Module 21699.1 (2011)

Syllabus page 2011/2012

06-21699
Software Workshop ICY

Level 1/C I

Manfred Kerber
Uday Reddy
Manfred Kerber (coordinator)
20+20 credits in Semester 1 and Semester 2

Links | Outline | Aims | Outcomes | Prerequisites | Teaching | Assessment | Books | Detailed Syllabus


The Module Description is a strict subset of this Syllabus Page. (The University module description has not yet been checked against the School's.)

Relevant Links

Module Web Page


Outline

The module introduces and develops object oriented design and programming skills through the Java programming language.


Aims

The aims of this module are to:

  • introduce and develop object oriented design and programming skills
  • introduce the Java programming language as an example of an object oriented programming language
  • develop software development skills through Java

Learning Outcomes

On successful completion of this module, the student should be able to: Assessed by:
1
2demonstrate understanding of the Java programming language Continuous Assessment (Lab Exercises and Class Tests)
3demonstrate understanding of and use object oriented analysis and design processes Continuous Assessment (Lab Exercises and Class Tests)
4develop large software systems from specification through design and implementation Continuous Assessment (Lab Exercises and Class Tests)
5develop and use test plans Continuous Assessment (Lab Exercises and Class Tests)
6work in groups as part of a larger project Continuous Assessment (Lab Exercises)
7produce documentation for large software systems Continuous Assessment (Lab Exercises)
8show familiarity with professional issues relevant to software engineering Continuous Assessment (Lab Exercises and Class Tests)

Restrictions, Prerequisites and Corequisites

Restrictions:

None

Prerequisites:

None

Co-requisites:

None


Teaching

Teaching Methods:

2 hrs lecture, 1 hr tutorial, 3 hrs supervised laboratory sessions per week (plus unsupervised laboratory sessions).
The module is taught through a combination of lectures, tutorial and both supervised and independent practical work. The module has a strong practical element. The lectures introduce and develop the major topics of object oriented software development. Small groups are used for tutorials through which practical work is assigned, discussed and assessed.

Contact Hours:

66


Assessment

  • Sessional: 100% continuous assessment, consisting of Lab Exercises (80%) and Class Tests (20%).
  • Supplementary (where allowed): By repeat only.
  • The class tests are an internal hurdle and must be passed in order to pass the module. There will be approximately 12 class tests.

Recommended Books

TitleAuthor(s)Publisher, Date
Computing Concepts With Java 2 EssentialsCay C. Horstmann & Cay S. Horstmann1999
Java in a Nutshell: A Desktop Quick Reference (Java Series)Flanagan D1997
Teach Yourself Java 2 in 21 Days, Second EditionLaura Lemay & Rogers Cadenhead2000

Detailed Syllabus

  1. The Java Programming Language
    • Object Orientation
    • Classes
    • Algorithms
    • Objects and variables
    • Basic Control structures
    • Exceptions
    • Threads
    • Inheritance
    • GUIs
    • Other Java packages
  2. Case Studies
  3. Exercises: A series of exercises starting with small simple problems and developing towards large group exercises integrating applets and relational databases
  4. Professional Issues, Data security, privacy

Last updated: 1 July 2009

Source file: /internal/modules/COMSCI/2011/xml/21699.xml

Links | Outline | Aims | Outcomes | Prerequisites | Teaching | Assessment | Books | Detailed Syllabus