CSE Undergraduate Studies Committee
Minutes of Meetings (2010-'11)


Committee Members: Paolo Bucci, Eric Fosler, Steve Lai, Rick Parent, Kitty Reeves, Neelam Soundarajan (Chair), Peg Steele, Radu Teodorescu, Bruce Weide; Michael Schoenberg (CSE student), Grant Curell (CSE student), ?? (CIS student).

Spring:
  
(Meetings on Thursdays at 10:30am-11:30 am in DL 698.)
Additional; April 14; March 31;
Winter:
  
(Meetings on Tuesdays at 11:00am-12:00 noon in DL 298.)
March 1; Feb. 22; Feb. 8; Jan. 18; Jan. 4;
Autumn:
  
(Meetings on Thursdays at 10:30-11:30 am in DL 698.)
Dec. 2; Nov. 18; Nov. 4; Oct. 28; Oct. 21; Oct. 14; Oct. 7; Sept. 30;



Most Thursdays from mid-April through early June

The committee met several times during the quarter with most of the committee including the CSE student reps attending. Most of the meetings focused on the results of the Spring POCAT. Since there were three POCAT sessions, using a slightly different tests, there was a lot to talk about. Instead of detailed minutes of the meetings, the discussions are summarized in the POCAT evaluation page (id/pw required).

  1. We also discussed the results the BS-CSE exit survey. The results are available here. Results were similar to those in previous years. One particular suggestion was that it would be useful if students knew in advance how much effort (especially programming effort) each course involved. We will see if there is a way to make this information available. One issue here is that different sections of a course sometimes require varying amounts of effort because different instructors attach varying amounts of importance to implementation of particular concepts. At the same timel the capstone courses and the other courses that included substantial programming activities were well received by the students.
  2. Because of the extended discussions of POCAT, we have not had much time to talk about the preparations for the ABET evaluation.

The meetings were adjourned each time at about 11:30.

Last meeting of the quarter on 6/2 at 10:30.


04/14/'11

At the meeting: Bucci, Lai, Parent, Reeves, Sivilotti, Schoenberg, Soundarajan, Steele, Teodorescu, Weide; Wayne Heym

  1. CSE 560: Wayne Heym reported on his experiences with CSE 560, focusing on student activities related to team-work and communication skills. Here are some of the key points that were made:
  2. POCAT: The test will be held in three sessions during the week of April 18. Variations of several of the questions have been suggested by involved faculty and these different versions will be used in the three tests. We will analyze/evaluate the results in future meetings.

The meeting was adjourned at 11:30

Next meeting: 4/21/'11


03/31/'11

At the meeting: Bucci, Parent, Reeves, Sivilotti, Schoenberg, Soundarajan, Weide

  1. POCAT: Steve Lai couldn't attend the meeting but sent some comments about the 680-related question (involving the Master theorem). Performance on this question was rather poor. Steve asked the question in his final exam for the course and the performance was quite good. His suggestion was that the theorem was important but it is not reasonable to expect students to remember the details; and it was probably because they didn't remember the details that performance on this question in the POCAT was poor whereas, during the final exam for the course, they did remember the details and performance was very good. One possible solution would be to include the statement of the theorem as part of the question. If the results don't improve, then we will have to probe further. 75 students are expected to take the POCAT this quarter. This gives us an unusual opportunity, for example, to try multiple versions of questions.

    In fact, the idea

The meeting was adjourned at 11:30

Next meeting: 4/7


03/01/'11

At the meeting: Bucci, Parent, Reeves, Sivilotti, Schoenberg, Soundarajan, Steele, Supowit, Teodorescu

  1. Prerequisites for admission to the BS-CSE major: Currently, most of the other engineering programs require students to have completed Engineering 181, 183 before being admitted to their respective majors. We have not required this of BS-CSE students partly because the material in 181-183 is not directly relevant to CSE majors and parly because we have students who switch between the BS-CSE and BS-CIS programs. At the same time, BS-CSE students are advised to finish these courses in their freshman year and the vast majority of them do but a handful take it later in their program, sometimes as late as in their senior year.

