All homework assignments should be completed with a partner. You are strongly encouraged to discuss readings with other students while completing paper reviews, but the written review you submit should be your own.
All homework assignments are due by midnight on the associated dates posted on the Homework page.
Please package your homeworks using the package.sh
script (included in the homework skeleton) and upload the resulting zip file to the CSE P505 19sp GradeScope page. One student from each partnered pair should submit the homework. ALWAYS include a comment at the top of the file clearly indicating both partners and use the group submission feature in gradescope to mark your partner.
You can use up to two late days for each homework. Weekend days count as late days. No submissions will be accepted after two late days.
Do not post solutions to the homeworks publicly. Do not push solution to the homeworks to public git repositories.
All paper reviews are due by midnight on the associated dates posted on the Reading page. Please submit your individual reviews on the CSE 505 19sp GradeScope page. No late submissions for paper reviews will be accepted.
Please carefully review the UW Academic Misconduct Process which provides the following policy:
Course Policy on Academic Misconduct
Engineering is a profession demanding a high level of personal honesty, integrity and responsibility. Therefore, it is essential that engineering students, in fulfillment of their academic requirements and in preparation to enter the engineering profession, shall adhere to the University of Washington’s Student Code of Conduct.
Any student in this course suspected of academic misconduct (e.g., cheating, plagiarism, or falsification) will be reported to the College of Engineering Dean’s Office and the University’s Office of Community Standards and Student conduct. (See CoE website for more detailed explanation of the academic misconduct adjudication process). Any student found to have committed academic misconduct will receive a 0-grade on impacted academic work (e.g., assignments, project, or exams).