This document provides information about an introductory programming course including meeting times, instructor details, required materials, course description, expectations, assignments, and policies. The course introduces programming concepts and skills through weekly readings, tutorials, in-class challenges, and creative projects. Students will complete labs, exams, quizzes and larger projects throughout the semester and be evaluated based on technical and creative merits. Academic integrity, collaboration, and disability accommodation policies are also outlined.
Rubrics: Improve students’ learning and save instructor’s grading timeD2L Barry
Presentation by Sheri Stover of Wright State University at the Brightspace Ohio Connection at Sinclair College on Oct. 20, 2017.
Description: Rubrics are a tool that instructors can use to assess the performance of their students. The incorporation of rubrics are beneficial to students’ learning because the rubric can make an instructor’s expectations clear to students, allow students to evaluate their own work, and give students clear criteria when conducting peer reviews. The use of electronic rubrics is also highly advantageous to instructors because it can significantly reduce the amount of time it takes to grade student assignments. This presentation will give an overview of the use of rubrics, show the technical steps to creating a rubric in D2L, and review the best practices of incorporating rubrics in your class.
Rubrics: Improve students’ learning and save instructor’s grading timeD2L Barry
Presentation by Sheri Stover of Wright State University at the Brightspace Ohio Connection at Sinclair College on Oct. 20, 2017.
Description: Rubrics are a tool that instructors can use to assess the performance of their students. The incorporation of rubrics are beneficial to students’ learning because the rubric can make an instructor’s expectations clear to students, allow students to evaluate their own work, and give students clear criteria when conducting peer reviews. The use of electronic rubrics is also highly advantageous to instructors because it can significantly reduce the amount of time it takes to grade student assignments. This presentation will give an overview of the use of rubrics, show the technical steps to creating a rubric in D2L, and review the best practices of incorporating rubrics in your class.
Integrated Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITS)Babagana Sheriff
An Implementation of Integrated ITS Solution supporting Mobility as a Service within West Midlands Region, UK in Collaboration of Integrated Transport Authority.
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Syllabus ViewPrintFilesInfoCV
Introduction to Ethics
Alamo Colleges District •
San Antonio College •
- •
PHIL-Philosophy
Introduction to Ethics
PHIL-2306
8 Weeks Flex I Spring 2018Section 050.203343-3-0 Credits01/16/2018 to 03/10/2018Modified 01/10/2018
Contact Information
Department of Language, Philosophy, and Culture:
Materials
Elements of Moral PhilosophyAuthor: RachelsPublisher: McGraw-Hill PublishersEdition: 8thISBN: 9780078038242
Description
Classical and contemporary theories concerning the good life, human conduct in society, and moral and ethical standards. This course fulfills the Language, Philosophy, and Culture foundational component area and the Component Area Option of the core, and addresses the following required objectives: Critical Thinking, Communication, Social Responsibility, and Personal Responsibility.
Prerequisite(s)
INRW 0420
Objectives
Objective 1: The student will be able to articulate key concepts in ethical and moral philosophy.
Objective 2: The student will construct defensible personal beliefs about assigned philosophical topics.
Objective 3: The student will be able to analyze primary philosophical works.
Objective 4: The student will be able to recognize and assess arguments and construct counter arguments.
Objective 5: The student will be able to identify the influence of major philosophers on contemporary ethical thought and experience.
Outcomes
1 Read, analyze, and critique philosophical texts.
2 Define and appropriately use important terms such as relativism, virtue, duty, rights, utilitarianism, natural law, egoism, altruism, autonomy, and care ethics.
3 Demonstrate knowledge of major arguments and problems in ethics.
4 Present and discuss well-reasoned ethical positions in writing.
5 Apply ethical concepts and principles to address moral concerns.
6 Apply course material to various aspects of life.
7 Discuss ways of living responsibly in a world where people have diverse ethical beliefs.
Evaluation
WEEKLY READINGS
The online course will be organized around weekly readings. While the amount of assigned readings will not be extensive, they will require careful reading and rereading. Notes on reading philosophical text are provided in detail below.