    The faculty involved with Eng 181-183 have complained about such students, especially senior students, since they tend, to quote, "have an attitude". Hence the college has urged us to consider requiring that students complete these courses before being admitted to the BS-CSE major (with suitable accomodations being made for students who switch from BS-CIS to BS-CSE). Since we are very close to switching to semesters, the idea would be to do this as part of the transition (Eng 181-183 will become Eng 1181-1182) so students will be required to finish Eng 1181, 1182 before being admitted to the BS-CSE major.

    After a brief discussion, the committee recommended this for approval to the faculty. Neelam will ask for electronic approval via the faculty mailing list.

  2. Rubric for assessment of technology teams: One of the activities that we introduced, several years ago, into the capstone courses requires students to explore a new tool, technology, or process and write a three or four page paper on it. The purpose of this activity was to further develop the lifelong learning abilities of the student (as well as his or her written communication skills). However, since the item in question may be unrelated to the student's capstone project, it tends to distract from the main activity in the course. In order to address this, some courses (CSE 786, 682) have modified this activity as follows. Students are organized into "technology teams" that are orthogonal to the project teams. That is, each technology team is made up of one student from each of the project teams (in the ideal case). Each technology team is charged with researching a specific technology relevant to projects in the domain, for e.g., "texture" (in graphics) or "sound" (in games). Each technology team researches the topic carefully and makes an extended team presentation to the class presenting their findings. Each student in a project team serves as the "point person" for that project team in the particular technology (texture or sound or whichever technology the tech team that he/she was in was responsible for researching). The slides/other documents that the team prepares for its presentation becomes available as a key resource related to the particular topic, to all the project teams.

    Given the nature of this activity, it is clear that it makes a strong contribution to the lifelong learning outcome since each technology team explores a particular topic in-depth and has to be able to address questions that students (in any of the project teams) might raise during the tech-team's presentation. At the same time, it also clearly contributes to students' team-working skills as well as their communication skills. Thus it seems appropriate to develop a new rubric that can be used to assess various components of this activity. Neelam presented a candidate rubric.

    While the first three dimensions in the rubric seem reasonable, the main concern that Rick (who devleops and teaches 682 regularly) had was that the last dimension is based on a faulty assumption; i.e., that the members of a technology team will be available to all project teams for consultations. That has not been the intent of the approach and it would not work since students are already much too busy with the work on their own project teams. Roger Crawfis (who developed and teaches 786 regularly) had a similar concern (although Roger could not attend the UGSC meeting). Thus it would seem appropriate to drop this dimension from the rubric. At the same time, it would seem reasonable to introduce a new one that assesses the quality of the document produced by each technology team and its effectiveness to help project teams answer questions that they may have about the particular topic or to help them locate useful relevant resources, etc. Neelam will prepare a revised version of the rubric for use in these (and possibly the other) capstone courses.

  3. Comment on our rubrics: Paul made a general point: in almost each of our rubrics, we use four levels for each dimension in the rubric. Informally, these levels may be characterized as corresponding to "poor", "fair", "good", and "excellent" (or even "outstanding") achievement with respect to the particular skill. In other words, there is an important gap, in almost each dimension in each rubric, between level 3 and level 4 with the former corresponding to "good" and the latter corresponding to "excellent"/"outstanding". We need to expand the levels to five, with a new level that would correspond to the informal level of "very good". The general expectation/guideline would be that most students would get a score of 3 ("good") or 4 ("very good") with almost no one getting a 1 ("poor") or 5 ("excellent"/"outstanding"). We will work on revising the rubrics to implement this finer scale.

The meeting was adjourned at 12:10 pm.

Next meeting: ??


02/22/'11

At the meeting: Bucci, Lai, Parent, Reeves, Sivilotti, Soundarajan, Supowit

  1. POCAT results: We discussed the results of the Winter '11 POCAT (and compared them with the Au '10 results). The Winter '11 test included some new/revised questions. The results were rather interesting (although it should be noted that only 13 students took the test so the reliability of the results might be somewhat questionable). A detailed summary and possible actions appear at evaluation page (login required; contact Neelam).

