CS382:Class Notes
Revision as of 13:50, 15 January 2009 by Admin (talk | contribs) (New page: These are class notes for CS328: Discrete Modeling Development. They will be maintained by Kay and Charlie, but feel free to add parts we may have missed...)
These are class notes for CS328: Discrete Modeling Development. They will be maintained by Kay and Charlie, but feel free to add parts we may have missed.
Wednesday, January 14
About the class:
- We will be designing a new class “in silicoâ€
- new class will be offered the first time next spring
- geared towards first year students
- lots of this already developed, we’ll be selecting the best parts of which ones for this specific course at this specific college
Themes we're designing for:
- quantitative reasoning
- model development and use
- validation and verification
- Did I solve the right problem? Did I solve the problem correctly?
- estimation
- visualization
- data -> information -> knowledge
- harder to do as go further to the right
- visualization is one way to make it easier to get more from just data
- mostly the natural sciences, possibly some art
- using tools (spreadsheets, models, make your own or pre-made)
Methods we will use:
- inquiry based learning – find out how to solve a problem and document it, and describe what learned from it
- scaffolded – provide an empty framework for students to work through it in multiple ways
- metric system exclusively
- auto-magic grading?
- Good feedback is important, possibly part of this could come from a machine
Units/modules (each probably week to two weeks) might include:
- reading
- lectures/discussion notes
- lab
Potential Units/Modules:
- "Seeing Around Corners" – an article about race behavior using Agent-based models
- Lunch rooms, neighborhoods, etc.
- Possibly a unit with “sensor netsâ€
- Possible energy unit – EEAP, wind, solar
- Measuring – area, volume, count
- Ground water – wet lab, analytical, in silico
- Genomics
- Measure gravity (as between the roof of Dennis Hall and the ground)
- Something requiring lots of computational horsepower (maybe?)
- Maybe just mentioning and not an entire unit
- Maybe tied into the genomics unit or chemistry
- Chemistry, possibly forensic
Other Thoughts:
- We may find things that are really cool but that don’t fit into this particular class we’re designing. However, they may be inserted into various places in the CS curriculum – in POCO, ACS. We should capture them somewhere and Charlie will come back to them another time.