All About Homework

All homework is due at 11:55pm on the due date, unless noted otherwise. We will grade and return these to you as quickly as possible. We’ll try for three class periods, but can’t guarantee it.

When you are asked to analyze something, or explain something, please be complete, and show your work (including any commands you give, and their output, to show how you did the problem). We need to be able to replicate it. Otherwise, even if you get the right answer, you will get ZERO (that’s 0, zip, nada, rien, nil, nothing) points. Think your answer through and do a rough draft. Students (and professionals, actually) often overlook this, but it is vital. Write clearly and cogently. If the question asks for an opinion, state your opinion clearly, justify it, and don’t ramble. Answers that start, “My opinion is yes …” and conclude with “… on the other hand it could equally well be no” won’t get much credit.

When you turn in homework, you must turn in an ASCII or a PDF version of your answers (you can use any text processor you like to generate these). Please do not submit Microsoft Word or Open Office files. We sometimes grade homework on UNIX-based or Linux systems, and it can be difficult to read those files on such a system.

When you turn in your file, please use an appropriate extension: “.pdf” for a PDF file, “.txt” for an ASCII file, and an appropriate extension for programs.

Please turn in your work electronically through Canvas. If you have any problems doing this, please let me know at once! If you need to turn in something on paper (for example, a diagram that you can’t draw using your text processing program), please hand it to me before the assignment is due, and put a note in what you submit electronically that you have done this. That way, I will remember to look for something written, rather than mark you off for that problem.

Grades

Your grades will be posted to Canvas when the homework assignment is graded. We will also post comments on why you gained, or lost, points.

Extra Credit

Extra credit is tallied separately from regular scores. It counts in your favor if you end up on a borderline between two grades at the end of the course. But not doing extra credit will never be counted against you, because grades are assigned on the basis of regular scores. You should do extra credit if you find it interesting and think that it might teach you something. Remember, though, it is not wise to skimp on the regular assignment in order to do extra credit!

Late Homework

As this is a graduate class, I expect that you can manage your own time. So if your homework is occasionally late, I’ll assume there is a good reason. (If the reason is a serious one, like a medical reason or a family emergency, I’d appreciate your letting me know.) So I won’t deduct points without warning you. If this becomes a problem for an individual or the class, I reserve the right to begin imposing penalties, so please do not abuse this!

Also, I won’t post my answers until all homework has been turned in, so it is to your classmates’ benefit, as well as your own, not to be too late.

Grade Reviews

If you feel that there is an error in grading, please come see me and I’ll look over it (and possibly talk with you about it). However, don’t dally; if you ask more than a week of when the grades were made available, I may not reassess the work.


UC Davis sigil
Matt Bishop
Office: 2209 Watershed Sciences
Phone: +1 (530) 752-8060
Email: mabishop@ucdavis.edu
ECS 235A, Computer and Information Security
Version of September 16, 2024 at 4:23PM

You can also obtain a PDF version of this.

Valid HTML 4.01 Transitional Built with BBEdit Built on a Macintosh