CS 197 Computers in Society Fall, 2007. Welcome, Freshmen!

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CS 197 Computers in Society Fall, 2007
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Transcript of CS 197 Computers in Society Fall, 2007. Welcome, Freshmen!

  • Slide 1
  • CS 197 Computers in Society Fall, 2007
  • Slide 2
  • Welcome, Freshmen!
  • Slide 3
  • Introductions An now, please tell us about yourselves
  • Slide 4
  • Why I Teach CIS Computing has in impact on every field everyone has something they need to know to work more effectively. People need to understand how computers work to make informed decisions Social and legal issues abound in computing these arent just geek concerns.
  • Slide 5
  • The Educated Person What should an educated person know about computers and computing? We will try to answer this question in the next 15 weeks.
  • Slide 6
  • Textbooks The best information source for this class is the Internet: we will not need any other text Much of this class is about Current Events in computing: the latest technology, problems, court cases, and opinions. Another aspect of this class is making sure you know how to find things out in computing.
  • Slide 7
  • Rules of CS 197 * No dumb questions: if you dont understand, speak up. You shouldnt need any background in computers to handle this course. * No hype: be skeptical about claims involving computers and avoid a wow isnt that cool way of looking at the field * Participate: this class is a shared investigation of computing; all of us need to talk, investigate, and present information * Specialize: everyone should find some specific area to investigate in detail. Follow your interests!
  • Slide 8
  • Computers I've explicitly requested a classroom without computers! This is because I want you to do your computer work OUTSIDE of class. Here, I want attention focused on the presenter, not on your email or catching up on the required reading.
  • Slide 9
  • Overview My goal is to help you understand and communicate. You need to deal with the following: Tests Participation Presentations Term Paper Homework and Teams
  • Slide 10
  • Tests There will be a quiz every week (except this one). All quizzes will be 10 minutes, closed notes, during the end of the Thursday class. I drop the 2 lowest scores. There will be a final. It will be similar to the quizzes. Tests are 20% of your grade.
  • Slide 11
  • Homework There will be a variety of homework assignments. Some assignments are worth more than others see the points associated with each homework. Some homework will be for your team, others will be individual. We will create teams at the start of week 3.
  • Slide 12
  • Homework #1 Youll find that theres already a homework due! Everyone needs to create a home page in the wiki with a picture of you and a brief bio. This picture helps us get to know you make sure you are recognizable! You MUST link all assignments you do to your home wiki page. You can have a subpage for 197 if you want Ill be using the wiki in other courses too.
  • Slide 13
  • Term Papers Your term paper is 25% of your grade. You need to start thinking about a topic! There will be numerous deadlines as the term goes on. The term papers are developed publicly (wiki) and iteratively. Youll get plenty of help as you go. NO LATE WORK!
  • Slide 14
  • Participation This is a big part (25%) of your grade! You need to come to every class PREPARDED! There will ALWAYS be a reading assignment make SURE you do the reading. I will have the reading posted by the end of the previous lecture. Youll get a grade EVERY DAY. No unexcused absences (or you get a 0!)
  • Slide 15
  • Expectations Participation grades: To get an A, you need to Do the reading and understand the basic facts Read beyond the original source material as needed Participate in the discussion and raise your own points regarding the topic Connect the material with areas outside the original topic
  • Slide 16
  • Reading Assignments Make SURE you always look in the wiki before class for the reading assignment. On Thursday we will be discussing OLPC look for the required reading in the wiki. Dont just read the words make sure you UNDERSTAND! This means you have to dig beyond the source material.
  • Slide 17
  • Presentations Everyone will participate in 4 formal presentations: A short news article An application of computing (team) An integrated presentation (team) A presentation on your term paper
  • Slide 18
  • Good Presentations Background reading for the audience make sure the reading is appropriate (not too long or technical) Poster to advertise your presentation Slides to accompany your presentation You MUST get your materials approved in advance. NO PRESENTATION WILL BE MADE WITHOUT PRIOR APPROVAL!
  • Slide 19
  • Feedback I am here to help you by getting prior approval Im giving you a chance to get feedback on your presentation before you give it. We will use anonymous peer review to evaluate your presentations expect to submit comments on other peoples presentations.
  • Slide 20
  • What Make a Good Poster? Lets look at some posters from last term.
  • Slide 21
  • What Make a Good Poster? Highlights some topic makes you want to read more Graphics that draw attention and are appropriate to the subject Not too many words but still some concrete facts Quotes especially be well known people Humor Graphic design
  • Slide 22
  • Wiki Our class will be conducted in a wiki. Whats a wiki? A wiki is: * A shared place to present and edit information (web pages) * A way to organize information * Something that keeps track of history so nothing is forgotten * a form of computer-assisted collaboration
  • Slide 23
  • What is a Wiki? A wiki is a website where anyone can edit the pages in the website. Depending on the wiki, you may have to identify yourself (login). Ours will require this. Anyone with a web browser can access our wiki dont put anything there you wouldnt want on your own web page.
  • Slide 24
  • Wikis The wikipedia is an encyclopedia that is published as a wiki. Were using the same wiki engine. Our wiki is at http://wiki.western.edu/mcis http://wiki.western.edu/mcis The unofficial text of this class is the wikipedia: Lets have a look www.wikipedia.orgwww.wikipedia.org
  • Slide 25
  • Wiki Skills Demonstrate: * The home wiki and links * How to create an identity * How to edit a page * How to add a page * Basic wiki markup * Pictures
  • Slide 26
  • Reading for Understanding Lets read a short article and talk about it and how to best get the information needed to understand it. Lets look at Schoolboards: net dangers over-rated; bring social networks to school
  • Slide 27
  • How to read this Who authored the study this is based on? Do they have an agenda? What technical terms do you need to understand in this reading? Where might you find other comments? Where might you find other views? What other relevant online information might exist? Do the comments illuminate?
  • Slide 28
  • Discussion Do you agree with this? Is there real research that proves social networking is beneficial to education? What are the real dangers of unrestricted Internet use? Is the sample size big enough to make these results meaningful? Is .08% an acceptable danger level?