DISCUSSION
Discussions will play a central role in this course, so your active participation is required. I will post on CANVAS, and take part in, discussion questions related to the readings for each of the 8 weeks. Everyone must have at least one post and must respond to TWO other student’s post. Discussion posts should be AT LEAS.
Contemporary Issues in Adulthood and Aging PSY 340.01.docxmaxinesmith73660
Contemporary Issues in
Adulthood and Aging
PSY 340.01
CUNY SPS, Online B.A. Psychology
Spring 2020
Instructor: Dr. Giselle Gourrier
Email Address: [email protected]
Office Hours: Mondays, 2:00pm – 3:00pm
Required Text: Mason, Marion (2011), Adulthood and Aging. Allyn & Bacon. ISBN:
9780205433513
There will be additional resources posted online such as videos, articles, and blogs. These will be
posted in the weekly assignments.
Course Description:
Study of current theories and research on physical, intellectual and social-emotional growth and
change across the adult years will be the central focus of this course. Key roles of family and
friendship, work and retirement, as well as broader social, economic and legal factors are examined,
along with race, culture, class, and gender differences. Implications of research findings for optimizing
adaptation to normal development change and crises are considered.
Psy101 is the prerequisite for this class.
Course Objectives:
Students will:
1) Study current theories and research on physical, intellectual and social-emotional growth and
change across the adult years will be the central focus of this course.
2) Explore key roles of family and friendship, work and retirement, as well as broader social,
economic and legal factors such as race, culture, class, and gender differences.
3) Examine the implications of research findings for optimizing adaptation to normal development
change and crises are considered.
Learning Outcomes:
Students will:
1) Clearly articulate and understanding of the main concepts and theories within the field of
psychology and aging
2) Demonstrate how concepts and theories of aging are applied to “real-world” situations and current
events.
3) Critically analyze, compare, and contrast seminal perspectives within the field of psychology and
aging.
mailto:[email protected]
4) Realize the unique experience of the aging individual and its multifaceted complexities that include
such layers of identity as: race, gender, sexual orientation, religion, class, etc.
5) See how the ideas presented in this course overlap with many other courses and disciplines.
How This Online Course Works
This course is being offered in a fully online format. This means that all of your course activities will
take place within the Blackboard course. There will not be any specific times when you will have to be
online with your instructor or your classmates during the semester. This gives you the flexibility of
doing your assignments at times during the day when you can be at a computer and work without
distractions. For some students this is early in the morning and for others late at night. An advantage
of online study is that your classroom is open 24 hours a day, seven days a week.
Because of this schedule flexibility, time management is always a challenge for students in fully online
courses. Be sure you set a.
Contemporary Issues in Adulthood and Aging PSY 340.01.docxaidaclewer
Contemporary Issues in
Adulthood and Aging
PSY 340.01
CUNY SPS, Online B.A. Psychology
Spring 2020
Instructor: Dr. Giselle Gourrier
Email Address: [email protected]
Office Hours: Mondays, 2:00pm – 3:00pm
Required Text: Mason, Marion (2011), Adulthood and Aging. Allyn & Bacon. ISBN:
9780205433513
There will be additional resources posted online such as videos, articles, and blogs. These will be
posted in the weekly assignments.
Course Description:
Study of current theories and research on physical, intellectual and social-emotional growth and
change across the adult years will be the central focus of this course. Key roles of family and
friendship, work and retirement, as well as broader social, economic and legal factors are examined,
along with race, culture, class, and gender differences. Implications of research findings for optimizing
adaptation to normal development change and crises are considered.
Psy101 is the prerequisite for this class.
Course Objectives:
Students will:
1) Study current theories and research on physical, intellectual and social-emotional growth and
change across the adult years will be the central focus of this course.
2) Explore key roles of family and friendship, work and retirement, as well as broader social,
economic and legal factors such as race, culture, class, and gender differences.
3) Examine the implications of research findings for optimizing adaptation to normal development
change and crises are considered.
