Office: K-112
Course Description (from catalog):
In the second semester of Visual Basic, the students will learn to program with the advanced
features available in Visual Basic and will focus on thelogic involved in developing professional
programs. The features covered will include user interfaces, controls including ActiveX controls,
databases, object-oriented programming, VBScript and the Internet.
Course Objectives:
The primary objective of this course is to teach the student to program effectively in Visual Basic. At the completion of
this course, the following objectives should have been accomplished:
Texts:
Advanced Programming Using Visual Basic 6
Julia Case Bradley and Anita C. Millspaugh
Irwin/McGraw-Hill
Material to be Covered:
Requirements and Grading: The student will be expected to complete all assigned work. This is an advanced course and debugging is the responsibility of the student. Learning to effectively debug your own work is a critical programming skill. Homework assignments will be due in a week, programs will be due in two weeks. There will be approximately one assignment per week (occasionally two). Quizzes, when given, will count as a homework assignment. In addition there will be a final exam. Grading percents are:
Evaluation:Assignments, programs and exams are graded using either number grades or letter grades based on the
following (A=90-100, B=80-89, C=70-79, D=60-69, F=below 60). The student's grade for the course will use the same scale and
will be based on the percentages explained in the grading section. Plus and minus grades will be given.
Attendance:The student is allowed to cut six one hour classes.
Methodology: This course is offered as an in-class course or as a Distance Learning, Web based course.
For in-class students, it is a traditional lecture based class with supplementary information
available on the Web. Web based students will be relying on the information at the Web
site for the information being presented in class. Web based students are invited to
attend class at any time if they feel that hearing a lecture would be valuable (if an in-class version
of the course is being offered that semester). All students should read the
assigned notes, study the presentations available and avail themselves of other resources in
mastering the course material. In addition, students will
be working independently on projects designed to give them additional
computer skills and practical experience in analyzing and solving problems and debugging their work.
When appropriate, exercises and problem solving techniques are used.
This SYLLABUS is not to be construed as a CONTRACT in any way, shape, manner or form.
This SYLLABUS is a SUGGESTED course OUTLINE and will be GENERALLY followed, subject to
change according to the INSTRUCTOR'S discretion and needs. Academic FLEXIBILITY is important!
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