00 Intro
Big Picture
- CMPUT 275 starts with course mechanics because those mechanics control how you schedule work, how you recover from bad weeks, and how you avoid preventable mark loss.
- This lecture is administrative on the surface, but it is still worth studying because the policies shape every later decision about assignments, attendance, and communication.
- The correct way to read this deck is as a set of operating rules for the term, not as background trivia.
What You Need to Know
- Instructor and term context:
- Instructor: Rob Hackman.
- Term: Winter 2025.
- University context: University of Alberta.
- Assessment breakdown:
- Assignments are 25% total.
- Morning Problems are 10% total.
- Midterm is 30% total.
- Final is 35% total.
- There are five assignments, each worth 5%.
- Slip days:
- The course gives eight total slip days for late assignments.
- One slip day extends one assignment deadline by 24 hours.
- No more than three slip days may be used on one assignment.
- The practical maximum lateness on a single assignment is 72 hours, assuming you still have slip days left.
- Slip days are not automatic; you must email to use them.
- Excused absences:
- A qualifying excused absence can cover assignments, morning problems, or the midterm.
- Qualifying reasons include incapacitating mental or physical illness, severe domestic affliction, or another compelling reason.
- If approved, the missed assignment weight shifts to the other assignments.
- If approved, the missed morning problem weight shifts to the other morning problems.
- If approved, the missed midterm weight shifts to the final exam.
- Communication:
- Ed Discussion is the primary communication channel for the course.
- Questions should go there so the whole class can benefit from the answer.
- The forum link is distributed through email, Canvas, and the syllabus.
How to Interpret the Policy
- Slip days and excused absences are different tools.
- Slip days are a planned delay mechanism for assignments.
- Excused absences are a recovery mechanism for serious interruptions after approval.
- You should not mentally merge them into “free extensions.”
- The grading breakdown tells you where your effort should go.
- Assignments are large enough to matter.
- Morning Problems reward steady practice.
- The midterm and final together dominate the term, so the small policy details about missed work matter.
- The forum is not just a convenience.
- It reduces duplicated effort.
- It makes answers searchable later.
- It is part of how the course scales help.
Slip Days in Practice
- Tanisha’s example shows the real cost of spending slip days early.
- Three days on Assignment 1.
- One on Assignment 2.
- Two on Assignment 3.
- Two on Assignment 4.
- Result: nothing left for Assignment 5.
- Tian’s example shows the per-assignment cap.
- Saving all eight slip days does not let you spend eight on one assignment.
- The cap prevents one submission from consuming the entire reserve.
- The policy is designed to help with surprise disruptions, not to replace ordinary time management.
- A good habit is to track remaining slip days the same way you track deadlines: as a finite resource.
Excused Absences in Practice
- Approved excused absences change where the weight lands.
- Missed assignment weight moves to the remaining assignments.
- Missed morning problem weight moves to the remaining morning problems.
- Missed midterm weight moves to the final exam.
- That shift can change how you study.
- If you lose a midterm to an approved absence, the final becomes much more important.
- If you lose an assignment, the rest of the assignment category matters more.
- The policy is not just about fairness in the abstract.
- It determines which remaining work now carries more weight.
- That affects study plans, time allocation, and stress.
Worked Scenarios
- If you spend three slip days on one assignment early in the term, you still only have five left for everything else.
- If you later need four days on another assignment, the policy will not let you spend four on that single assignment.
- If you miss the midterm with an approved excused absence, the final becomes the place where that 30% weight lands.
- If you miss an assignment with an approved excused absence, the remaining assignments inherit that weight.
- If you need help with a question that is not private or personal, posting on Ed Discussion is the best default because it creates a public answer others can reuse.
Common Failure Narratives
- A student treats slip days as extra working time and spends them casually, then has no reserve when something serious happens later.
- A student assumes an excused absence and slip days are interchangeable, even though one is pre-allocated flexibility and the other is an approved policy response.
- A student waits until the last minute to ask a course question, turning a small clarification into a deadline emergency.
- A student forgets that a missed midterm shifts to the final and then underestimates how much the final matters after an approved absence.
How to Study This Lecture
- Memorize the weights and the slip-day limits, but also memorize the policy logic.
- When you see a scenario question, identify the mechanism first:
- grading weight,
- slip days,
- excused absence,
- or communication channel.
- Do not answer by vibe.
- Translate the situation into the rule.
- Then apply the rule.
- If you are unsure, ask what happens to the weight, not just whether something is “allowed.”
Exam Reasoning
- If a question asks about course policy, state the rule in direct language and avoid paraphrasing it into something weaker.
- If a question asks about a late assignment, check both the total slip-day pool and the three-day per-assignment cap.
- If a question asks about excused absences, identify the affected assessment category and where the weight moves.
- If a question asks where to ask a course question, the correct answer is Ed Discussion, not private messages or ad hoc email unless the issue is personal.
Quick Reference
- Assignments: 25%
- Morning Problems: 10%
- Midterm: 30%
- Final: 35%
- Total slip days: 8
- Maximum slip days on one assignment: 3
- Slip-day extension: 24 hours each
- Communication channel: Ed Discussion
- Excused-absence shifts: assignment to assignments, morning problem to morning problems, midterm to final
Exam Questions
- Q: A student has used seven slip days already. Can they spend two slip days on the next assignment?
A: No. They only have one slip day left in total.
- Q: What does one slip day do?
A: It extends an assignment deadline by 24 hours.
- Q: If an excused absence is approved for a missed morning problem, where does that weight go?
A: It shifts to the other morning problems.
- Q: If an excused absence is approved for a missed midterm, where does that weight go?
A: It shifts to the final exam.
- Q: Why is Ed Discussion the preferred place for most course questions?
A: It lets one answer help the whole class and leaves a searchable record of common problems.