SUMMER QUARTER 2007 — Information and Computer Science UC Irvine

ICS 139W Course Reference
COMMUNICATIONS SKILLS FOR COMPUTER SCIENTISTS 

Instructor: David G. Kay, 5056 Donald Bren Hall (kay@uci.edu)

Teaching assistant: Denh Sy (dsy@uci.edu). Denh will devote some of the scheduled lab section time to individual consultations; he will also be available at other scheduled times to be arranged, and by appointment.

Quick links: Email archive

Course goals: Even if you intend to spend your entire professional life designing software or configuring networks, you will spend more of it writing prose—memos, proposals, documentation, electronic mail—than you will writing code. Yet in most of your courses, you exercise this vital skill only after you have run the last test case, in the half-hour before the deadline. Here we have the luxury of concentrating on your writing skills, with an emphasis on writing to meet the specific needs of different audiences; you will also make oral presentations and design presentation graphics.

This course satisfies UCI's upper division writing requirement, which gives students the opportunity to do writing in ways that are specific to their own academic disciplines, guided by faculty from that discipline rather than from English.

Prerequisite concepts: Satisfaction of the lower division writing requirement is a prerequisite for this course, so we will expect every student to be able to write cogent, grammatical English at the level expected in Writing 39C.

Meeting place and times: Lecture meets Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays from 1:00 to 2:50 in Donald Bren Hall 1200. The discussion section is scheduled on Tuesdays and Thursdays from 1:00 to 1:50 in CS 180; some section days will involve required activities, but others will be set aside for individual consultations on your work.

Office hours: I will be in or near my office during these scheduled hours, during which course-related matters will have first priority: Mondays from 10:00 to 10:30 and Wednesdays from 12:30 to 12:55. Of course emergencies may come up, but I will try to give advance notice of any change. If I'm not immersed in something else, I'll be glad to answer short questions whenever I'm in my office, so feel free to drop by any time. I'll also be happy to make appointments for other times during the week. The quickest and most effective way to reach me is by electronic mail, as described below.

Questions and announcements: You can usually get a response to your course-related questions within a few hours (though a bit less frequently on the weekends) by sending electronic mail to the ID ics139w@uci.edu. This goes to both of us, and whoever reads it first can respond. If you need to reach one of us individually, our individual addresses are listed above.

We may also send course announcements by Email to the official course mailing list, so you should check your Email at least daily. Note that this mailing list goes to the Email address that the registrar has for you (your UCInet ID). If you prefer to read your Email on another account, you should set your UCInet account to forward your Email to your preferred account (from http://www.nacs.uci.edu/email/forward.html). Don't let this slide; if you miss official announcements, your grade could suffer.

This course has a home page at http://www.ics.uci.edu/~kay/courses/139w; http://e3.uci.edu/07y/w3m3/35565 holds an archive of official course Email. If there's interest in setting up a Note Board for semi-public communication among students, let us know.

Course materials:

Course requirements and grading: To satisfy the upper division writing requirement, you must receive a grade of C or better in this course; you may also take this class on a pass/not-pass basis (which also requires work at the C level to pass). In addition to satisfactory participation and completion of the assignments, to pass 139W you must successfully complete an in-class writing sample (described in more detail in the following section) demonstrating your ability to write a short passage in clear, correct, grammatical, cogent academic English.

In general we will assign scores on a 100-point scale, with 95 a clear A, 85 a clear B, and below 70 not of passing quality (i.e., below C). It is possible but not guaranteed that the cutoffs for course letter grades of A and B will be assigned more leniently; that is, an overall score of 89% might receive an A or A-.

There will be no exams.

We're required to say that in unusual circumstances, these criteria could change, but we do not expect that to happen.

Special needs: Any student who feels he or she may need an accommodation due to a disability should contact the UCI Disability Services Center at (949) 824-7494 as soon as possible to explore the possible range of accommodations. We encourage all students having difficulty, whether or not due to a disability, to consult privately with the instructor at any time.

In-class writing sample: The first in-class writing sample is scheduled for Wednesday, June 27; if you don't pass the first sample, you will have another chance on Friday, June 29. The topic for each sample will be something designed to be easy to write about, so you can concentrate on your writing rather than the underlying ideas. In hour-plus class period, we will ask you to write roughly 300 words (for comparison, this page contains nearly 600 words); this should give you plenty of time to revise and rewrite your passage. To pass, your writing must have essentially perfect mechanics, grammar, and usage, and it must be reasonably clear and well organized. You may bring a dictionary or any other reference works. Being able to produce clear and correct writing is a requirement for completing lower division writing, so we expect everyone in the class to be able to demonstrate this ability.

Computer access: Students in ICS 139W have access to the ICS open labs. These machines run Windows and the Microsoft Office suite of software, including Word and PowerPoint. For this course you may use any system to which you legitimately have access; we will require that you learn and use PowerPoint (or Apple's Keynote or an open-source equivalent) for part of one assignment.

