Table of Contents

UNIV 101-049D First Year Experience Syllabus

The Path to Worldwide Computing: Where are we now and how can we proceed?

General Course Information

Instructor:Lori Pollock, Department of Computer and Information Sciences, 436 Smith Hall, 302-831-1953, lastname at cis.udel.edu.

Peer Mentor: Meghan Snyder, me(put last name here without parentheses)@udel.edu.

Meeting Times and Place

Mondays, 11:15AM - 12:05PM, 115 Gore Hall

Course Description

We will explore the challenges to providing worldwide computing, with a focus on the benefits and challenges of equal access across borders, cultures, languages, economies, and human physical abilities. We will also examine strategies and programs towards meeting these challenges.

We will also examine and discuss issues that are vital to your future success at the University of Delaware, including providing students with the materials necessary for developing skills for navigating the University of Delaware.

Learning Objectives

At the end of this course, the students should be able to:

Schedule

Sept 1: Pizza dinner with peer mentor and faculty; getting to know each other, class goals, passports;

Sept 3: Greg Mortenson talks at 3:30 or 7pm, Mitchell Hall (YOU MUST TAKE YOUR UD ID and ARRIVE EARLY)

Sept 7: Labor Day, no class meeting

Sept 14: Three Cups of Tea discussion

Sept 21: Decisions and personal safety: Alcohol awareness

DUE: blank passports; Here is a start of some pages if you want to use these.

Sept 28: State of global access to computing in the world discussion

Oct 5: Decisions and personal safety: Safer sexuality (led by peer mentor)

Oct 12: Group Lunch at Grotto's

Oct 19: Campus explorations: sharing discoveries

DUE: passport check

Oct 26: Communication and conflict management discussion

Nov 2: Meeting your academic advisor

registration advice for spring semester; changing course registrations; unexpected grades;

Nov 9: Thinking Ahead to summer and next year

Nov 16: Around-campus team exploration game

Nov 23: End-of-Semester and Finals: Expectations and Planning

Nov 30: Scavenger Hunt Game

Dec 7: Lessons learned from first college semester

DUE: passports

Resources and Workshops to Help You

Student-identified Resources from our class

UD Academic Workshop Schedule on time management, note-taking, reading strategies, test taking, preparing for finals

Career Services Workshop Schedule

Requirements

Required Textbook

Mortenson, Greg – Three Cups of Tea, The book, by Greg Mortensen and David Oliver Relin, features a compelling personal account of how one man has worked to make a difference by building schools in the most remote regions of Afghanistan and Pakistan. Students are encouraged to read this book prior to the start of classes in the fall.

Course Requirements

As a student in this course, you are expected to complete the following required activities AND record your attendance/participation in your FYE passport:

Students may also plan an optional group fieldtrip to a nearby destination of their choice.

University Requirements

UD email: If you want to receive your UD e-mail at a non-UD mailbox (e.g., AOL, Hotmail, etc.), you must forward your UD e-mail to that mailbox and ensure that it is working so that you can receive and read official UD e-mail, including course-related materials, in a timely fashion. Instructions for forwarding are posted on the UD Network Page [www.udel.edu/network]

Assessment

You will be graded pass/fail for this course. To pass, you must complete all of the required assignments.

General Questions to be Examined in this Course

1. Equal Access to Computing

2. Benefits of Worldwide Computing beyond Individuals

3. Challenges in Worldwide Computing beyond Access

4. Who is and can make Worldwide Computing happen?