Computer Science 312                                                                         Syllabus for Spring 2007

Dr. Carol E. Wolf                                                                                 Office 163 William St. 215

Website: http://csis.pace.edu/~wolf/                                                      E-mail: cwolf@pace.edu

Office Hours: Tuesdays 1:00 – 3:00

Text:     Annual Editions: Computers in Society, 2006-07, Paul De Palma, editor,

            McGraw Hill/Duskin, 2007.

Group A Group B  Group C Group D Group E 

Date

Group 

Chapter 

Topic

Jan 22

 

 

Overview of course, creation of groups
Five Things We Need to Know about Technological Change

Jan 24

A

2

Whom to Protect and How

 

B

3

On the Nature of Computing

Jan 29

C

4

The Productivity Paradox

 

D

5

The Big Band Era

 

E

6

The New Gatekeepers

Jan 31

A

7

The Software Wars

 

B

8

Brain Circulation: How High-Skill Immigration Makes Everyone Better Off

Feb 5

C

9

Software

 

C

10

Letter from Silicon Valley

 

D

11

When Long Hours at a Video Game Stop Being Fun

Feb 7

D

12

The Computer Evolution

 

E

13

Making Yourself Understood

Feb 12

A

14

Back-to-School Blogging

 

A

15

Structure and Evolution of Blogspace

Feb 21

B

16

New Technologies and Our Feelings: Romance on the Internet

 

B

17

From Virtual Communities to Smart Mobs

 

C

18

Making Meaning: As Google Goes, So Goes the Nation

 

C

19

Conquered by Google: A Legendary Literature Quiz

Feb 26

D

20

The Copyright Paradox

 

D

21

You Bought It. Who Controls It?

Feb 28

E

22

Electronic Voting Systems: the Good, the Bad, and the Stupid

 

E

23

Small Vote Manipulations Can Swing Elections

Mar 5

A

24

To Size Up Colleges, Students Now Shop Online

 

A

25

Facing Down the E-Maelstrom

Mar 7

 

 

Midterm Exam

Mar 12

B

26

Point, Click…Fire

 

B

27

The Doctrine of Digital War

Mar 14

C

28

Why Spyware Poses Multiple Threats to Security

 

 

 

Library Research Document Due 

 Mar 26

C

29

Terror’s Server

 

D

30

Homeland Insecurity

Mar 28

E

31

The Virus Underground

 

 

 

Survey Document Due 

 Apr 2

A

32

The Fading Memory of the State

 

B

33

False Reporting on the Internet and the Spread of Rumors: Three Case Studies

 Apr 4

C

34

The Level of Discourse Continues to Slide

 

C

35

China’s Computer Wasteland

 Apr 9

D

36

The New Face of the Silicon Age

 

D

37

Restoring the Popularity of Computer Science

.75al>Kabul's Cyber Cafe Culture

 

B

41

Japan's Generation of Computer Refuseniks

 Apr 18

C

42

Minding Your Business

  D 43 Why Listening Will Never Be the Same
Apr 23 D 44 The Intelligent Internet

 

E

45

Sparking the Fire of Invention

Apr 25

E

46

Mind Control

Apr 30

 

 

Presentation of Group Projects

May 2

 

 

Presentation of Group Projects, Review

When a group has been assigned a chapter to report on, one member of the group should write a 1 or 2 page summary of the chapter and prepare 1 or 2 Powerpoint slides describing it. The other members of the group should find related material either in print or on the Internet pertaining to the topic in the chapter.  Each one should also prepare a 1 or 2 page written summary. The group will then make a presentation during the class time and hand in the written summaries.  If we run out of time for the entire presentation, the remainder will be presented during the next class session.  If you have any problems printing, email the summary to me, and I will print it out for you. You may also send me the PowerPoint slides and I will make sure that they can be shown on the classroom equipment.

Summaries should be double-spaced and brief. One or two pages are all right, but three pages will not be accepted. The slides should also be brief with no more than 4 or 5 bulleted items per slide. The summaries will be graded for both grammar and content. After they have been returned with corrections, the corrected versions should be copied into html and posted on a group website. These websites may be either on a server chosen by the group or on a Pace University server. For the latter, either get a website through DoIT or on matrix.csis.pace.edu.

The group project will consist of a library research paper, a survey, a statistical analysis of the survey results and a conclusion. The entire project is due at the end of the semester. It should both be presented in class and posted on the website. At the end of the semester, zip up the entire contents of the website and send them to me. I will then post them on my website. No one in the group will receive a final grade until all the material has been posted on the site.

Grades will be determined by two written exams, a midterm and a final, all the presentations during the semester and the final project. Each one of these categories will count for 25% of the grade. All written materials, including exams, should be double-spaced. If your handwriting is hard to read, please print on your exams. Grammar will count on all documents, but spelling will only be graded on papers prepared ahead of time.

Additional Resources:

Herman T. Tavani, Ethics and Technology, Chapter 2, Wiley, 2004.

MLA Citation Style, 6th ed. (2003), http://www.pace.edu/library/pages/instruct/guides/mla6.htm

I. Lee. A Research Guide for Students. http://www.aresearchguide.com/ Feb. 4, 2004.

ACM Code of Ethics, http://www.acm.org/constitution/code.html

John L. Sullivan and Richard G. Niemi, editors, Quantitative Applications in the Social Sciences, Sage Publications Inc., 1983.

http://www.cooper.com/alan/homonym_list.html

Link to Postman's Five Things We Need to Know about Technological Change

Helpful Grammar Handouts from Purdue On-Line Writing Lab


CS 312 Suggestions for Group Projects

 

1.       How computer usage differs between rich and poor schools.

 

2.       Why do so few women and minorities choose to work in IT?

 

3.       Are students doing less file sharing now that they can buy music on ITunes?

 

4.       How private is data on the Internet?  Are people buying more on-line than before?

 

5.       What are people doing about spam?  Has it decreased after the new laws?

 

6.       What do people do to protect their computers from viruses and worms?

 

7.       What are employers now looking for?  What is the effect of ‘off-shoring’?

 

8.       Who uses Internet phones, and what is their future?

 

9.       Does using a computer cause isolation or greater interaction with others?

 

10.   Is Internet dating effective, and who is doing it?

 

11.   How successful are robots?  Who uses them?

 

12.   What effect are social networking sites like MySpace and FaceBook having on relationships?  How safe is it to use them?

 

13.   Where do people get news and political information? 

 

14.   How safe is electronic voting, and did it affect the last election?

 

15.   Why are fewer students choosing IT as a major?

 

16.   How have IM, PDAs, IPods, etc. changed people’s lives?