Quarter: Autumn 2024
Instructor: Leilani Battle
Teaching assistants: Margaret Y. Li, Kianna Bolante, and Vaishnavi Vidyasagar
Class time: Once a week on Tuesdays 11:30-12:50 (80 minutes)
Class location: JHN 075
Number of credits: 2 (CR/NC)
Office hours:
Leilani: 4pm Wednesdays on Zoom (see Canvas for Details)
TAs (Margaret, Kianna, Vaishnavi): 2:30pm Fridays @ CSE1 2nd Floor Breakout
The goal of this course is to introduce undergraduate students to CSE research and give them basic skills to participate in research early on in their education. After taking this class, students will have:
An understanding of research in CSE: Students will be able to accurately describe what research in Computer Science & Engineering involves.
They can describe the general process of scientific/academic inquiry
They can describe the process of research funding, peer-review, different types of scientific publications, and citations
They can enumerate and describe different sub-fields of CSE research, the different types of research methods and processes used in them, and the different types of research contributions across these areas
They can describe the academic career progression and the day-to-day of research jobs
They can enumerate key skills, attributes, mindset, and habits (e.g., creative, curious, independent, good communicator, etcetera) that help researchers succeed
They can identify research programs/opportunities and the steps they need to take to apply
Basic research skills: Students will know what general skills are key in research and have practice with some of their subfield-specific skills.
They will have experience in finding, reading, presenting, and critically evaluating research papers
They will have experience in conducting a literature search, understanding the state-of-the-art
They will have practice using tools for managing citations, writing papers, and creating figures, slides, or posters (e.g. Overleaf)
After achieving these learning goals, students should be able to confidently decide whether they would like to pursue research and know which sub-field of CSE and what type of projects might be right for them. They should also be well positioned to apply for positions that fit their preferences.
This two credit course involves an 80 minute class time on Tuesdays. Lecture attendance is required. The class time will be broken down roughly as follows:
Information modules [5-10 minutes]: Cover one or more topic of general information through presentation and discussion questions
Skill module:
Tutorial and instructions for activity [5-10 minutes]
Individual and/or group work: [10-30 minutes]
Sharing with class and broader discussion [5-10 minutes]
Weekly assignment instructions [5 minutes]
Attributes module [5-10 minutes]: Discussion and/or activity
FAQ module [5 minutes]: Response to frequently asked questions
Lecture attendance is required for this course. Participation will be tracked using PollEverywhere and displayed on Canvas, so students can monitor their recorded attendance throughout the quarter. Students can miss up to 2 lectures without affecting their grade.
This is a CR/NC class. Students will have weekly assignments they need to complete and will submit a weekly self-evaluation (which will also serve as feedback about the course for future offerings). Instructors will provide qualitative feedback on ways to improve the artifacts that students create as part of assignments (e.g. paper summaries, presentation slides, research proposal) and will grade the assignment as either "satisfactory" (S) or "not yet" (N). Students can request a re-evaluation of their artifacts after addressing all the feedback from the instructors. Students who receive an S on at least 80% of the assignments, participate in at least 80% of the lectures, and complete all self-evaluations will receive a "CR" grade in this class.
Weekly assignments will be introduced during class time. Often, the in-class activities will involve getting started on the assignment. Most assignments are focused on practicing the skill covered in class and will involve submitting an artifact (e.g. paper summaries, presentation slides). Assignments are due the following Monday at 11:59PM.
There is no penalty for late submissions, so long as they are submitted by Friday December 6 (the last day of classes). However, the natural consequences of late submissions include not being prepared for the next lecture and hence not getting as much out of it, not getting qualitative feedback on your artifacts from the instructors at a regular pace, and having too much to catch up at the end of the quarter and not being able to finish by the hard deadline for grade submissions.
Students who have not obtained a "satisfactory" rating on at least 80% of assignments by Tuesday December 10, 2024 (must be submitted by Friday December 6) will receive an "X" (incomplete) grade. Students will have the opportunity to amend their grades by submitting work after this date, but regrading will only be done once a quarter during finals week. UPDATE 10-2: late submissions will *not* be accepted after Dec 6 (except for the final assignment, which must be submitted by the published deadline).
Please see the course calendar for an up-to-date week-by-week plan of topics.
Day-to-day announcements about this class will be sent through Ed Discussion boards. Please check your Ed settings to ensure you will receive announcements immediately. Students who have questions about the course content or logistics that might be relevant to the rest of the class are encouraged to post their questions on the Ed Discussion boards. Any other questions can be sent to cse390r at cs.washington.edu.
Students should stay home if they have any symptoms of possible illness, even if mild. We will enable students to complete all modules without having to attend class. The instructor might change a lecture to be online if a large number of students cannot attend or if she has any symptoms herself. Read more about COVID-19 safety here.
We follow the Allen School’s policy for academic integrity and misconduct.
We welcome students from all backgrounds and adhere to the Allen School’s Inclusiveness Statement. If anything related to the course makes you feel unwelcome in any way, let the instructor know.
We are eager to provide any necessary accommodations.
For disability accommodations, please see the UW resources at http://depts.washington.edu/uwdrs/current-students/accommodations/.
Religious Accommodation: Washington state law requires that UW develop a policy for accommodation of student absences or significant hardship due to reasons of faith or conscience, or for organized religious activities. The UW's policy, including more information about how to request an accommodation, is available here: Religious Accommodations Policy. Accommodations must be requested within the first two weeks of this course using the Religious Accommodations Request form.