CSci 487: Senior Project
Fall Semester 1999
General Information


Locations

The fall semester 1999 class meets in 352 Weir Hall at 4:00 p.m. on Mondays and Wednesdays.

The class is taught by Prof. Conrad Cunningham, whose office is in 312 Weir Hall. The official office hours for this class are 1:30 p.m. until 3:30 p.m. on Tuesdays and Thursdays and by appointment at other times.

Prof. Cunningham's voice telephone number is (662) 915-5358 and fax number is (662) 915-5623. His WWW home page is http://www.cs.olemiss.edu/~hcc/ and his email address is cunningham@cs.olemiss.edu (send?).

The WWW home page for this class is http://www.cs.olemiss.edu/~hcc/csci487/ and the anonymous FTP site is http://ftp.cs.olemiss.edu/pub/cunningham/csci487/ .


Course Goals

This is the capstone course for the undergraduate programs in computer science, typically taken in a student's final semester. Students must bring the knowledge, understanding, and skills they have attained in the undergraduate program to bear on a nontrivial problem in computing science and technology. They are expected to solve the problem and present their solutions in a professional manner.


Course Description from Catalog

An individual in-depth study of a current problem in computer science or a related area.


Prerequisites

Senior standing in computer science. ("Senior standing in computer science" means successful completion of all courses specifically required in the computer science curriculum that are numbered less than 400.)


Professional Conduct

As a student in CSci 487, you are expected to conduct yourself in a professional manner according to the Honor Code of the School of Engineering, the Information Technology Appropriate Use Policy, the M Book, and any other relevant policies.

"The Honor Code shall apply to all students, both undergraduate and graduate, registered in and/or seeking degrees through the School of Engineering. The Honor Code shall be understood to apply to all academic areas of the School such as examinations, quizzes, laboratory reports, themes, computer programs, homework, and other possible assignments. Only that work explicitly identified by the class 2instructor not to be under the Honor Code is excluded. The intent of the Honor Code is to recognize professional conduct and, thus, it shall be deemed a violation of the Honor Code to knowingly deceive, copy, paraphrase, or otherwise misrepresent your work in a manner inconsistent with professional conduct."


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Copyright © 1999, H. Conrad Cunningham
Last modified: Tue Aug 17 19:17:02 1999