CGS 2100 Microcomputer Applications for Buiness and Economics
COURSE SYLLABUS
Instructor: Randolph Langley
Summer C 2018

Course Description

CGS 2100, Microcomputer Applications for Business and Economics, teaches important computer and digital technology concepts and skills necessary to succeed in careers and in life. Course topics range from computer literacy basics, to today's technologies, and to the information systems on which today's businesses and organizations depend. This course is designed to provide relevant technology coverage for all degree programs.

Concepts Computer Skills
  • Exploring our Digital Planet
  • Hardware Basics: Inside the Box
  • Hardware Basics: Peripherals
  • Software Basics: The Ghost in the Machine
  • Productivity Applications
  • Graphics, Digital Media, and Multimedia
  • Database Applications and Privacy Implications
  • The Evolving Internet
  • The Basics of Networking: Making the Connection
  • Computer Security and Risks
  • Microsoft Windows File Management
  • Microsoft Office Applications, Common Features
  • Word Processing with Microsoft Word
  • Numeric Analysis with Microsoft Excel
  • MS Office Application Integration

Course Objectives

By the conclusion of this course, students who earn a passing grade will be able to:

Course Structure

Classroom: This class provides 45 hours of instructional contact. Classroom students have two weekly lecture class meetings on campus where lessons are provided and course topics are discussed.

Online: If you are in an "online" section, you will have no scheduled weekly class meetings in a classroom. However, online students are welcome to attend lectures if they choose. Online students need to be physically present on campus in Tallahassee to take exams

The instructor holds 2.5 hours per week of office hours.

Recitation Sections: There are no pre-scheduled recitation or lab meetings for this course.

All students must sign up to take their exams in on-campus exam sessions offered during the semester. All exams are held in the FSU Testing Center.

Conditions for Course Credit for CGS 2100

Students who have taken CGS 2060, Computer Fluency, are not eligible for credit in CGS 2100 and should not sign up for this class.

If both CGS 2060 and CGS 2100 are taken in the same semester, the student will receive credit for only one of the two courses.

Instructional Staff

Instructor:
Randolph Langley
Office Hours:    Tuesday from 3:30 to 5:00
   Thursday from 3:30 to 4:30
Office: MCH 103

Online Email Help Desk:
Send mail to: 2100help@cs.fsu.edu

Communicate all course questions and concerns to the email helpdesk 2100help@cs.fsu.edu, or directly to me, langley@cs.fsu.edu.

Course Materials

Required Course Textbooks:

The ISBN-13 for the course pack is 9780134608549. You may purchase this at the FSU Bookstore or directly from Pearson (we are still using the 14th edition of "Technology in Action", not the 15th.)

A personal computer is not required, but it is recommended for anyone wishing to do assignments at home. Also, you may be able to use MyFsuVlab to do these assignments.

Grading/Evaluation

Percentage Component
10% Syllabus Quiz
10% Assignment 1: Excel
10% Assignment 2: Excel
10% Assignment 3: Excel
10% Assignment 4: Excel
10% Assignment 5: Word
20% Exam 1: Text Chapters 1-7 and Appendix A
20% Exam 2 : Text Chapters 8-13
100% Total

Use the table below to calculate your letter grade based upon the number of points earned.

Lower Bound Percentage Upper Bound Percentage Grade
90 100 A
88 < 90 B+
80 < 88 B
78 < 80 C+
70 < 78 C
68 < 70 D+
60 < 68 D
0 < 60 F

Final Letter Grade: The points you earn over the duration of the semester determine your final letter grade. No additional point earning activities will be provided for students who, at the end of the semester, realize that they have fallen short of their desired grade. This is university policy. Students in any course must have exactly the same opportunities to earn points towards a final grade. Grades are final unless an error was made in grading or point calculations.

GRADING QUESTIONS

Your assignments are graded by our grading TAs. You will be assigned an administrative TA to help you with administrative matters, such as taking make-up exams and handling questions about how an assignment was graded. Please don't ask your grading TA to review your assignment's grading; instead please email your administrative TA explaining your concerns. Please be specific about your concerns and why you think the assignment needs to be regraded. The administrative TA will consider your request, make changes if needed, and then record any grade changes. If you still have concerns about a grade after your administrative TA has reviewed your request, please email email me at langley@cs.fsu.edu, and I will take a look at your assignment.