    One overall change that was briefly considered was to move the test on-line and collect some additional information for inclusion in the summary results, information such as the identity of the instructors involved in teaching the sections of the courses that the particular students took the courses with to enable us to identify possible strengths and weaknesses in approaches used by the different instructors in their courses.

The meeting was adjourned at 12:15 pm.

Next meeting: ??


02/08/'11

At the meeting: Bucci, Lai, Parent, Reeves, Sivilotti, Schoenberg, Soundarajan, Steele, Teodorescu

  1. Undergraduate forum: The annual undergraduate forum was held on Thursday, Feb. 3. It was well-attended (about 30 students ranging from freshmen to seniors; seven faculty; two alums; two members of the advising staff; two people from the SOC lab). A report summarizing the discussion at the forum is available. We discussed some of the main points:

The meeting was adjourned at 12 noon.

Next meeting: ??


01/18/'11

At the meeting: Bucci, Lai, Parent, Reeves, Sivilotti, Schoenberg, Soundarajan, Steele, Supowit

  1. Annual forum: The annual forum (for all CSE and CSE majors/pre-majors) will be held on Thursday, Feb. 3. Several members of UGSC will attend. Peg and Neelam will talk to others about attending. The forum will be on 2/3 in DL 480 at 5:30. Pizza/pop will be served.
  2. POCAT: Our plan is to create a bank of questions for use in POCAT with at least one question for each "mastery/competence" level outcome in each required and popular elective course. Progress on this has been slow. Neelam will work with faculty to generate more questions for more courses.
  3. Updating outcomes in course syllabi: We recently revised the course outcomes terminology to use four levels of outcomes (mastery/ competence/ familiarity/ exposure) instead of the current three levels (mastery/ familiarity/ exposure) because, for many courses, "mastery" was too strong a claim for many outcomes but "familiarity" was too weak. The course syllabi have to be revised to reflect this. But, given all the activity with the conversion to semesters, we have not done this. Undergrad Studies and the Curriculum Comm. will work on this.
  4. Assessment/evaluation: We had a session on Monday, Jan. 10, where Tom Bihari, Rick Parent, and Kitty Reeves discussed results from their courses (respectively CSE 758, 682, 601) of using various rubrics for evaluating various activities. Neelam is preparing a summary. These summaries will become part of our evaluation documentation.

The meeting was adjourned at 12:00 noon.

Next meeting: ??


01/4/'11

At the meeting: Bucci, Lai, Parent, Sivilotti, Soundarajan, Steele, Supowit, Teodorescu

  1. Accreditation preparations: Neelam updated the committee on preparations for the upcoming accreditation evaluation of the BS-CSE program. The main tasks this quarter are continuing collection of materials from various courses, (some) reorganization of the assessment/evaluation information, and working on the self-study. With respect to the first item, the plan is to create an on-line archive of all the materials. (For access information, please email neelam). With respect to the second item, one important task is going to be reorganize the way that assessment data from the rubrics used in 601 and the capstone design courses are collected and presented as well as the evaluation of that data. There will be a meeting on Monday, Jan. 10, at 3:30 in DL 298 where Rick will present information from CSE 682, and Kitty will talk about CSE 601. The plan is also to get Tom Bihari to talk about CSE 758. With respect to the third item, Neelam mentioned two points: First, the CAC portion of the self-study has been considerably simplified so that it just contains a table that shows how the CAC curricular requirements are met; so the self-study will consist of the EAC portion plus the CAC-table. Second, and on the flip side, since we are switching to semesters soon after the evaluation, we will have to include fairly complete information about the planned semester program.

  2. Note added after meeting: Since Eric is on sabbatical during the Winter and Spring, Neelam requested Paul to join the committee and Paul has kindly agreed. Thanks to Paul!

The meeting was adjourned at 12 noon.

Next meeting: Jan. 11


12/2/'10

At the meeting: Fosler, Lai, Parent, Soundarajan, Teodorescu

  1. Accreditation preparations: The discussion focused on how to effectively evaluate the assessment results of the professional and societal issues outcomes (such as teamwork skills, communication skills, lifelong abilities, etc.) that students achieve by engaging in certain activities in the capstone design courses and in 601. Student performance in these activities is assessed using a number of suitable rubrics. The key questions were how to evaluate these assessment results and how to share these results among faculty so that the lessons learned can be used to effect improvements in all the courses.

