CS 381: Introduction to the Theory of Computing
Fall 1997
- 4152 Upson, 255-8119, llee@cs.cornell.edu
- Extra copies of handouts and graded homeworks and exams not
collected in class will be available from Upson 303.
- Questions about homework, administrative details, and course
material should be mailed to cs381@cs.cornell.edu (if you mail
from your browser, don't forget to include your email
address).
- Academic
Integrity: You are expected to maintain the utmost level of
academic integrity in the course. This means that all work you
submit in CS381 must be the result of your own individual effort.
You may discuss homework problems, general proof strategies or
algorithms with other students in the course, but you may not
collaborate in the development of details or actual writing of
problem sets. You may not work from written notes developed
collaboratively. The exams must be entirely your own work.
This implies that one student should never have in her or his
possession a copy of all or part of another student's homework. It
is your own responsibility to protect your work from unauthorized
access.
Academic dishonesty has no place in a university: it wastes our
time and yours, and it is unfair to everyone else. Any violation of
this code will be penalized severely and can lead to failure in the
course.