Welcome to AP Computer Science Principles




This week we are going to be working on the following:

Explore Performance Task – Begins this Week

To Think; To Develop Problem-Solving Skills; To Discover; and To Create;

Learning to Compute and Computing to Learn

Classroom Protocol:

 

This is where you will come every day to find out what we are going to do in class for that day. Every day you are to come to your Quia class web page upon arriving to class, go to your class web page, and follow the directions for today.

 

Homework Policy:

 

All assignments will be due on the deadline date given. It is the responsibility for all students to complete their assignments on time. Any assignments received late will not be accepted and a grade will not be given for that assignment.

Accessing your Class Weekly Agenda:

Each week’s agenda and assignments will be updated and posted on your Quia class web page on a weekly basis.  Previous weeks Assignments/Agendas will be provided with a link at the end of the current week’s Class Web Page in case you need to revisit due to an absence, or you’re required to make up, or catch up on your course assignments.

Homework Assignment: Daily homework assignments may be found at the end of each day’s agenda. Daily Journal Entries as seen in Daily Ticket to Leave are to be entered as part of your daily homework. All students will receive a homework grade on a weekly basis, and your journal will receive a project grade each mid-term and final semester.

 

IMPORTANT DATES:     Saturday February 2nd @ Auburn HS

 

                                      Saturday April 6th Mock Exam @ your school

Explore Performance Task:  8 hours

To Be Completed by December 22, 2017

This Week’s Agenda:

Your Explore Performance Task Begins This Week!

 

Monday Day C - 11-26-18 – Friday Day G – 11-30-18

 

Monday Day C - 11-26-18

 

NOTE: Explore Performance Task begins Tomorrow.

 

This is your final day to make any final preparations for the task. Use the resources below to help you to make your final preparations. Make sure to have a topic ready that will help you to fulfill all of the requirements of this Task, make sure you have created your Digital Portfolio account and joined my class, and make sure to download and use the college board provided template for completing your written responses.

 

 

Objectives

Students will be able to:

Direct Instruction and Guided Instruction:

1)    Preparation of your AP CSP Digital Portfolios: Click on the link below.

Student Digital Portfolio Guide – Save a copy of the Student Digital Portfolio Guide to your Google Drive

Ø  Please review the Student Digital Portfolio Guide and follow the directions for setting up your digital portfolio for your AP CSP course. Thanks.

Join Code 6JESM3

Online Explore Performance Task Resources:

AP CSP Performance Task Directions for Students - College Board Student Handout

 

 

Summarizer:

Mr. PC will review each day what each student accomplished and the focus of tomorrow.

Assessment for/of learning:

Not applicable.

Ticket to Leave:

In order to prepare you for your two AP CSP college-board performance tasks we need to get use to reflecting on our daily work and experiences. This is a skill that will prove to be useful when you go on to college, enter the workforce, and even in every aspect of your everyday life.  Every day at the end of class you should save your work, open up your journal, put down today’s date, and provide the following information.

1.   Provide at least on new thing that you learned today – Refer to today’s Objectives

2.   What did you accomplish today?

3.   Indicate any problems or obstacles you experienced

4.   How did you solve the problems or obstacles that you experienced?

Feel free to provide screen shots of your daily work in order to illustrate your day’s activities. Windows provides a Snipping Tool within its provided Accessories that may be used for this purpose.

Homework:

 

1)   Complete your ticket to leave journal entry.

2)   Make sure you have a computing innovation that you will use for your college board Explore Performance task that allows you to meet and be able to submit all requirements of the task.  Make sure data is computed by your computing innovation, that you can identify beneficial and potential harmful effects of the innovation in society, culture, or the economy, and data security and/or storage concerns can be identified.

 

Tuesday Day D - 11-27-18 – Friday Day G – 11-30-18

 

For the next 9.5 Classes, 8 hours of class time you will be working on your first AP CSP college board Performance Task. This is an independent assignment. Please plan and use your time wisely and use the Digital Portfolio online resources including the Explore Performance Task Rubric as a guide to fulfilling the Explore Performance Task Requirements.

 

More Resources for finding computing innovations:

http://www.ted.com/talks

 

www.digg.com

 

http://www.teachersdomain.org

 

http://www.pbslearningmedia.org/

 

 

Tools for building computing artifacts:

 

https://sites.google.com/view/cool-tools-for-schools/home

 

Preparation of your AP CSP Digital Portfolios: Click on the link below.

Student Digital Portfolio Guide – Save a copy of the Student Digital Portfolio Guide to your Google Drive

Ø  Please review the Student Digital Portfolio Guide and follow the directions for setting up your digital portfolio for your AP CSP course. Thanks.

Join Code 6JESM3

Online Explore Performance Task Resources:

AP CSP Performance Task Directions for Students - College Board Student Handout

 

 

Good luck and always do the best you can and most of all have fun and enjoy!

Summarizer:

Mr. PC will review each day what each student accomplished and the focus of tomorrow.

Assessment for/of learning:

Not applicable.

Ticket to Leave:

In order to prepare you for your two AP CSP college-board performance tasks we need to get use to reflecting on our daily work and experiences. This is a skill that will prove to be useful when you go on to college, enter the workforce, and even in every aspect of your everyday life.  Every day at the end of class you should save your work, open up your journal, put down today’s date, and provide the following information.

1.   Provide at least on new thing that you learned today – Refer to today’s Objectives

2.   What did you accomplish today?

3.   Indicate any problems or obstacles you experienced

4.   How did you solve the problems or obstacles that you experienced?

Feel free to provide screen shots of your daily work in order to illustrate your day’s activities. Windows provides a Snipping Tool within its provided Accessories that may be used for this purpose.