    It was decided that we will organize two sessions each year, perhaps early in the fall quarter or perhaps one early in the fall and one early in the winter quarter. It was proposed that the sessions be organized on Mondays at 3:30 on a day when there isn't a faculty meeting or an outside speaker so all interested faculty will be able to attend. In a session, we will have faculty from three or four of 601 plus the capstone design courses to discuss their recent experiences with their courses. But a key point was (for UGSC, in consultation with the 601 and the capstone course faculty,) to come up with three or four specific questions that the discussions would be structured around. These questions would focus on the professional skills and societal issues outcomes and may target specific dimensions that appear in the rubrics. An example might be, "what is the most common problem that individual students seem to have in taking responsibility for assigned tasks in a team project and how can we help address this?" Having a focused discussion that is based on questions that are related to specific items that appear in the rubrics, given that the rubrics are used in all the courses, would seem to meet the goals listed in the paragraph above.

    (Additional note: A better approach may be to create a question corresponding to each dimension in each rubric; and have the instructor/ coordinator for a given course to pick the three questions most relevant to the particular course and focus on those three questions during the discussion about that course. This would seem better since the issues deemed most important may vary from course to course; and it would allow the discussions, over a period of several quarters or a couple of years, to cover all or most of the important components of the professional skills and societal issues outcomes.)

    It was decided we will try this early in the winter quarter with the first session to be on Monday, January 10th, at 3:30. Rick volunteered to talk about 682. We will identify a couple of other faculty who can talk about their respective courses (possibly courses that have been this quarter (Au '10).

  2. POCAT results: We didn't have time to discuss this. We will, instead, merge it with the discussion of the Winter POCAT results. One key point was noted: we need to get faculty to create suitable questions related to specific outcomes listed in the respective course syllabi. Neelam will contact faculty about this.

The meeting was adjourned at 11:30

Next meeting: ??


11/18/'10

At the meeting: Bucci, Fosler, Parent, Reeves, Rodriguez, Soundarajan, Steele, Supowit

  1. Enrollment management: A recent message from the dean indicated that OSU has a goal of incresing student enrollment substantially and that the College of Engineering is expected to contribute in a major way to that. This means that plans for restricting the admission of students to particular majors (such as CSE or CIS) are being strongly discouraged. At the same time, the dean's message indicated that resources will be made available to departments based on the number of credit hours that they teach. The dean also asked us (as well as other programs) to provide him such information as the number of students in the major, which courses we have enrollment problems with, etc., as well as what additional resources we need, etc.

    We discussed some of these issues. Our enrollment figures appear in the table below. So far we have been able to accomodate all students in nearly all of the courses but most courses are running near their capacity. So if enrollment keeps increasing (as expected), we will have to start closing students out of courses (both required and elective) unless we are able to hire additional faculty, GTAs etc.

       Year    Majors    Pre-majors     NFQF     Degrees granted
              CSE  CIS   CSE  CIS    CSE  CIS    CSE   CIS
       
       2001   322  214   459  406    207   ??     87   86
       2002   288  180   378  333    151   ??    107   69
       2003   280  216   295  199    106   ??    114   77
       2004   274  110   253  186     97   ??     98   41
       2005   265  113   227  177     82   ??     88   50
       2006   267  112   225  174     87   ??     82   43
       2007   246  125   261  173    102   ??     96   35
       2008   282  132   261  181    116   ??     87   52
       2009   302  149   259  157     87   ??     84   39
    
    Neelam will prepare a summary to give to Xiaodong so he can respond to the dean's request.

  2. CIS minor: The AI faculty have discussed the possibility of creating a version of the intro-AI course (5533) that would be accessible as an elective course to CIS minor students (after Foundations I). In addition, Systems I will also be accessible to the minor students; as well as Foundations II (for those who follow one of the proposed three tracks). Thus the minor program, as proposed, is viable. Conceivably, with some minor tweaking in the prerequisite, other courses will become accessible to all the minor students. In any case, since it is already viable, we will submit this program and continue working on making additional courses accessible to these students.

