CSE 594 - Medical Imaging

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Policies:

Attendance:

Although attendance is not taken, I urge everyone to come to class regularly. You will be responsible for all material that has been mentioned in class. The handouts cover most of it, but the class period should be valued as an excellent forum for questions that you may have. Please ask whenever you are unclear about certain aspects of the material. Chances are that you won't be alone. I'd like to maintain a lively student-teacher interaction in the lecture.

Lab procedures and grading policy:

In this context, the term "lab" is the general name chosen for all assignments, programming or homework. Labs are handed out in class and are due at midnight on the dates listed in the course schedule. Labs will be either be handed in in class or via the SUNY-SB Blackboard facility. If you submit the lab late, you must send email to the grader as soon as you have completed the lab. It is your responsibility to check if you received a proper grade for your lab work. The grades will be posted in a timely fashion on the class web page. No email will be sent.
There is a 10% per day late penalty for every day, up to a maximum of 40%. After that, you get zero. There are no extensions given to individuals unless its an extreme case of a proven emergency. There is plenty of time to do the labs, especially if you start on them right away. If you wait, you may run out of time, and that is your responsibility. I will, however, give extensions to the class in case of general equipment failure or other, universal, uncontrollable, devastating circumstances.

Academic misconduct policy:

Don't cheat. Cheating on anything will be dealt with as academic misconduct and handled accordingly. I won't spend a lot of time trying to decide if you actually cheated. If I think cheating might have occurred, then evidence will be forwarded to the University's Academic Misconduct Committee and they will decide. If cheating has occured, an F grade will be awarded. Discussion of assignments is acceptable, but you must do your own work. Near duplicate assignments will be considered cheating unless the assignment was restrictive enough to justify such similarities in independent work. Just think of it that way: Cheating impedes learning and having fun. The labs are meant to give you an opportunity to really understand the class material. If you don't do the lab yourself, you are likely to fail the exams. Please also note that opportunity makes thieves: It is your responsibility to protect your work and to ensure that it is not turned in by anyone else. No excuses!

Disability note:

If you have a physical, psychological, medical or learning disability that may impact on your ability to carry out assigned course work, I would urge that you contact the staff in the Disabled Student Services office (DSS), Room 133 Humanities, 632-6748/TDD. DSS will review your concerns and determine, with you, what accommodations are necessary and appropriate. All information and documentation of disability is confidential.