Learning Outcomes:
Students will:
1) Clearly articulate and understanding of the main concepts and theories within the field of
psychology and aging
2) Demonstrate how concepts and theories of aging are applied to “real-world” situations and current
events.
3) Critically analyze, compare, and contrast seminal perspectives within the field of psychology and
aging.
mailto:[email protected]
4) Realize the unique experience of the aging individual and its multifaceted complexities that include
such layers of identity as: race, gender, sexual orientation, religion, class, etc.
5) See how the ideas presented in this course overlap with many other courses and disciplines.
How This Online Course Works
This course is being offered in a fully online format. This means that all of your course activities will
take place within the Blackboard course. There will not be any specific times when you will have to be
online with your instructor or your classmates during the semester. This gives you the flexibility of
doing your assignments at times during the day when you can be at a computer and work without
distractions. For some students this is early in the morning and for others late at night. An advantage
of online study is that your classroom is open 24 hours a day, seven days a week.
Because of this schedule flexibility, time management is always a challenge for students in fully online
courses. Be sure you set a.
ADMG374 – IT Project ManagementWelcome WeekAttendance.docxnettletondevon
ADMG374 – IT Project Management
Welcome Week
Attendance
SCREENS OFF!
Hi!
Moved here from So Cal
Married to a great guy – 37 years
Spent 35 years in industry and finished my career with Boeing
Network Administrator
Web Application Developer
Systems Analyst/Project Manager/Business Analyst
BS in Org Management
MA in Educational Technology
PhD in Applied Management and Decision Systems
Research interests include:
Emotional intelligence and IT
Disruptive change in the organization
Knowledge management
About the Class
This class is a Hybrid class
We will meet three times per week – T, W, and TH on campus
The rest of the time we meet online in Canvas
This class is a “Flipped” class
I don’t lecture! (You need to read the material BEFORE class)
In class, we will work on assignments, case studies, and class projects
There are Individual assignments and Group Assignments
We will have In-Class assignments – up to 10 points per week
The Class Project – A Real Project! (More Tomorrow!)
Syllabus
The syllabus can be found in the Canvas classroom
The syllabus is the contract which we will use throughout this course
There is a syllabus quiz that must be completed by Friday and passed at 80%!
I reserve the right to change the syllabus as needed. PLENTY of notice will be provided!
Textbook and Software
The textbook is: Information Technology Project Management, 8th edition, by Kathy Schwalbe. Published by Course Technology Cengage Learning. You won’t be able to get through
the class without it.
Software - MS Project 2013/2016
Can obtain from Dreamspark
No MAC version
Some but not all campus labs have MS Project
installed
You *MAY* have the 7th Edition! Don’t sweat it. We can work around any page number problems. Just let me know.
DreamSpark
You can obtain a free copy of MS Project 2013/2016 from DreamSpark
DreamSpark is a website, not a tool
If you do not have an account, contact Libby
Gibson.
However, she just setup a number of accounts,
so check your email
Follow the instructions provided in the
Introduction module
Used with permission Information Technology Project Management, Seventh Edition
Modules
One module per week, 10 modules. Module 1 begins next week. Plus finals week!
Do not rely on the Course Calendar for your information!
Blackboard Collaborate
From time to time, we *MAY* need to meet online
If necessary, we will use Blackboard Collaborate
There is a link in the Left Nav bar
Setup and test your system now, in preparation
There is a Test Session ready
YOU WILL BE HELD RESPONSIBLE FOR ATTENDING CLASSES HELD IN BBC. Be sure you know how to use the tech before needed.
Course Content
Reading
In-Class Assignments – in groups (20% of grade)
Individual Assignments (35% of grade)
Quizzes (10% of grade)
Final Team Project (35% of grade)
Policies
The syllabus covers the following policies:
Communication –
Read Announcements
Configure your Canvas email preferences
Be professional!
Be ready to use BBC if needed
Email and .
