CSCI-2324 Networking

Instructor: Todd Dole

Semester: Spring 2025

Course Information

Course Type: Online and Asynchronous
First Day of Class:January 13
Contact: todd.dole@hsutx.edu, Phone 325-670-1502, Office AH100

Coming Soon!

Office Hours

Note that since this is an online course, Mr. Dole can meet via Microsoft Teams, Zoom, or Discord if coming to office hours in person is not a possibility.
With student permission, Q&A sessions may be recorded and uploaded for other students to benefit from.

Monday and Wednesday: 2:30pm-4:30pm
Tuesday and Thursday: 9:00am-12:00pm
Other times by appointment.

Course Description

Students will obtain a comprehensive view of how computers are connected and how they achieve communication. Topics include wireless netowrks, physical connections, local area networks, and the protocols that enable the Internet. Students will also learn networking terminology and will study a variety of networking applications.

Course Outcomes:

Note that the course will target the CompTIA Network+ certification exam.

Textbook

Required Textbook:CompTIA Network+ Guide to Networks by Jill West, available on Cowboy Access
This course will heavily utilize this textbook. Students will be expected to thoroughly read all material. We will cover some of the book material in lectures, but not all. You will be responsible to know all information from the book.
We will also use Cengage's MindTap platform (available free through Cowboy Access, subscription required for students who have opted out of Cowboy Access.)

Course Topics and Schedule

Recommended Weekly Schedule (Tentative and Subject to Adjustment)

Week Date Topic Reading/Assignment
1 Week of January 13 Introduction to the Course. Introduction to Cengage Mindtap. Begin reading Chapter 1.
2 Week of January 20 Introduction to Netowrking Read Chapter 1. Complete Chapter 1 exercises.
3 Week of January 27 Infrastructure and Documentation Read Chapter 2. Complete Chapter 2 exercises.
4 Week of February 3 Addressing Read Chapter 3. Complete Chapter 3 exercises.
5 Week of February 10 Protocols Read Chapter 4. Complete Chapter 4 exercises.
6 Week of February 17 Cabling Read Chapter 5. Complete Chapter 5 exercises.
7 Week of February 24 Wireless Networking Read Chapter 6. Complete Chapter 6 exercises.
8 Week of March 3 Midterm Exam. Review and Catch Up Week. No new readings
9 Week of March 17 Network Architecture Read Chapter 7. Complete Chapter 7 exercises.
10 Week of March 24 Network Segmentation Read Chapter 8. Complete Chapter 8 exercises
11 Week of March 31 Wide Area Networking Read Chapter 9. Complete Chapter 9 exercises.
12 Week of April 7 Risk Management Read Chapter 10. Complete Chapter 10 exercises.
13 Week of April 14 Access Control Read Chapter 11.
14 Week of April 21 Access Control Cont. Complete Chapter 11 exercises. Catch Up Week.
15 Week of April 28 Performance and Recovery Read Chapter 12. Complete Chapter 12 exercises.
16 May 5-8 Final Exams

Grading Policy

Your grade in the course will be earned / calculated as follows:

A: 90-100
B: 80-89
C: 70-79
D: 60-69
F: 0-59

Exams

All exams are comprehensive. The final exam will take place at the scheduled time during finals week. Exams will never be collaborative in nature, so receiving any form of assistance from anyone other than the instructor is a violation of the academic integrity policy. You may only use study aids during the exam if they are expressly allowed by the instructor for that particular exam.

Students with Disabilities

An individual with a disability is defined by the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) as a “person who has a physical or maaental impairment that substantially limits one or more major life activities.” Any student with a documented disability may choose to seek accommodations. Eligible students seeking accommodation should contact the Director of Undergraduate Advising and Disabilities as soon as possible in the academic term (preferably during the first two weeks of a long semester) for which they are seeking accommodations. The director will prepare letters to appropriate faculty members concerning specific, reasonable academic adjustments for the student. The student is responsible for delivering accommodation letters and conferring with faculty members. Please refer to the most recent version of the Undergraduate Catalog for the complete policy. (Carol Krueger, Director of Undergraduate Advising and Disabilities, Office: Sandefer Memorial, 1st floor Academic Advising Center, Phone: 670-5867, Email: disabilityservices@hsutx.edu)

Student Support

Peer-to-peer academic support (tutoring) is available for all undergraduate HSU students. The Academic Center for Enrichment (ACE) is open for virtual tutoring sessions via Zoom. To access instructions or make an appointment, open the ACE course on your Canvas dashboard. For additional information regarding academic support, contact the Advising Center at 325-670-1480 or tutoring@hsutx.edu.

In addition, all full or part-time students are eligible to receive free, confidential, and voluntary counseling services at HSU. Services include consultation, evaluation, counseling, and crisis support services for students facing issues impacting their overall well-being. To obtain any of these services, students may call The Office of Counseling Services at (325) 671-2272, email counseling@hsutx.edu, or begin the intake process by completing our online forms at https://www.hsutx.edu/intake.

Academic Integrity

Violations of academic integrity have been described to some degree in other sections of this syllabus. Cases of suspected academic dishonesty will be handled in accordance with university policies outlined in the Undergraduate Catalog and in the Student Handbook. The current catalog prescribes that “no student who has violated the Academic Integrity Policy will be allowed to graduate from Hardin-Simmons University with honors.” Penalties will be assigned at the discretion of the instructor and typically range from failure on the assignment to failure of the course. A general rule-of-thumb is that a first offense (if not too major) will result in a zero on the assignment and a second offense will result in an F for the course. The current catalog states that an F earned in this way cannot be replaced by retaking the course.

Use of Artificial Intelligence / Generative AI

There is an acceptable time and place to use large language models such as ChatGPT or Microsoft Copilot. These tools may be used to help you learn, to answer questions you have about the algorithms or data structures we will cover, or to give you very broad help on lab assignments. However, it is never acceptable in this course to turn in work generated by AI, except for specific assignments which will be clearly designated by the instructor. This course is foundational to a career in the world of computer science. The goal of all lab assignments is for you to learn the material and skill necessary to succeed in the field. These are skills that in many cases you may have to demonstrate from memory in job interviews. Do not cut take shortcuts by having AI do the work for you. Students deemed to have turned in work generated by AI will be in violation of the Academic Integrity provisions listed above, with the same penalties.

Computer Account Use

The instructor may occasionally use email to communicate with the class as a whole or with individuals. When contacting you for this course the instructor will use your HSU email account. You are expected to check your HSU email account at least once per day and you will be held responsible for any content distributed in this way.

Attendance

Because this is an online, asynchronous course, attendance will not be taken.

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