1. Show respect for others in the laboratory rooms
Be at your lab session in time. If
you do not show up in time your seat may be given to a group that
has asked for an extra lab session
If you are about to have a lab session, and have a pass card
for the lab room door, do not enter the lab room until the
assistants tell you to.
If you are in the lab room when another lab session is
about to begin,
leave the room when the assistants tell you to.
Before you ask a lab assistant for
help with a programming problem make sure that you have
read all necessary
instructions in the lab PM and that you
follow the software
design guidelines advocated by the course material.
If you would like
to attend an additional lab session, for which you are not
scheduled, let us know in advance
so we can tell you if it is possible. If we can accommodate
non-scheduled groups we will use a first-come-first-served
policy, with priority given to those who give advance notification.
During the lab session scheduled groups will always get highest priority
regarding access to the lab assistants and the lab equipment.
2. Refrain from cheating
We will report all cases of suspected cheating to the
Chalmers Disciplinary
Committee for further investigation. In the worst case, this can lead to the
student's exclusion from services such as lectures,
computer rooms and exams. Please help us to avoid this to happen!
Here follow the rules of cooperation between students in this
course:
Students are allowed to orally discuss general principles of the
laboratory assignment
with one another.
Students should work in project groups of size two. Once you have
cooperated on an assignment with a particular person, you must
submit your answer to that assignment together with that person,
and can not cooperate with anyone else.
Apart from your own lab partner, you are not allowed to share any
piece of code with another student, by any means. Examples of
ways which you cannot use to share code are: e-mailing code,
printing out your code and giving it on paper, stealing other
people's print-outs, faxing, dictating code over the phone,
copying files with or without permission, reading someone else's
email, reusing code from the web, etc. Remember: it is equally
wrong to give your code to another student as it is to use
another student's code.
It is possible that exceptions to these rules are granted, but only if
you talk to us as soon as the problem arises.