1. ATLS 2400: Code (ATLS 2519-420)
Fall 2015
MEETING TIMES
Mondays & Wednesdays
1:00 - 2:50 pm
ATLS 1B25
INSTRUCTOR
Brittany Ann Kos
brittany.kos@colorado.edu
Office Hours:
Wednesday 3-4
Friday 12-1
ATLAS 234
I am also available by
appointment
REQUIRED MATERIALS
Portable Storage Device
Examples: USB Jump Drive,
Firewire Hard Drive, iPod, etc.
for saving and backing up your
work.
You are given 1GB of server
space, but you still need to
backup your work. Lost and/or
corrupted work is not an
acceptable excuse for late
work.
REQUIRED TEXTS
Learning Processing: A
Beginner's Guide to
Programming Images,
Animation, and Interaction2nd
Edition
Daniel Shiffman
978-0-12-364443-6
This book is available in the
CU Bookstore and online. You
must have this book by the
second day of class to avoid
falling behind.
ATLAS HELP HOURS
Sterling Fraser
Sterling.Fraser@colorado.edu
ATLS 225
COURSE DESCRIPTION
The field of digital media continues to be propelled forward by technological
advances, making it essential for artists, designers, and media producers to expand
their technical knowledge and skillset in order to fully participate. This course
introduces basic programming concepts and methodologies that will be applied to
the creation and manipulation of information, images, animation, and sound.
Students will gain the knowledge and skills needed to fully participate in digital
media production.
My personal goal for you is that you will not only understand how to program, but
you will begin to appreciate its relevance in today’s digital media landscape.
This course is technical and can be challenging for many students. If you find
yourself struggling, please let me know as soon as possible as waiting will only
compound the problem.
If you are familiar with programming and are concerned that this class won’t be
beneficial and or challenging for you, please see me so that we can ensure that this
course is a useful experience.
COURSE CONTENT
In this class I reserve the right to show a broad range of course materials, some of
which assume the audience to be adult in age and demeanor. Should you feel of-
fended by something you have seen or heard, I would appreciate you staying to be
part of a dialogue as I welcome your perspective. If you feel that you cannot stay,
feel free to excuse yourself from the classroom as discretely as possible.
COURSE WEBSITE
For this class, we will be using Edmodo.com. On this site you will find a course
calendar, assignments, resources, and grades. Additionally, this is where you will
submit your labs and projects. I will send an invitation to registered students after the
first class.
EMAIL
You must use your Colorado.edu email account for this course. Please check your
email and the class website regularly. I will notify you of all class cancellations and
scheduling changes via the class website and/or email. It is my goal to respond to all
emails within 24 hours. If I fail to reply within 24 hours, feel free to resend.
CLASS STRUCTURE
This will be a semi-flipped classroom. Before class, I will assign readings and Khan
Academy tutorials. You will be expected to have completed this “prep-material”
before the start of class. The prep-material readings will introduce you to the new
material and the Khan Academy tutorials will give you practice programming with
these new concepts.
In class we will work through various “challenges” that will go a little more in-depth
with the material and will solidify your knowledge of the material. You will be
assigned a lab that will be a creative or practical application of the new material.
2. Monday & Wednesday
11–1:30 & 3:30–5:00
Friday 8–10
DIGITAL DISTRACTIONS
Part of learning how to be an
adult is learning how to
manage various digital
distractions such as texting,
E-mailing, and Facebooking. I
am not going to prohibit these
activities because you need to
learn how to integrate these
tools into your life, and
prohibitions will not help you
learn how to manage these
activities professionally.
However, during class time, I
will ask that you refrain from
texting, checking your E-mail,
and using Facebook, as it
creates a distraction for you,
and for your classmates. In the
event that these activities do
become problematic, I reserve
the right to amend this policy.
ATTENDANCE
Attendance at all class meetings is required. You are responsible for knowing the
material presented during class, even if you were not in attendance when the
material was presented. Previous experience has shown me that students who do
not attend class regularly often receive a failing grade and have to repeat the class
the following semester.