Please note that if you ask to have any part of an assignment re-graded, the entire assignment may be re-graded, and your score may go up or down.

Any request to review the grade for a particular item must be made within 7 days after the date that the given assignment/exam grade is posted, or it will not be considered. You must notify your administrative TA that you wish to make a grade inquiry via email in order to meet this deadline. All grade inquiries will then be resolved and the grade will be finalized within 7 days of the grade inquiry being initiated.

FSU COMPUTER SKILLS COMPETENCY REQUIREMENT

The successful completion of this course satisfies the FSU Computer Competency Requirement for many majors. Students must check with their academic advisor to confirm that this course will meet the requirement for their specific major. The Microsoft Office Word assignment functions as the computer competency capstone activity of this course. The following policy is a university requirement: In order to fulfill FSU's Computer Competency Requirement, the student must earn a "C-" or better in the course.

General Policies

To insure successful completion of this course, students must understand and comply with the following:

NO INCOMPLETES WILL BE GIVEN FOR THIS COURSE UNLESS THE STUDENT CAN SHOW DOCUMENTATION OF SEVERE AND UNANTICIPATED EXTENUATING CIRCUMSTANCES FOR WHY THE STUDENT WAS NOT ABLE TO COMPLETE THE WORK, AND HAS ALREADY COMPLETED NEARLY ALL OF THE COURSE WORK WITH PASSING SCORES. INCOMPLETES ARE NEVER GIVEN DUE TO POOR PERFORMANCE IN A COURSE.

Where to Work

On Your Own PC

If you have a Windows PC with the appropriate version of Office and a high speed Internet connection, you can do your class work on your own PC.

Assignments will be graded with Microsoft Office on a Windows PC, so please make sure that the files you submit work the way they are required to in Microsoft Office on a Windows PC. You must use the required version of Office. After you save your final work for an assignment, please be very careful to shutdown down all Microsoft Office products before submitting an assignment on Canvas. Viewing an uploaded assignment with the same session of Office still open can be misleading.

In Strozier, Dirac, or 302 MCH

Students who don't have a Windows PC with the correct version of MS Office can do some or all of their coursework on a PC in the Strozier, Dirac, and 302MCH computer labs which have all of the software. When working on a campus computer, students must save all their work on a portable flash drive.

All students are responsible for properly maintaining multiple, backup copies of their files and work for this course.

Microsoft Office

Students who do their work on older versions of Microsoft Office run the risk of losing points on their assignments, or even getting a zero score. Submitted homework files that are not submitted in accordance with the assignment directions will receive a zero.

The versions of Microsoft Office in the labs are Office 2016 for Windows 10.

Again, all assignments are graded using Office 2016 on Windows 10 (and not on a Mac) so all files must work correctly on that specific platform to receive full points. Generally speaking you can do most of your work on a Mac system, but be sure to verify that your files work correctly on a Windows platform before you turn them in for grading.

Students can also find all the software necessary for this class installed on computers in any of the general purpose labs on campus.

Students that opt to do their work on their own computer accept the responsibility for their computer's proper functioning.

"Computer problems" will never be accepted as an excuse for missing an assignment submission. If problems occur at home, students will need to complete their work in one of the general purpose labs on campus mentioned above. NEVER WAIT UNTIL THE LAST MINUTE TO SUBMIT AN ASSIGNMENT. "Our" Canvas services are cloud-based (and generally are found on the West Coast.) Assuming that your computer is in perfect time synchronization with random servers in the cloud is a poor assumption; synchronicity over long distances with many, many intermediaries is one of the more challenging engineering problems that we face in our Internet-connected world.

Exams (Concepts Assessment)

Administering exams to very large numbers of students each semester is no small task. We have a testing staff at the FSU Testing Center that attends to this task and several procedures and policies to help the testing procedure run as smoothly as possible. It is imperative that students follow the following procedures and policies regarding the examination process. All exams are Concepts exams.

Assignments (Skills Assessment)

Late Policy for Assignments

No late assignments are accepted.

Other Assignment Policies

Assignment Extension Policy

Extensions will only be considered in case of medical or other emergency situations. In all cases, you must substantiate any request with written proof consisting of original and verifiable documents, for example, a letter from a physician or hospital emergency room documents, or written funeral home documentation.

