Syllabus
CISC 3320 Operating Systems (Section MW3)
Fall 2019 (08/27/2019 – 12/20/2019)
by Professor Hui Chen, CUNY Brooklyn College
Table of Content
- Class Meetings
- Instructor
- Overview
- Learning Objectives
- Textbook
- Academic Regulations and Procedures
- Important Dates
- Attendance
- Assignments and Examinations
- Assignment Submission
- Grade Calculation
- Instructional Technologies
Class Meetings
Class Meeting: 03:40 - 04:55PM Monday and Wednesday
Classroom: 234 Ingersoll Hall Extension (234IA)
Instructor
Hui Chen, Ph.D.
Office Hours: 09:30 - 11:30AM Monday and Wednesday
Office: Room 1432N Ingersoll Hall
Phone: 718-951-5000 x2055
E-mail: chen@sci.brooklyn.cuny.edu
Overview
3 hours; 3 credits
Design and implementation of operating systems for large computers. Multiprogramming, multiprocessing, time sharing. Resource allocation and scheduling. Communications, conversational computing, computer networks. Memory protection, interrupts, segmentation, paging, and virtual memories
Prerequisite: Computer and Information Science 21 or 3130 [22]; and 3305 [27] or 3310 [27.1] or 3315 [28]. It is recommended that students be acquainted with at least two computing platforms (e.g., PC, Macintosh, UNIX workstation, IBM mainframe) before taking Computer and Information Science 3320 [25].
Learning Objectives
By the end of this course, students should be able
-
to demonstrate understanding of the functions and tasks of an operating system and the development history of current techniques;
-
to demonstrate understanding of process handling, including interrupts, short-term scheduling, CPU scheduling, processes and threads, inter-process communication, semaphores, and deadlock;
-
to demonstrate understanding of primary and secondary storage management, including memory management, multiprogramming, virtual memory, secondary storage management and scheduling;
-
to demonstrate understanding of security and protection; and
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to write a large program (with subprograms) that incorporates and requires implementation of the techniques taught in the course.
Textbook
- Silberschatz, A., Gagne, G., & Galvin, P. B. (2018). Operating system concepts. Wiley.
Academic Regulations and Procedures
All students should carefully and thoroughly read the section entitled Academic Regulations and Procedures
in the Brooklyn College
Undergraduate or Graduate Bulletin
for a complete listing of academic regulations of the College.
Academic Integrity
The faculty and administration of Brooklyn College support an environment free from cheating and plagiarism. Each student is responsible for being aware of what constitutes cheating and plagiarism and for avoiding both. The complete text of the CUNY Academic Integrity Policy and the Brooklyn College procedure for policy implementation can be found at http://www.brooklyn.cuny.edu/bc/policies . If a faculty member suspects a violation of academic integrity and, upon investigation, confirms that violation, or if the student admits the violation, the instructor shall report the violation to the College.
Student Disability Services
In order to receive disability-related academic accommodations students must register with the Center for Student Disability Services first. Students who have a documented disability or suspect they may have a disability are invited to set up an appointment with the Director of the Center for Student Disability Services at (718)951-5538. If you have already registered with the Center for Student Disability Services, please provide the instructor with the course accommodation form and discuss your specific accommodation with the instructor.
Consideration of Religious Observance
New York State Education Law (Title I, Article 5, Section 224-a) requires that the College
makes available to each student who is absent from school, because of his [or her] religious beliefs, an equivalent opportunity to make up any examination, study or work requirements which he [or she] may have missed because of such absence on any particular day or days.
If you are unable to attend classes or take examinations, the instructor is happy to accommodate you as permitted by semester schedule and other constraints there may be; however, it is recommended that you make arrangement with the instructor in advance. You may also contact Division of Student Affairs , if you have questions about accommodations for religious observance.
Important Dates
Students should pay attention to:
Important Dates
Date | Description |
---|---|
Tuesday, August 27 | First day of Fall 2019 classes |
Monday, September 2 | Last day to add a course |
Tuesday, November 5 | Last day to withdraw from a Fall 2019 course with a “W” grade |
Friday, December 13 | Reading Day / Final Examinations Begin |
Friday, December 20 | Final Examinations End / End of the Fall 2019 Semester |
For the complete College calendar, check out the Fall 2019 Academic Calender, Brooklyn College.
Attendance
Class attendance is required unless prearrangement is made with and approved by the instructor, or is permitted by Federal and State laws and regulations and the policies of of the College.
Reference to the state law regarding non-attendance because of religious beliefs is in the Undergraduate or Graduate Bulletin.
The instructor will pass and collect an attendance sheet at the beginning of each class, and students must sign the attendance sheet within the first 15 minutes of the class.
Late Attendance
Students should arrive at class on time. A late attendance is treated as missing half of the class, and is penalized as such when attendance score is computed.
Assignments and Examinations
Exercises and Quizzes
The instructor assigns exercises and quizzes regularly. The exercises are either take-home or in-class. They are individual assignment unless the instructor specifies otherwise. For each exericse, a student shall receive either an accepted or an unaccepted grade. The instructor will use the percentage of the accepted exercises to compute students' grade score.
Quizzes are online on CUNY Blackboard. All quizzes are individual assignments.
Projects
For selected major areas of study, the instructor will issue project assignments to the students. The purpose of the project is to provide students with sufficient practice and ample exploration to master the knowledge and skills pertinent to the area, and learn to collaborate in a team setting.
The instructor will place each student randomly in a team of 3-5 students.
Students' projects are graded by both the instructor and the students' peers. The students will provide a peer evaluation. The instructor will provide an evaluation on the quality of the projects. Both of the student peer evaluations and the instructor’s evaluations will be used in the student’s final grade calculation. A student’s may receive a lower grade than the project quality grade if the student makes far few contributions than her or his team members. In an extreme case, a student who does no make any contribution to the project as evidenced by the peer evaluation and Github commit logs may receive no points on a project.
Midterm and Final Examinations
The instructor shall give two exams, a Midterm Exam and a Final Exam. Refer to the course schedule for the time, the date, and the location of the Midterm and the Final Exams. Be aware that it is Brooklyn College Registration determins the time, the date, and the date of the Final Exam.
Assignment Submission
The instructor adopts the Github Classroom to manage assignments. The students submit their work to Github by commiting their work using a _Git_ client and pushing their work to their Github repositories.
The Github Classroom repository invitation links for this class will be distributed in class.
Late Submission
Late submissions are accepted, but penalized with 20% of penalty or one letter grade lower each day late. For instance, if a team submits a project one day late, the grade of the project will be lowered from A to B, B to C, and so on. This penalty scheme also implies that a student will receive 0 on a submission of 5 or more days late.
Grade Calculation
Students final score is calculated on the scale of 100 as follows,
Grading Components and Grade Calculation
Component | Percent |
---|---|
Attendance | 5% |
Exercises and Quizzes | 15% |
Projects | 30% |
Miterm Exam | 20% |
Final Exam | 30% |
Letter Grade
Your final letter grade will be given as follows:
Letter Grade Assignment
Component | Percent |
---|---|
90 - 100 | A |
80 - 89 | B |
70 - 79 | C |
60 - 69 | D |
0 - 59 | F |
Instructional Technologies
The instructor posts syllabus, course schedule, and lecture notes on the Class Website, and posts assignments, assignment grades, and advisory grades on CUNY Blackboard.