You will not receive a grade for attendance and participation, however, I will be
taking attendance in class everyday and not coming to class will adversely affect
your grade. If you miss more than 3 classes (excused or unexcused), you will
receive a 10% drop in your final grade and every day you miss after that will be
another 5% drop. If you are present for only part of the class, this will count as a
half day absence. Two half day absences will add up to one full day absence. If you
come to class late this will count as a third day absence. Three third day absences
will count as a full day absence.
Campus policy regarding religious observances requires that faculty make every
effort to reasonably and fairly deal with all students who, because of religious
obligations, have conflicts with scheduled exams, assignments, or required
attendance. You can find the details at www.colorado.edu/policies.
If you qualify for accommodations because of a disability, please submit a letter to
me from Disability Services by the end of the first week of classes so that your needs
may be addressed. Disability Services determines accommodations based on
documented disabilities. Contact info: www.colorado.edu/disabilityservices,
303-492-8671, Willard 322. That office also maintains guidelines about temporary
medical conditions or injuries.
PARTICIPATION
Being present and participating is necessary if you want to do well in this course.
Being “present” means that you have completed all the required reading, exercises,
and assignments before class begins, and that you arrive to class on time. Being
present also means that you are mentally and physically engaged with the class.
I understand that as college students you are extremely busy and over-extended.
But please realize that your behavior affects the learning environment and do your
best to avoid causing distractions and disruptions.
I believe strongly that a classroom experience should be compelling, challenging and
relevant. I also believe that we should take full advantage of being with each other in
a physical space. I pledge to you my intent to create the best classroom experience
that I can. I will be fully present for you, I will be highly prepared, I will be flexible and
responsive to your questions and interests. I will know your names and your
concerns. I will begin each class on time.
In exchange, if you are going to commit to this class, you need to fully commit. This
means taking responsibility for your own learning experience, and as well as the
experience of your peers.
IN-CLASS EXPECTATIONS
It is my expectation that each of you will be respectful to your fellow classmates and
instructors at all times. In order to create a professional atmosphere within the
classroom, you are expected to:
3. ● Arrive to class on time
● Bring your laptop to class if you have one to participate in classroom
activities. Please restrict laptop use to these activities only, no email,
Facebook, Youtube, etc.
● Refrain from disruptive behaviors, such as texting or having conversations at
inappropriate times during class
● Remain for the whole class; if you must leave early, do so without disrupting
others
● Display professional courtesy and respect in all interactions related to this
class
EVALUATION
Labs 20 points
(8 labs x 1 pt &
6 labs x 2pts)
Projects 32 points
(2 projects x 9 pts &
1 project x 14 pts)
Final
Project
18 points
(1 project x 18 pts)
Quizzes 9 points
(3 quizzes x 3 pts)
Exams 20 points
(2 exams x 10 pts)
Total 100 pts
In order to counteract grade
inflation, I do not give out A’s
easily. If you turn in all your
work on time (and if it is
satisfactorily completed), and if
you attend class and
participate, you are ensured a
C. A’s and B’s are reserved for
students who excel beyond
average and competent work.
A = excellent work
B = above average work
C= average or competent work
D = below average work
F = unsatisfactory work
LABS/PROJECT EVALUATION RUBRIC
Labs and projects will be evaluated according to the following questions:
Technical (50%): Does the lab or project work? (Partial points can be given even if it
does not fully work.) Does it reflect an understanding of the programming language
and relevant concepts? Does it reflect a growth of understanding and an application
of relevant technical principles?
Creative & Conceptual (50%): Does the project or lab approach the assignment
creatively and uniquely? Does the project or lab present a foundational idea or
question? Is it aesthetically interesting? Is the project engaging? Does it reflect
creative and critical thought?
CRITIQUES
I take critiques very seriously. Even if your project is not completed, it is required that
you come to class to offer feedback on your classmates’ projects. It will negatively
affect your project grade if you are not present for critiques.
Critiques for projects 1 and 2 will be help on the week of Sept 21. Critiques for
projects 3 and 4 will be held on the week of Oct 26. The critique for the final project
will be held during the scheduled final time for the course, Thurs, Dec 17 at 7:30 pm.
