page 5/5

ENGR 1213 Engineering Computing

Fall 2007

Department of Engineering and Physics

University of Central Oklahoma


Location

Howell Hall 101

Time

MWF Noon - 12:50 p.m.

Instructor

Evan Lemley, Ph.D.; Prof., Department of Engineering and Physics

Office

Howell Hall 221L

Web

http://evan.lemley.org/

email

elemley@ucok.edu

Phone

(405)974-5473

Office Hours

MTR 1:30 p.m. - 2:30 p.m. or by appointment

Final

W Dec 12, 2007 from 11:00 a.m. - 12:50 p.m.


Course Description

This course focuses on the use of the C programming language to solve engineering problems from the algorithm development stage to program implementation stage. In this course student teams design and implement computer programs to solve engineering and related problems.


Prerequisites

PHY 2014 Physics for Scientists and Engineers I and Lab or concurrent enrollment in PHY 2014.


Textbook

Engineering Problem Solving with C, Dolores M. Etter, ISBN: 0-13-142971-X, Pearson-Prentice Hall, 2005.


Objectives

Students will

  1. Develop algorithms and create computer programs to solve engineering or related problems.

  2. Demonstrate an understanding of programming control structures, and input/output of data to/from these programs.

  3. Demonstrate an understanding of multidimensional arrays and their use in engineering computing problems.

  4. Demonstrate an understanding of the engineering design process.

  5. Demonstrate the ability to prepare written engineering documents including reports and homework.

  6. Demonstrate the ability to give an oral technical presentation on an engineering computing problem.

  7. Demonstrate the ability to function as part of an engineering design team by participating in team meetings and completing assigned tasks.


Calculator

You must own a scientific calculator – see the list of allowed calculators for exams in the Department of Engineering and Physics. Please bring your calculator to class for each meeting.


Engineering Paper

Engineering Paper -- available from the UCO bookstore and at Thompson's Bookstore. Please use engineering paper for all handwritten homework assignments.



Internet & E-mail

Access to the Internet and ability to send and receive E-mail are required for the class. If you do not have a computer at home or a laptop you can use machines on the UCO campus: Look at

http://technology.ucok.edu/support/microcomplab.htm

for a full list of available general use computers on campus.


I will send e-mail to your “ucok” e-mail address on a pretty regular basis with class announcements and updates or corrections. Therefore you should check your “ucok” e-mail address often.


Portable Electronic Devices - including cell phones/pmp's/laptops

Please turn off any portable electronic devices during class. You may not access any portable electronic device during exams except calculators that are on the approved list. If you plan to take notes on the computer you must speak with Dr. Lemley and get permission. In any event you are not allowed to work on homework or any assignment during lectures unless told specifically to do so.


Instruction Techniques

Lecture will be used two days per week and a work session will usually occur one day per week.


Class Polices


Lab Sessions

Much of the process of learning to write programs involves guided hands-on practice – kind of like a laboratory in other courses. So we will have about 10 lab sessions throughout the semester. The class will meet in Howell Hall 163 on the dates indicated on the course schedule in this document. There are only 14 computers in this room, so some sharing may have to occur. If you have a laptop you may bring it to use for these sessions.

Homework/Team Design Project/Programming Projects

Working HW problems in a timely manner is the best way to do well on exams and in the class as a whole. Homework is due at the beginning of the class period on the due-date or due-day. Each HW problem you turn in is worth ten points. Some problems will be graded on detailed solutions and others will be graded on effort. I will not tell you ahead of time which or how many problems will be graded relative to a detailed solution, but on the returned and graded HW paper a check mark next to the problem number will indicate full effort (or ten points) and a numerical score (e.g. 8/10) next to the problem number will be used on those problems under more scrutiny.


Paper Homework

Homework papers should be folded length-wise with your name written on the outside of the folded pages before turning it in. Each problem should fit all of the following criteria: clearly labeled, one problem per sheet of paper, legible and organized. HW papers that do not fit these criteria will be penalized accordingly. See the following link ( http://evan.lemley.org/courses/hwk_format.php ) for for details on the presentation of HW problems.


Electronic Assignments

These may be homework, design projects, or programming projects. What will need to be turned in will vary, but whatever documents you need to submit should be attached to an e-mail message to Dr. Lemley. File names should be distinct from other students – following is the general format for file names:


date_assignment_lname.ext

where


date =

current date in MMDDYY format

assignment =

assignment (e.g. hwk for a homework, dpr for design project, ppr for a programming project, lab for a lab assignment)

lname =

last name

ext =

file extension that indicates the type of file (e.g. c for program source, xls for a spreadsheet, ppt for a PowerPoint presentation, etc...)


For example if your last name is Jones, you have completed an assignment called programming project 1, you are submitting on 09/12/07, and you are submitting C source code and a related header file, then your filenames need to be:


091207_ppr1_jones.c & 091207_ppr1_jones.h


Late Homework

Homework is generally due at the beginning of class. HW turned in after this time will have 20% deducted per late class period. For example: if a paper is turned in at 12:01 p.m. on the day it is due, 20% will be deducted. If it is turned in at 11:59 a.m. just as the next class meeting is about to begin, 20% will also be deducted. Dr. Lemley will check e-mail just before class – any electronic assignment must be received by this time, or 20% will be deducted.


Team Design Project

There will be team design project in this course. This will incorporate some of the work you do throughout the semester into a single piece of software. You will be working in a team with other students. We will have some early exercises so you get to know your team.


Grading Policies

The following table shows the breakdown of credit for this course.


HW

10%

Mid-Term Exam

20%

Programming Projects

25%

Team Design Project

20%

Final

25%

Total

100%


Tentative Grading Scale

90-100% -- A, 80-90% -- B, 70-80% -- C, 60-70% -- D, <60% -- F


STUDENT INFORMATION SHEET / SYLLABUS ATTACHMENT

Go to: http://evan.lemley.org/courses/stud_info_sheet_fall07.pdf


DISABILITY SUPPORT SERVICES

http://www.ucok.edu/disability_support/