CMSC461 Administrivia
Prerequisites
CMSC 341 or permission of instructor.
UMBC Catalog
Database management and the different data models currently used to
structure the logical view of the database: relational, hierarchical,
and network. Implementation techniques including file organization,
query processing, concurrency control, recovery, integrity and
security.
Textbook
Grading Policy
Grades will be assigned on the basis of
accumulated points. A tentative weighting is as follows:
- Two mid-term exams 25%
- Final examination 25%
- Homework assignments and projects 50%
Incompletes
As per University policy, incomplete will be granted only under
extraordinary circumstances; students who are enrolled after the last
day to drop a class should be prepared to receive a grade of A-F.
Homeworks
There will be five or six homeworks plus a special database design
case study.
Late Policy
Homeworks will be due at the beginning of the class unless otherwise
specified. Homeworks may not be accepted after the beginning of the
next class. This will allow timely discussion of homework solutions in
the class. Homeworks are expected to be worked on
individually. Collaboration in any form will not be tolerated.
Examination Policy
Exams are closed book and fixed duration. Make-up exams will only be
given when a student is prevented from taking the exam due to
unforeseen circumstances (e.g., sickness), and formal proof will be
required to prove the prevailing circumstance.
Academic Honesty
Cheating in any form will not be tolerated. You may discuss
programming assignments with anyone. However, any help you receive
must be documented. At the beginning of your program, you must
include a comment indicating the sources you used while working on it
(excluding course staff and text), and the type of help you received
from them. If you received no help, say so. Failure to include this
comment at the top of your program will result in your program being
returned ungraded.
Newsgroup
There will be a local newsgroup named umbc.course.cs461 for
this course. We will post messages to this newsgroup and assume that
you will read them. You should also feel free to post your own
messages to this newsgroup if you feel you have something that would
be useful and appropriate to share with the rest of the class. If you
do not know how to read news, you should find out by reading the man
page for the rn command.
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