Computing and Society
Lecture Time: MW 11:00-11:50 in Scheller 100
Discussion Section Times: Each student should have registered for a discussion section time. Sections are synchronous and attendance is required every week.
Head Teaching Assistant: Stephanie Lee
Teaching Assistants (and their sections): Instructor and TA contact information can be found via the class Teams site and Canvas.
Name | Discussion Section |
---|---|
Allen Averbukh | A20: Wednesday 05:00 pm-06:55 pm A25: Friday 12:30 pm-02:25 pm |
Meghna Bhatnagar | A02: Thursday 03:30 pm-05:25 pm A24: Friday 8:25 am-10:20 am |
Conor Brownell | A04: Thursday 8:25 am-10:20 am A06: Thursday 12:30 pm-02:25 pm |
Suraj Chatrathi | A17: Wednesday 05:00 pm-06:55 pm A19: Friday 03:30 pm-05:25 pm |
Sorakrit Chonwattanagul | A13: Thursday 03:30 pm-05:25 pm |
Ashwin Dubey | A16: Friday 12:30 pm-02:25 pm |
Shreya Jayaswal | A08: Friday 03:30 pm-05:25 pm |
Thomas Lang | A03: Thursday 8:25 am-10:20 am A11: Wednesday 05:00 pm-06:55 pm |
May Le | A14: Wednesday 05:00 pm-06:55 pm |
Stephanie Lee | A21: Thursday 12:30 pm-02:25 pm |
Stacy Lee | A07: Thursday 03:30 pm-05:25 pm A15: Friday 12:30 pm-02:25 pm |
Vanessa Lin | A01: Thursday 03:30 pm-05:25 pm A22: Wednesday 05:00 pm-06:55 pm |
Zhaoran Ma | A10: Thursday 03:30 pm-05:25 pm A12: Friday 8:25 am-10:20 am |
Pranal Madria | A05: Thursday 12:30-2:25 pm |
Rohith Sudhakar | A18: Wednesday 05:00 pm-06:55 pm |
Elisa Zhang | A09: Thursday 03:30 pm-05:25 pm A23: Wednesday 05:00 pm-06:55 pm |
In this class, you will learn how to be a responsible and ethical computing professional. You’ll learn about ethics, how to construct well-reasoned arguments, and about how to apply workable ethical frameworks to difficult problems regarding computing and society. We’ll start by learning foundational ethical frameworks, and gradually apply these frameworks to navigate difficult real world scenarios in which computing affects society. By the end of the course, you won’t have all the answers to the ethical dilemmas facing society, but you should have the tools necessary to responsibly approach ethical dilemmas you may face in the workplace.
In this class, you will learn about:
A secondary objective is:
The GT Library’s Web Localizer is useful for research you need to do for this class. You may also need it to access some assigned readings.
The weekly schedule is available here.
We will use Canvas and Microsoft Teams for the class. Teams channels and Piazza will be used for Q&A. Canvas will be used for assignments, announcements, and grades. You can also find office hours for the instructor and TAs on Canvas.
Class discussion sections will be run by the TAs. Attendance is required for discussion sections. The material in this class is best understood through discussion. Therefore, sections are important. Section participation is graded. Your lowest single section grade is dropped.
Before your discussion section, you must attend or watch the lectures for that week and do the readings. Your section leader will deduct substantially from your participation grade if you are not prepared.
A reading commentary will be due most weeks, before the start of the class they are assigned for.
Each week there will be a quiz based on the material covered that week. The quizzes will be short, and the questions will usually be of a form that can be auto-graded on canvas (i.e., true/false, multiple choices, etc.). The quizzes will be time limited, and due at the end of the week.
If you miss section for a legitimate reason, you may be given a makeup assignment. The make-up assignment will typically consist of answering all the questions for discussion in writing, and one more essays that asks you to synthesize what is important. Email your TA for the make-up assignment. This includes students who added the class late, are ill, have a job interview, or whatever other reason. Make-up assignments may be handed in up to two weeks after the missed section; up to one-week later for the final section.
Please hand all assignments in on Canvas unless explicitly instructed otherwise.
Please double space your assignments.