  3. Discrete math course: In the switch to semesters, the plan is to absorb (some of) the material in Math 366 into the Foundations I course. CSE majors will be required to take an additional discrete math course; CIS majors will be required to take either that course or a linear algebra course. Math dept. has asked us what we would like to see included in the new discrete math course. The following points were noted: We will continue the discussion at the next meeting.

    Added on 11/29: The discussion about the discrete math course continued electronically and at a brief meeting on 11/23. Based on the above and these discussions, it was decided to recommend to faculty that the new discrete math course be a combination of the portion of 366 that is not included in Foundations I and 566 and that the course be a prereq for Foundations II, in the same way that 566 is currently a prereq for 680. This would also require us to modify the BS-CIS program to require this course (rather than require either the discrete math course or the linear algebra course; if the discrete math course is required, these students can take linear algebra as a tech elective). This will be discussed at a faculty meeting on 11/30.

The meeting was adjourned at 11:30.

Next meeting: 11/23


11/04/'10

At the meeting: Bucci, Fosler, Parent, Reeves, Rodriguez, Soundarajan, Steele, Supowit, Teodorescu

  1. "GET program": Syracuse University has a program called Global Enterprise Technology (GET) that is supported by a number of industry partners and is intended to prepare students in various aspects of global enterprise technology systems. Syracuse students get between 9 and 15 (semester) credits for successfully completing the program.

    Rajiv has been interacting with them (and with JP Morgan Chase, Nationwide etc.) to see if a similar program can be set up here. This seems difficult for now given the transition to semesters. At the same time, there is interest in making the program available to current students and the industries involved would also like to have our students involved. A number of our students have also expressed strong interest in participating. Rajiv has worked out an arrangement with the Registrar's office to take care of tuition issues etc. for students who wish to participate in the program. On the OSU side, students will register for some number of hours of 693 credit with Rajiv and Rajiv will interact with the Syracuse faculty to keep track of students' progress.

    The main question for the committee was how to allow our students to get academic credit for the program and count the credits as part of their major. Since we do not have equivalent courses, transfer credit will not work. After a brief discussion, the committee agreed that given the many benefits that students will acquire by participating in the program, it would be appropriate to allow both BS-CIS and BS-CSE majors who participate in the program to count up to nine hours of 693 credits from this program toward their tech electives.

  2. POCAT results: We discussed the results of this quarter's POCAT (available here). Student performance on some of the questions was surprisingly poor. For example, the first question that is really just about how numbers are encoded in binary (although it is phrased in terms of the number of states of a finite state machine) seems quite simple and yet only 36% of the students answered it correctly. Several of the other questions also had relatively poor performance and we will try to identify the reasons. One possibility is that the wording of the questions is poor. We will continue the discussion at the next meeting.

  3. CIS Minor: There was no time to discuss this. But in the Curriculum Committee meeting that preceded the UGSC meeting, Chris Brew presented some details of a proposed "AI-lite" course that might be accessible to these students as an elective. The graphics faculty are also considering the possibility of a course similar to the current 581 that might be accessible to these students.

The meeting was adjourned at 11:30.

Next meeting: Nov. 18


10/28/'10

At the meeting: Bucci, Fosler, Parent, Reeves, Soundarajan, Steele, Supowit, Teodorescu

  1. CIS Minor: We continued discussion of the proposed Minor program and the problem of lack of elective courses that the students can take. One thing we (just) noted was that the Foundations I course lists, as prereqs, one of 1232, 1233, or Software I (and, in the case of Software I, a co-req of Software II). 1232 is the second C++ course (for non-majors), 1233 the second Java course (also for non-majors). This makes Foundations I accessible to all the minor students (and is, indeed, included as a required course in the proposal). In addition, 3241 (the database course, replacement for 670) has prereqs of Software II and Foundations I; if the first of those can be replaced by "one of 1232, or 1233, or Software II" (which seems reasonable, given that Foundations I will also be required), that course will become accessible. Similarly, 2421 (Systems I, replacement for 360+) has prereqs of Software II and Foundations I; again, if the first of those can be replaced by "one of 1232, or 1233, or Software II", that would become accessible. Foundations II is similar although it has Stats I as another prereq so it would be accessible (after changes similar to the above) for some of the minor students.

