COS 598e: Homework Guidelines
The goals of the homework are to encourage students:
- to keep up with the reading assignments,
- to think critically and creatively during reading, and
- to develop project ideas early.
The homework format is the following.
- Each student writes a short (roughly half page) "observation" of
the assigned reading.
- Hand in a hardcopy to the instructor
and turn in an on-line version using the web submission form before the class
during which the assigned reading is to be discussed.
- Each student is expected to turn in a total of 20 such
observations during the semester, each worth 1.5 points. I expect the
total number of papers to be covered to comfortably exceed 20 (24 at
least). This means that students can skip at least 4 assignments
in case of scheduling conflicts without being penalized.
I will post the observations on the web. Class participants will read
each others' posts and use them as a basis for discussion in a
subsequent class.
In terms of contents, the paper observation can be anything a
student feels like saying about the paper, as long as it is not
some sort of dry summary. This is to discourage people from lifting
boring stuff from the abstract, the introduction, or the conclusion of
the paper. Here are some possible ideas of a paper observation:
- Pointing out weaknesses of the paper;
- Asking questions;
- Speculating on how the paper can be improved;
- Designing a new experiment to augment the study;
- An interesting future direction (not mentioned by the paper);
- Comparison against a related paper;
- Really, anything at all. Basically say something clever!
Analyzing, synthesizing, applying, fixing, and extending past work is
a big part of OS research. I won't be surprised if some of these
paper observations spawn projects and, subsequently, conference
papers.
COS598e
© 1999
Randy Wang