Your lowest quiz score will be dropped.
Your two lowest reading commentary scores will be dropped.
The assignments (HW1 through HW5) and the term paper assignments (proposal and outline) are due at 5pm on the day they are due. The final paper is due at 11:59pm on the last day of class (April 26). Late assignments will be penalized at a rate of 3 pts (one grade step: A becomes A-) per day. Assignments more than one week late will not be accepted.
Over the course of the term, you have three “late days” where work may be late with no explanation needed. Please mark ‘use my late days’ on the first page of your assignment/paper if want to use your late days when you make late submissions. Use your late days wisely as different submissions have different weights. If you have used your late days on a low-value assignment like a homework, you can’t later transfer them to a different assignment.
Reading commentaries will not be accepted late, without a valid unanticipated excuse such as sickness.
All live lectures will be streamed and recorded on Teams, and made available on Teams and in Perusall. Most lectures will use pre-recorded videos (created for the class in Spring 2021) made available via Perusall. If you are sick or have been exposed to COVID and need to quarantine, you can keep up with lectures via these recordings.
If you are unable to attend your discussion section because you are quarantining due to COVID exposure, this will be considered a legitimate absence (as discussed above in Course Details). If you are unable to attend because you are sick with COVID, please get appropriate documentation and we will not count the missed discussion section.
Please do not use your laptop or cell phone during section for anything other than video conferencing (if there are remote participants), taking notes, and referring to assigned readings.
If/when you attend discussion virtually, please keep your camera ON during section. It’s easier to have a meaningful conversation when you can see everyone. If you are having bandwidth problems, you may ask your TA if it’s OK to turn the camera off.
Please use APA format for all references. APA format is described here.
If English is not your first language, you may request to not be graded on your writing for a particular individual assignment, including the term paper. This means you won’t be penalized for bad writing, but you also won’t get credit for good writing. To take advantage of this option, you must mark “ESL” (English as a Second Language) on the first page of your assignment/paper. This option is not available for group assignments. We still of course expect you to try to write in correct English, and will do our best to offer useful feedback on your writing.
This class abides by the Georgia Tech Honor Code. All assigned work is expected to be individual, except where explicitly written otherwise. You are encouraged to discuss the assignments with your classmates; however, what you hand in should be your own work.
Please be careful not to copy sentences from readings/references into your assignments verbatim. Sometimes this happens accidentally. For example, a student may copy and paste a sentence into their file of notes, and then later refer to their notes and forget that the sentence is not their own. If you copy anything into notes, make sure to write where you got it from. Other times, students who are struggling with English as a second language may copy sentences because they are struggling with the language. Do not do this. Remember that we have a lenient policy on grading for ESL students.
If copied sentences are detected and the copying appears incidental, the assignment will be penalized for 5 to 10 points per sentence. If the copying is more extensive, the student will be referred to the Office of Student Integrity.
As a member of the Georgia Tech community, I am committed to creating a learning environment in which all of my students feel safe and included. Because we are individuals with varying needs, I am reliant on your feedback to achieve this goal. To that end, I invite you to enter into dialogue with me about the things I can stop, start, and continue doing to make my classroom an environment in which every student feels valued and can engage actively in our learning community.
As college students, it can be hard to prioritize your health, especially when you are pushed to prioritize academics, work, and extracurricular activities in the middle of an ongoing pandemic, COVID-19. The instructor and Head TA are happy to talk to you privately if you need mental health related accommodations. Please also refer to the various campus resources to access timely, professional help as well as self-care tips.
Assignments and ideas on this syllabus build on those from everyone who has taught it in 2020, especially Amy Bruckman, Sauvik Das, Beki Grinter, and Munmun De Choudery.
Material for CS3001 Spring 2022 by Blair MacIntyre is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
The intent of choosing (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0) is to allow individuals and instructors at non-profit entities to use this content. This includes not-for-profit schools (K-12 and post-secondary). For-profit entities (or people creating courses for those sites) may not use this content without permission (this includes, but is not limited to, for-profit schools and universities and commercial education sites such as Corsera, Udacity, LinkedIn Learning, and other similar sites).