Teaching Assistants:
Mei Ran
(primary responsibility: grading)
Phone: 974-0508
Office: Claxton 225
Hours: 2:00-3:00 M or
make an appointment
Email:
Ran@cs.utk.edu
Michael Bailey (primary responsibility: help)
Phone: 974-0513
Office: Claxton 227
Hours: 2:30-3:30 W or
make an appointment
Email:
MBailey@cs.utk.edu
Class Meetings: 3:40-4:55 MW in Claxton 205
This page: http://www.cs.utk.edu/~mclennan/Classes/365/
"Language paradigms (procedural, functional, object-oriented, logic), language design and implementation issues and language issues related to parallelism."The purpose of the course is not to teach you to program in half a dozen languages, most of which you will never see again. Rather, the goal is that you:
As a side-effect of attaining these goals, you will have little trouble learning new languages when you need to do so.
In addition, it will be expected that you have done enough programming to have some appreciation of the problems involved in designing and implementing large software projects. Further, you will be expected to be familiar with basic data structures such as linked lists and stacks.
You will be expected to keep up with the reading according to the schedule (approximately one chapter per week). By reading the material beforehand, we will be able to devote class time to summarization, questions, expansion and discussion.
Although I wrote the book that has been chosen for this course, I have not been involved in this area for nearly fifteen years, so the course will be conducted as a collaborative inquiry, through which we will all learn. In other words, you will be expected to take an active role in the class, and will be graded accordingly.
The Office of Disability Services and the Campus Disability Monitors have asked us to include this statement in our syllabi:
Students who have a disability that require accommodation(s) should make an appointment with the Office of Disability Services (974-6087) to discuss their specific needs as well as schedule an appointment with me during my office hours.
There will be approximately six projects/homework assignments. There will be no programming projects, except perhaps one small program in the language of your choice.
Since language design and evaluation is of little value unless the results can be communicated clearly, assignments will generally take the form of well-written essays or oral presentations, which will be graded for grammar and style as well as content. (Non-native English speakers will be graded for content and organization, but not for English grammar or style.)
In addition, you will be expected to keep a journal of your programming experiences (in this and other courses), which you will hand in from time to time for evaluation.
The final exam will be approximately one-half on the materials covered since the midterm and one-half cumulative.
The Final Exam will be 10:15-12:15, Tuesday May 7, 2002
See Final Exam Information (forthcoming)
Send mail to Bruce MacLennan / MacLennan@cs.utk.edu