    Two other possibilities were discussed. Currently CSE 581 is accessible to minor students. No equivalent course has been proposed for semesters. Instead, 3902, the project course on designing interactive systems, is intended for students interested in the topic. But this course has a number of prereqs (Software II, Foundations II, Systems I) making it inaccessible to minor students. Rick Parent seemed to think it might be worth considering the possibility of developing a 581-like course (with an exclusion cluase with 3902). Finally, currently CSE 630 is accessible to minor students. The first AI course under semesters has Foundations II as prereq. This course may become accessible to (some) minors if the change considered above in the prereqs for Foundations II is made.

    We plan (hope?) to arrive at a conclusion at the next meeting.

  2. Preparation for accreditation evaluation: Neelam summarized the three major activities that we have to go through this year: collecting course materials from all (BS-CSE) required courses, all capstone design courses, and a number of the popular electives; preparing the self-study; make sure that the documentation of our assessment and evaluation activities is in good shape. The work on the first item is proceeding. The work on the second item will start next quarter. We need to tweak our work on the third item; we will continue this discussion next week.

The meeting was adjourned at 11:30

Next meeting: 11/4


10/21/'10

At the meeting: Baith, Bucci, Fosler, Rodriguez, Soundarajan, Steele, Teodorescu

  1. BS-CIS Minor program: We continued discussion of the proposed Minor program (with the addition of a 1-credit language course to tracks B and C), in particular the issues raised at the last meeting, i.e., the lack of CSE courses that students might be able to take as electives, especially students in tracks B and C. This seems to be a severe enough problem that unless we can solve it, it may not make much sense to even offer a minor. One possible solution would be to change the prereqs for some of the advanced courses so that they don't require SW II, Foundations I, etc. as they seem to now. The disadvantage of such an approach would be that it may have a negative impact on the major programs. We will continue the discussion at the next meeting.
  2. Accreditation preparations: Again we did not get to this. We will do so at the next meeting.

The meeting was adjourned at 11:30.

Next meeting: 10/28


10/14/'10

At the meeting: Baith, Bucci, Fosler, Parent, Reeves, Rodriguez, Soundarajan, Steele.

  1. BA-CIS program: We continued discussion of the proposed BA program and possible variations. Taking various issues into account, the following program was considered:
    BA-CIS proposal:
    
       Gen Ed (liberal arts)      36 hrs
    
       Math & sc.                 27 hrs
        (Calc. I, II; Stats;
         Phys sc; Bio sc;
         Additional math/sc)
    
       CSE core:                   20 hrs
       (SW I, II; Fnds. I; 
        Sys I; Prof. & ethics;
        Project)
    
       Related field core:         12 hrs
       (Intro-level: 3-6
        Advanced:    6-9)
    
       Program Electives:          27 hrs
       (CSE courses:  >= 13 hrs
        Related field >=  6 hrs
         +other related 
          courses)
                                -------------
                    Total:        122 hrs
    
       Limits: CSE: minimum: 33 hrs; max: 41 hrs; 
               Related field: min: 18 hrs; max: 26 hrs.
    
    The idea of requiring 13 hrs of CSE courses in the electives was to allow the inclusion of a 4-credit course (especially, a capstone design course). The "other related courses" are intended to mean courses that may not necessarily be from the related field but could be courses from other areas as long as there is a reasonable connection to the related field and/or the application of computing to the related field.

    After a brief further discussion, this proposal was approved. Neelam will send mail to faculty asking for approval.