EXAMS
There will be 2 (two) exams during the course of the semester. Both of these exams
will be in-class. The midterm will be held on Mon, Oct 19, and the final will be held
during the last day of class on Wed, Dec 9.
QUIZZES
There will be three unannounced quizzes throughout the course of the semester.
These quizzes will cover the content of the lectures and readings. The purpose of
these quizzes is to let me, and more importantly you, know how well you are
absorbing and applying the concepts of the course. If you come to class, pay
attention, complete the readings, and ask questions regarding things you don’t
understand, you will do fine on the quizzes.
READINGS
Readings are due by the day that they are listed on the schedule. We will be
using these concepts that you will encounter in the reading in class and it is
expected that you come to class prepared.
4. EXTRA CREDIT
There will be various extra credit opportunities that I encourage you all to participate
in. Extra credit will be added to your final course grade at the end of the semester.
There will be a maximum of 3% of extra credit granted (so extra credit will enable to
you to jump from a B to a B+, but not a B to an A-).
ATLAS Events
ATLAS hosts a variety of events throughout the semester, such as the Speaker
Series, TAM Workshops, and hosting guests. These provide great opportunities to
learn more about Technology, Arts, and Media through different academic, industry,
or artistic perspectives.
If you go to one of these events and want to receive extra credit, you will have to
complete these two steps:
1. Take a selfie! Take a picture of yourself at the event to prove that you were
present. You do not have to take a picture with the main speaker, but do
include the part of the audience in the background.
2. Write a reflection paper. This paper should be 2 pages in length (1.5
spaced) and will include your thoughts, reactions, and reflections on the
event. This should not be a summarization of the event, but should be your
own perspective and opinion of what you thought or experienced.
Each event you attend will be worth 0.5 points towards your final grade.
Research Study
An ATLAS PhD student and good collegue of mine, Kara Behnke
(kara.consigli@colorado.edu), is conducting a study on introductory programmers.
Participation in this study is completely optional and up to your discretion. If you
would like to participate, you will receive up to 3 extra credit points (the amount of
extra credit points I will award will be determined by the quality of your submission).
Here is the call to participation from Kara:
Interested in learning more about computer programming? You may receive up to
3 points of extra credit by participating in an academic research study on learning
introductory programming. To receive extra credit for this course, you will need
to complete the following tasks:
First, you will need to complete this survey. Your responses will be kept safe,
confidential, and have no consequence on your grade.
Next, choose one of the following websites that you will use to learn how to code.
1). Gidget
2). Khan Academy
3). GrokLearning
4). Scratch
You are required to finish the website's recommended learning module or
dedicate at least 10 hours of work to a project. Please submit a screenshot to
Edmodo of your coding project or completed learning modules. After you submit
this work, you will need to complete the posttest survey about what you learned.
5. CODE AND PLAGIARISM
You are responsible for
knowing and adhering to the
academic integrity policy of
this institution. Violations of
this policy may include
cheating, plagiarism, academic
dishonesty, fabrication, lying,
bribery, and threatening
behavior. Plagiarism includes
using material from outside
sources (e.g., the web) without
clear identification and citation.
COLLABORATION POLICY
I support and encourage collaboration among students. I believe that students are
most successful when they are working together to understand new concepts.
However, the ultimate goal is that you fully understand the code you develop.
This class also has specific guidelines for what is considered collaboration and what
is considered academic dishonesty. You must adhere to the University’s Honor
Code and this course’s Collaboration Policy at all times. Violations of this policy may
also include cheating, plagiarism, academic dishonesty, fabrication, lying, bribery,
and threatening behavior.
You are expected to generate their own code for this class, but I am aware that
through collaboration and using found code online often necessary. There will be a
strict 10%-90% rule. 10% of any code you turn in can can be from an outside
source, but 90% of the code MUST be original and written by you.
HOW TO CITE YOUR SOURCES
Examples (assuming // indicates beginning of code comment):
// Modified version from https://github.com/Phhere/MOSS
// Adapted from Learning Processing by Shiffman
// Worked with Joe Smith from class to come up with algorithm for sorting
// Received suggestions from stackExchange website (see http://….)
