CS 473: Oral Presentations


For about a third of the homework assignments, groups will present their solutions orally to Jeff or one of the TAs instead of submitting a written solution set.

Which Homeworks?

After HW0 was submitted, we randomly partitioned the students into three clusters: You can look up your assigned cluster on Compass Gradebook after HW1 is released. We will ask you to tell us your group membership in advance; we will assign everyone in the same group to the same cluster. You are free to change homework groups at any time, without notifying us, but you must present the homeworks assigned to your cluster.

Pairs of students can swap clusters at any time during the semester, provided the swap allows both students to present the same number of homeworks. (For example, you cannot swap into cluster 1 during the week that HW2 is due.) To swap clusters, send email to one of the TAs with both students' names and NetIDs. If you are interested in switching clusters but don't know anyone in your desired cluster, we recommend posting to the course newsgroup.

For all homeworks after HW0, groups of up to three people can submit/present a joint solution. You can form a group with anyone you like, as long as you present the homeworks in your assigned cluster.


When and Where?

Presentation sessions will take place each Tuesday and Wednesday afternoon from 1:30 to 4:00, simultaneously in 1212 Siebel and 3304 Siebel. Please contact Jeff as soon as possible if your class schedule conflicts with all of these times.

Sign-up sheets will be posted outside 3304 Siebel Center (the “Theory Lab”) several days before each homework deadline. Each homework group must sign up for a 30-minute time slot no later than Monday evening. There are 20 time slots per week, which should be more than enough to accommodate everyone. Wednesday slots are considerably more popular; if you cannot present on Tuesday, be sure to sign up early!

Each group member that actually shows up gets the same grade for each homework problem. If you miss the time slot your group signed up for, you get a zero for that homework. If you absolutely must reschedule your presentation because of an unexpected emergency, contact one of the TAs at least 24 hours in advance.


How?

Each presentation session lasts 30 minutes, split roughly into three 10-minute chunks, one for each homework problem. Each student in the group is asked to present one problem. The TA determines which student presents which problem by rolling dice, drawing straws, or some other random process.

Each student presents as much of their solution as possible without help from their teammates; the TA determines an individual score based on the student's presentation. Then if necessary, the other group members may chime in to help; the TA then determines another group score based on the entire group's presentation. Every member of the group receives the average of the individual and group scores for each problem.

On average, each problem should take 10 minutes to present; some will take more, others less. However, the entire presentation must be finished in 30 minutes.

For groups with three members, each student presents one problem, with help from the other members if necessary. If a group has only two members, each student presents one problem, with help from their partner if necessary; both students present the third problem together. If a group has only one member, that student presents all three problems without help.

It's all a lot simpler than it sounds!


Advice on Presenting Homeworks

Oral homework scores are based not only on the completeness and correctness of the solution, but also on the clarity of presentation. Here are some suggestions for giving good homework presentations.