Assignment requirements: The separate sheet titled "Writing Assignment Requirements" contains important advice that can affect your grade. Read it now and check it again every time you start a new assignment. There are also mechanical details for submitting assignments; each major assignment is submitted in two ways: on paper (including all the previously submitted, marked versions) and electronically via checkmate.ics.uci.edu). Especially in a condensed summer session, it's important that every assignment be precisely where it's supposed to be at the time it's supposed to be there.

What you must do right now to get started in ICS 139W:
— If you do not have a UCInet ID (an account on the EA system for Email), get one. See
http://www.oac.uci.edu/computing/activate.html.
— If you prefer to read your electronic mail on an account other than your UCInet account, redirect your mail at
http://www.nacs.uci.edu/email/forward.html.
— Give a snapshot of yourself (with your name written on the back) to your TA. This will help us learn your names quickly. (This is not just for fun—it's a course requirement.) Also log on to eee.uci.edu, choose Surveys, and complete the ICS 139W Questionnaire (by 5:00 on Wednesday, June 27)
— On the Web, go to
checkmate.ics.uci.edu, log in with your UCInet ID, choose "Course Listing" for "Summer 1 2007," click "Go" next to ICS 139W, and then click "List me for this course." You'll submit some of your work electronically; this step is necessary to set that up.
— If you aren't yet officially enrolled in the course, check the course Email archive regularly (see above) so you can keep up with official announcements (which may include announcements about enrollment).

Good advice and helpful hints:

Check your electronic mail regularly; this is an official channel for course announcements.

Attendance in class is important (and essential on the days marked with a bullet (•) in the outline below). Class participation of various kinds is rewarded at 20% of the course grade.

Always keep your own copy of each assignment, both electronically and on paper; if an assignment should get lost in the shuffle (or if a file server in the lab should crash, which has happened in the past), we'll expect you to be able to supply a replacement easily.

If you find yourself having trouble or getting behind, speak with a TA or the instructor. But never take the shortcut of copying someone else's work and turning it in; the consequences can be far worse than just a low score on one assignment. The ICS department takes academic honesty very seriously; for a more complete discussion, see the ICS academic honesty policy: http://www.ics.uci.edu/ugrad/policies/index.php#03.

The best advice we can give you is to read all the materials with care and pay close attention to what they specify. Even if a natural language like English is not quite as precise as a formal language like Java, precise expression in English is precisely what this course is about and we have tried to reflect that in our course materials. The time it takes to read each assignment twice will be time well spent.


Approximate course outline:

Week

Date
Topic
Item(s) Due [see notes below]

1.

25 June
Introduction to the course


26 June (section)
Consultation on "Changing System" topics and "Writing Instructions"
 


27 June

Oral presentation techniques
• In-class writing sample I

"Changing System" Email to Denh Sy
(
dsy@uci.edu)


28 June (section)
Consultation hour

 

  29 June • Using other people's writing 
• In-class writing sample II (if necessary)
"Writing Instructions" (draft, 3 copies)*

2.

2 July
• Oral synopsis of system changes 
Group editing of letter influencing policy

"Changing System" synopsis (oral)
"Influencing Policy" (draft)*
"Writing Instructions" (final)


3 July (section)
Consultation hour
 


4 July
— Holiday —
 


5 July (section)
Group editing of introductory tutorials
"Changing System" intro (draft)*
  6 July Effective typography and presentation graphics [guidelines; specimen] "Influencing Policy" (revised)

3.

9 July
• Oral tutorial introduction to system (videotaped)
"Changing System" intro (final)
"Changing System" intro (oral)


10 July (section)
Group editing of change proposals
"Changing System" proposal (draft with slides)*


11 July
Information visualization

"Changing System" proposal (revised with slides)


12 July (section)
• Review of videotapes
  13 July Résumés and cover letters  

4.

16 July
Nature and structure of language
"Influencing Policy" (final)


17 July (section)
Consultation hour
Graphics Activity (optional)


18 July
Nature and structure of language (continued)
 


19 July (section)
• Testing of PowerPoint files
  20 July Oral proposal of change to decision-makers "Changing System" proposal (oral)

5.

23 July
• Oral proposals (continued)
 


24 July (section)
Consultation hour
 


25 July
• Oral proposals (continued)
"Changing System" proposal (final)


26 July (section)
Consultation hour
 
  27 July Group editing of promotion pieces  or résumés and cover letters  "Changing System" promo or résumé/cover letter (draft)*
6. 30 July • Oral promotion of change to users
Epilogue
"Changing System" promo or résumé/cover (final) 
"Changing System" promo (oral)
  31 July (section) (Reserved)  
  1 August (Reserved)  

All assignments listed above must be submitted in two ways (on paper at the start of class and via Checkmate), as described on the previous page, with these exceptions:


David G. Kay, kay@uci.edu