If you are using code directly from another source, you must say where that code
begins and ends. For example:
// Start code from stackExchange website (see http://….)
// End code from stackExchange website (see http://….)
A good rule of thumb: “If it did not come from your brain, then you need to attribute
where you got it.”
Note: you do not need to cite if you are adapting code from the lecture slides or the
required readings.
Certain homeworks may be required to be completed without outside resources (see
course overview for details). In these cases it is your responsibility to know the
extent of approved resources and use only those that have been specifically allowed.
Use of outside resources in these cases would violate the collaboration policy.
OFFICIAL CU POLICIES
Religious Observances
Campus policy regarding religious observances requires that faculty make every
effort to reasonably and fairly deal with all students who, because of religious
obligations, have conflicts with scheduled exams, assignments or required
attendance. Please contact me before class regarding any absences or conflicts due
to religious observances. See full details at
http://www.colorado.edu/policies/fac_relig.html
Disability Services
If you qualify for accommodations because of a disability, please submit to your
professor a letter from Disability Services in a timely manner (for exam
accommodations provide your letter at least one week prior to the exam) so that
your needs can be addressed. Disability Services determines accommodations
based on documented disabilities. Contact Disability Services at 303-492-8671 or by
e-mail at dsinfo@colorado.edu. If you have a temporary medical condition or injury,
6. see Temporary Injuries under Quick Links at Disability Services website
(http://disabilityservices.colorado.edu/) and discuss your needs with your professor.
Honor Code
All students of the University of Colorado at Boulder are responsible for knowing and
adhering to the academic integrity policy of this institution. Violations of this policy
may include: cheating, plagiarism, aid of academic dishonesty, fabrication, lying,
bribery, and threatening behavior. All incidents of academic misconduct shall be
reported to the Honor Code Council (honor@colorado.edu; 303-735-2273). Students
who are found to be in violation of the academic integrity policy will be subject to
both academic sanctions from the faculty member and non-academic sanctions
(including but not limited to university probation, suspension, or expulsion). Other
information on the Honor Code can be found at
http://www.colorado.edu/policies/honor.html and at http://honorcode.colorado.edu
Discrimination and Harassment
The University of Colorado Boulder (CU-Boulder) is committed to maintaining a
positive learning, working, and living environment. The University of Colorado does
not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national origin, sex, age, disability,
creed, religion, sexual orientation, or veteran status in admission and access to, and
treatment and employment in, its educational programs and activities. (Regent Law,
Article 10, amended 11/8/2001). CU-Boulder will not tolerate acts of discrimination
or harassment based upon Protected Classes or related retaliation against or by any
employee or student. For purposes of this CU-Boulder policy, "Protected Classes"
refers to race, color, national origin, sex, pregnancy, age, disability, creed, religion,
sexual orientation, gender identity, gender expression, or veteran status. Individuals
who believe they have been discriminated against should contact the Office of
Discrimination and Harassment (ODH) at 303-492-2127 or the Office of Student
Conduct (OSC) at 303-492-5550. Information about the ODH, the above referenced
policies, and the campus resources available to assist individuals regarding
discrimination or harassment can be obtained at http://hr.colorado.edu/dh/
Behavioral Standards
Students and faculty each have responsibility for maintaining an appropriate learning
environment. Those who fail to adhere to such behavioral standards may be subject
to discipline. Professional courtesy and sensitivity are especially important with
respect to individuals and topics dealing with differences of race, culture, religion,
politics, sexual orientation, gender, gender variance, and nationalities. Class rosters
are provided to the instructor with the student's legal name. I will gladly honor your
request to address you by an alternate name or gender pronoun. Please advise me
of this preference early in the semester so that I may make appropriate changes to
my records. See policies at http://www.colorado.edu/policies/classbehavior.html
and at
http://www.colorado.edu/studentaffairs/judicialaffairs/code.html#student_code