Extensions are never granted for reasons such as the following: the university computing sites were crowded, Canvas was slow or unavailable, you lost your file and you didn't have a backup copy, your computer stopped working, you lost the internet connection at your home, or you had other courses or job commitments that interfered with your work in this course.

For serious emergency or medical situations (hospitalization, death in the family, etc), you are strongly advised to seek assistance from the Dean of Students. Often, if you provide the appropriate documentation, the Dean of Students will send out official notice to all of your instructors at once as to your situation.

You can avoid all problems by starting work on the assignments as they are assigned and working on them incrementally.

Academic Honor Policy

The Florida State University Academic Honor Policy outlines the University's expectations for the integrity of students' academic work, the procedures for resolving alleged violations of those expectations, and the rights and responsibilities of students and faculty members throughout the process. Students are responsible for reading the Academic Honor Policy and for living up to their pledge to ". . . be honest and truthful and . . . [to] strive for personal and institutional integrity at Florida State University." (Florida State University Academic Honor Policy, found at< a href="http://fda.fsu.edu/content/download/21140/136629/AHPFinal2014.pdf">http://fda.fsu.edu/content/download/21140/136629/AHPFinal2014.pdf.)

Cheating

Always begin your assignments from your assignne file, or, if not assigned an initial file, then start from a new, blank document file. We consider it categorical cheating when a student starts an assignment from another student's assignment file, or copies a portion of another student's file. All cases of cheating in this course will be dealt with using standard university policies and processes. If another student's name appears in the document properties, it is considered prima facie evidence of cheating.

There are no innocent participants in cheating incidents. Students who give someone else their assignment, or leave their assignment work available for others to access either on a private or public computer, intentionally or accidentally, are considered accomplices to cheating should someone else use their work and submit it as their own.

Many assignments are designed in a manner that requires every student's files to contain unique and different data. If two or more students submit work with the same, or portions of the same data, and/or if file properties are the same, it is evidence that cheating has taken place. If another student's name appears in the document properties, it is assumed that cheating has taken place.

Two or more students working together on an assignment is considered cheating. An assignment submission is intended to be a measure of one student's ability.

Be warned! Special software will be used that compares every electronically submitted assignment file to all other submitted files to determine if the file was copied from another student. Sometimes cheating is not detected until after students have submitted several copied assignments. In such cases the first copied assignment is considered the first offense, the second copied assignment, the second offense, and so on.

Students caught communicating during exams will be required to leave and will forfeit that exam. The testing center will also ban any student caught cheating for the entire semester, which can have a devastating effect on a semester's grades. Also note that there are a profusion of cameras in the Testing Center, all of which are being used to record your activities in the center.

Communication

Success in the course depends heavily on students reading all course related emails and all announcements posted on the course web site. Most communication between instructors and students occurs online. Students are expected to read their FSU emails and announcements on the class site at least daily Monday through Friday. The course calendar and grade book must be checked at least once a week to stay current on what needs to be done and what has been graded. Failure to do so may result in missed opportunities and poor grades. The student is fully responsible for reading all emails, Canvas announcements and other Canvas communications in a timely manner and is also responsible for any grade-related consequences relating to not doing so.

Americans with Disabilities Act

Students with disabilities needing academic accommodation should:

(1) register with and provide documentation to the Student Disability Resource Center; and

(2) bring a letter to the instructor indicating the need for accommodation and what type. This should be done during the first week of class.

For more information about services available to FSU students with disabilities, contact:

FSU Student Disability Resource Center (SDRC)
874 Traditions Way
108 Student Services Building
Florida State University
Tallahassee, FL 32306-4167
(850) 644-9566 (voice)
(850) 644-8504 (TDD)
sdrc@admin.fsu.edu
http://www.disabilitycenter.fsu.edu/

University Attendance Policy

Excused absences include documented illness, deaths in the family and other documented crises, call to active military duty or jury duty, religious holy days, and official University activities.

These absences will be accommodated in a way that does not arbitrarily penalize students who have a valid excuse. Consideration will also be given to students whose dependent children experience serious illness.

Syllabus Modifications

Except for changes that substantially affect implementation of the grading statement, this syllabus is a guide for the course and is subject to change without advance notice.

Last Update: 2018-06-25.

See Also

The Undergraduate Bulletin