http:^^www.cs.wisc.edu^~cs838-1^project.html
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Date: Tue, 05 Nov 1996 00:31:06 GMTServer: NCSA/1.5Content-type: text/htmlLast-modified: Tue, 17 Sep 1996 15:42:22 GMTContent-length: 3533
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<title>CS838-1 Project Assignment</title>
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<h1 align=center>CS838-1: Project Assignment</h1>
<h4 align=center>(http://www.cs.wisc.edu/~cs838-1/project.html)</h4>
<h3 align=center>Mark Hill and James Larus</h3>
<h3 align=center>Fall 1996</h3>
<p>The primary activity in this course is a research project, whichshould be comparable in scope to a conference paper. It should be3-4 times the size and effort of a normal class project, asyou can devote the entire course time to it. By contrast, mostother course projects are done in the last month concurrently withlecture activities.</p> <p>The project goal is for you and your partners to explore an aspectof Java or Java implementations deeply, so that (a) you learn moreabout doing research, and (b) teach the class and your professorssomething new. You will be graded on how well your team define a problem,surveys previous work, designs and conducts experiments, and presentsyour results.See the course page for possible topics.We recommend three partners (and require at least two) to provide you withexperience in working with a team, which is valuable in researchprojects and product groups.</p><p>Your tasks:</p><ul><li><strong>Project proposals due via email to both markhill@cs and larus@csby Friday, October 4, 1996.</strong>Proposals turned in earlier will get earlier feedback.Proposals should be about one-two pages longand include:(1) a description of your topic,(2) a statement of why you think the topic is interesting or important,(3) a description of the methods you will use to evaluate your ideas, and(4) a references to at least three sources of information pertinent toyour topic.<li><strong>Midterm status meetings during the week of November 4-8, 1996.</strong>You will meet with one or both of the professors for about 15 minutesto informally present the status of your project and a weekly planfor completing it.Details for scheduling meetings will be made available later via the classmailing list.<li><strong>Project talks during week of December 9-13, 1996.</strong>We will divide up the last few lectures into 20-minute-ishconference-style talks. All group members should deliver partof the talk. The talk should present highlights of the final report,including the problem, motivation, results, conclusions, andpossible future work. Time limits will be enforced to let everyonepresent. Please, practice your talk! Have a plan for what slides toskip if you get behind. <!WA0><!WA0><!WA0><!WA0><A HREF="http://www.cs.wisc.edu/~markhill/conference-talk.html">Click here for oral presentation advice.</A>Details for scheduling talks will be made available later via the classmailing list.<li><strong>Project reports are due to in Larus's mailbox by 3:00 PMWednesday, December 18, 1996</strong>.Reports turned in before 3:00 PM Friday, December 20, 1996 will be accepted, but will be graded 1/2 letter grade lower (e.g., A goes to AB, or AB goes to B).Reports will not be accepted after 3:00 PM Friday, December 20, 1996.Reports should consist of an abstract, body and optional appendices.The abstract should summarize the contributions of the report in oneor two paragraphs. The length of the body should be the equivalentof 15-20 pages at double-spaced 10-point. Additional supporting materialof any length can be put in appendices. However, we only promise to readthe body and skim the appendices.</ul></body>
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