Information About The Second Midterm Exam
Additional details will be provided as we get closer to the exam
so you should check this page for updates.
Grades: All term grade points can be now found at the top of the
course web page
Date/location of the actual midterm exam:
Thursday March 17
during normal class time in the
regular lecture room. There won't be a lecture after the exam.
Midterm review
- It will occur in the later part of the lecture on March 15.
Exam instructions (these are from the actual exam so you should read them
beforehand)
- Duration: 75 minutes
- This is a closed book exam: No electronic devices (e.g., cell phones
must be shut off and out of sight) or computational aids (e.g., calculators,
laptops, hand held computers, slide rulers, abaci) will be allowed. ‘Simple’
calculators are obviously excluded as well.
- DO NOT OPEN the exam until you are told to do so.
- Use a pencil to answer the multiple choice questions. Make sure
that you select the best answer to each question on the computer bubble
sheets.
- Make sure that you fill in the bubbles on the multiple choice answer
sheet for all the labeled categories. (Neglecting to full in all the
information may result in your exam getting lost or not marked so it's
important not to miss anything!) Here's the info for some of the categories
that students typically miss.
Date |
March 17
2011 |
Instructor |
James Tam |
Section |
01 |
Course name |
CPSC |
Course number |
219 |
- Use a non-erasable pen to answer the written questions. Write
your answer in the space provided.
- Unless otherwise indicated you can assume that the programs and program
fragments will compile.
Material that you should study
- The lecture material: the PowerPoint slides will provide you with an
outline of the topics to be covered. However studying the information just
listed on the slides won't be sufficient to do well on the final exam. You
will also need to take notes in class and to study and understand those
notes. If you have any questions then make sure that you ask me for help and
clarification.
- The text books: they should be used as another source of material to
help you understand the material as you prepare for the exam. I won't
however directly examine you on material that is listed in the textbooks
that I didn't cover in class.
- Lab exercises and the lab handouts: I won't be directly examining you on
this material (unless it overlaps with the lecture material).
Question type (on the near final version of the exam)1
- The exam will be a combination of written and multiple choice questions.
- The written questions could require you to: (1) write program code (2)
trace program code (3) describe a concept (this type of question won't
require you to write a full essay, likely it will just require a few bullet
points or a few sentences/a paragraph.
Multiple choice questions
|
|
|
23 questions
|
23 marks
|
Written questions
|
|
|
Program writing |
6 |
|
UML |
4 |
|
Program writing |
4 |
|
Program writing |
6 |
|
Conceptual |
2 |
|
|
22 marks
|
Topics to be included and approximate breakdown by topic (on the near final
version of the exam)1
Topic |
Approximate weight |
Introduction to Java programming |
~20% |
Introduction to Object-Oriented programming |
38 |
Data structures: lists |
27 |
Advanced Java (slide 1 - 45) |
~16% |
1 Small changes may be made in the final version but this outline should at
least give you a rough idea of the breakdowns and structure.