Homework: 

 

College Board Explore Performance Task:

 

 

Ø Complete your ticket to leave journal entry within your engineering notebook.

 

 

Thanks for a great week!

Mr. PC 

 

 

Preparation of your AP CSP Digital Portfolios: Click on the link below.

Student Digital Portfolio Guide – Save a copy of the Student Digital Portfolio Guide to your Google Drive

Ø  Please review the Student Digital Portfolio Guide and follow the directions for setting up your digital portfolio for your AP CSP course. Thanks.

 

 

Online Explore Performance Task Resources:

AP CSP Performance Task Directions for Students - College Board Student Handout

 

 

Explore Performance Task Rubric

More Resources for finding computing innovations:

http://www.ted.com/talks

 

www.digg.com

 

http://www.teachersdomain.org

 

http://www.pbslearningmedia.org/

 

 

Tools for building computing artifacts:

 

https://sites.google.com/view/cool-tools-for-schools/home

 

 

 

To Do: Create Digital Portfolios for Performance Tasks Submissions. Our goal is to complete our Explore Performance Task before the end of 2018.

 

 

UNIT 1 Overview: The Internet:

This unit explores the technical challenges and questions that arise from the need to represent digital information in computers and transfer it between people and computational devices. The unit then explores the structure and design of the internet and the implications of those design decisions.

In this unit students learn how computers represent all kinds of information and how the Internet allows that information to be shared with millions of people.

The first chapter explores the challenges and questions that arise when representing information in a computer or sending it from one computer to another. It begins by investigating why on-off signals, also known as binary signals, are used to represent information in a computer. It then introduces the way common information types like text and numbers are represented using these binary signals. Finally, it illustrates the importance of establishing shared communication rules, or protocols, for successfully sending and receiving information.

In the second chapter, students learn how the design of the internet allows information to be shared across billions of people and devices. Making frequent use of the Internet Simulator, they explore the problems the original designers of the internet had to solve and then students “invent” solutions. To conclude the unit, students research a modern social dilemma driven by the ubiquity of internet and the way it works.

 

Chapter 1: Representing and Transmitting Information

Big Questions

 

Enduring Understandings

·         2.1 A variety of abstractions built upon binary sequences can be used to represent all digital data.

·         3.3 There are trade-offs when representing information as digital data.

·         6.2 Characteristics of the Internet influence the systems built on it.

7.2 Computing enables innovation in nearly every field.

 

Unit 1 Vocabulary

 

Vocabulary

Unit 1: Chapter 2: Inventing the Internet

Big Questions

 

Enduring Understandings

·         2.1 A variety of abstractions built upon binary sequences can be used to represent all digital data.

·         6.1 The Internet is a network of autonomous systems.

·         6.2 Characteristics of the Internet influence the systems built on it.

·         7.3 Computing has a global affect -- both beneficial and harmful -- on people and society.

Introduction to UNIT 2: Digital Information:

This unit further explores the ways that digital information is encoded, represented and manipulated. Being able to digitally manipulate data, visualize it, and identify patterns, trends and possible meanings are important practical skills that computer scientists do every day. Understanding where data comes from, having intuitions about what could be learned or extracted from it, and being able to use computational tools to manipulate data and communicate about it are the primary skills addressed in the unit.

This unit explores the way large and complex pieces of digital information are stored in computers and the associated challenges. Through a mix of online research and interactive widgets, students learn about foundational topics like compression, image representation, and the advantages and disadvantages of different file formats. To conclude the unit, students research the history and characteristics of a real-world file format.

Chapter 1: Digital Information

 

Big Questions

 

 

 

Enduring Understandings

 

 

Vocabulary

Unit 3 - Intro to Programming

In Unit 3, students explore the fundamental topics of programming, algorithms, and abstraction as they learn to programmatically draw pictures in App Lab. An unplugged sequence at the beginning of the unit highlights the need for programming languages as well as the creativity involved in designing algorithms. Students then begin working in App Lab where they use simple commands to draw shapes and images using a virtual “turtle.” As they’re introduced to more complex commands and programming constructs, students learn to break down programming problems into manageable chunks. The unit ends with a collaborative project to design a digital scene.

Chapter 1: Intro to Programming

Big Questions

Enduring Understandings

 

Unit 3 Vocabulary

 

Vocabulary

Unit 4 - Big Data and Privacy

In this unit students explore the technical, legal, and ethical questions that arise from computers enabling the collection and analysis of enormous amounts of data. In the first half of the unit, students learn about both the technological innovations enabled by data and the privacy and security concerns that arise from collecting it. In the second half of the unit, students learn how cryptography can be used to help protect private information in the digital age.

Chapter 1: Big Data and Privacy

Big Questions

 

Enduring Understandings

 

 

Unit 4 Vocabulary

 

Vocabulary

  

 

AP CSP Syllabus

AP CSP Week 1 Agenda  

AP CSP Week 2 Agenda

AP CSP Week 3 Agenda

AP CSP Week 4 Agenda  

AP CSP Week 5 Agenda

AP CSP Week 6 Agenda  

AP CSP Week 7 Agenda

AP CSP Week 8 Agenda  

AP CSP Week 9 Agenda

AP CSP Week 10 Agenda  

AP CSP Week 11 Agenda

AP CSP Week 12 Agenda  

AP CSP Week 13 Agenda