  2. Minor program: We continued discussion of the proposed Minor program (with the addition of a 1-credit language course to tracks B and C). One concern was that a student following track B or track C might then take SW I as an elective (since the exclusions currently proposed for SW I do not disallow this). This is clearly not intended since it would be similar to a student in the quarter system taking 214 and then 221/222. We can address this either by adding the exclusions to the SW I syllabus (and adding other appropriate exclusions in other courses) or revising the Minor program proposal. The former seems preferable since the same consideration applies whether or not a student is following the Minor.

    A more serious concern had to do with the electives. According to the proposal, students are required to take 6 hours of electives but if they follow track B or C, very few courses would be available to them, given the prerequisites. We will discuss this further in the next meeting.

  3. Accreditation preparations: We didn't get to this topic.

The meeting was adjourned at 11:25 am.

Next meeting: 10/21


10/07/'10

At the meeting: Bucci, Fosler, Parent, Reeves, Rodriguez, Soundarajan, Steele, Teodorescu, Xuan.

  1. BA-CIS program: We discussed the proposed BA program. The proposed CS core, consisting of Software I & II, Foundations I, Systems I, project course, professionalism/ethics course, and additional programming language (1 cr hour) course seemed reasonable exept for the last item which, it was felt, would be better as an elective since students are already going to be working with Java, C, and assembly language in the other required courses.

    The more important concern was about the "related field". The current BA program specifies a structure for the set of courses students should take (5 hours of introductory course, 10 hours of advanced course, rest being electives). This structure seems to be valuable and it was felt that we should impose a similar structure on the semester version. Neelam will revise the proposal accordingly and we will discuss it at the next meeting.

  2. CIS Minor program: We discussed the proposed minor program. Overall the proposal seemed reasonable. One suggestion was to add, to tracks B and C, a requirement of one of the 1-cr hour programming language courses. This would make the required number of hours in each track to be 7 cr hours; and would ensure that students in each track see more than one programming language. This would also increase the total number of credit hours for the minor to 17 hours in each track, compared with, in the above proposal, 17 hours in track A and 16 in the other two tracks. The uniformity in the number of hours and the fact that this change would ensure that students in all tracks will see more than one prog. lang. seemed desirable. We will discuss this further in the next meeting.

  3. Accreditation preparations: We didn't get to this topic.

The meeting was adjourned at 11:25.

Next meeting: 10/14.


09/30/'10

At the meeting: Baith, Bucci, Lai, Parent, Reeves, Rodriguez, Soundarajan, Steele, Teodorescu.

  1. Student reps: The student representatives, Cody Baith (BS-CIS) and Alex Rodriguez (BS-CSE) introduced themselves and were welcomed to the committee.

  2. BS-CIS program: We discussed a proposal for the semester version of the BS-CIS program; page 8 summarizes the proposed program. The proposal is very similar to the proposed semester version of the BS-CSE program. One change was suggested: adding a condition to the 15 hours of tech electives to require that at least 8 of those hours be CSE courses. This would parallel a corresponding condition in the BS-CSE proposal. The committee unanimously approved the proposal, with the above condition, and recommended it to faculty for its approval.

  3. BA-CIS: We also discussed ideas for the semester version of the BA-CIS program. Ken expressed some concern that we may want to consider dropping this program altogether since its CSE portion is too weak. On the other hand, as several others noted, it serves an important role and caters to students whose primary interest is application of computing to other fields rather than working in, say, a software firm such as Google or Microsoft. Although our minor program will suit some of these students, the BA-CIS program provides a more solid background in CS topics.

    Currently the BA program includes 86 (quarter) hours in the major consisting of 25 hours of core courses (CSE 221, 222, 321, 360, 560, 601, 670); 19 hours of CSE electives; and 42 hours of additional major hours consisting of Math 152, 153, 366, Stat 245, CSE 459, related field (15 hrs), additional electives (8 hrs). In addition, 5 hours of Math 151 is included in the GEC category. This translates to about 60 semester hours. We considered the following proposal:

    The last category was not entirely clear; in particular whether it should be 18 or fewer and how many of those should be CSE courses; with 18 hours, the total in the major would be 61 hours.

    We will continue this discussion at the next meeting.

  4. Accreditation preparations: Will get to this at the next meeting.

The meeting was adjourned at 11:30.

Next meeting: Oct. 7