HCDS (Fall 2017)




 * Human Centered Data Science: DATA 512 - UW Interdisciplinary Data Science Masters Program - Thursdays 5:00-9:50pm in Denny Hall 112.
 * Instructor: Jonathan T. Morgan
 * TA: Oliver Keyes
 * Course Website: We will use Canvas for announcements and turning in reading reflections, PAWS for turning in code, and Slack for Q&A and general discussion. All other course-related information will be linked on this page.
 * Course Description: Fundamental principles of data science and its human implications. Data ethics, data privacy, differential privacy, algorithmic bias, legal frameworks and intellectual property, provenance and reproducibility, data curation and preservation, user experience design and usability testing for big data, ethics of crowdwork, data communication and societal impacts of data science.

Overview and learning objectives
The format of the class will be a mix of lecture, discussion, analyzing data, in-class activities, short essay assignments, and programming exercises. Students will work in small groups. Instructors will provide guidance in completing the exercises each week.

By the end of this course, students will be able to:


 * Analyze large and complex data effectively and ethically with an understanding of human, societal, and socio-technical contexts.
 * Develop algorithms that take into account the ethical, social, and legal considerations of large-scale data analysis.
 * Discuss and evaluate ethical, social and legal trade-offs of different data analysis, testing, curation, and sharing methods

Schedule
HCDS (Fall 2017)/Schedule Course schedule (click to expand)

Assignments
HCDS (Fall 2017)/Assignments Graded assignments (click to expand)

Readings
HCDS (Fall 2017)/Readings Course reading list (click to expand)

Grading
Grades will be determined as follows:


 * 20% in-class work
 * 20% readings/reading groups
 * 60% assignments

Late assignments will not be accepted after the first week of class. In-class work and class participation cannot be made up. If you miss a class, you will receive a zero for the work done in class that day. Please do not ask the professor or TA what you missed during class; check the website or ask a classmate. Required posts to the class discussion board must be made before the due date or you will receive a zero for that work.

Final projects cannot be turned in late.

Policies
The following general policies apply to this course:


 * Respect: If there were only one policy allowed in a course syllabus, I would choose the word respect to represent our goals for a healthy and engaging educational environment. Treating each other respectfully, in the broadest sense and in all ways, is a necessary and probably sufficient condition for a successful experience together.


 * Attendance: Students are expected to attend class regularly.


 * Late Assignments: Late assignments will not be accepted. If your assignment is late, you will receive a zero score.


 * Participation: Active participation in class activities is one of the requirements of the course. You are expected to engage in group activities, class discussions, interactions with your peers, and constructive critiques as part of the course work. This will help you hone your communication and other professional skills.


 * Collaboration: Working in groups or on teams is an essential part of all data science disciplines. As part of this course, you will be asked to provide feedback of your peers' work.


 * Academic Integrity: Simply stated, academic integrity means that you are to do your own work in all of your classes, unless collaboration is part of an assignment as defined in the course. In any case, you must be responsible for citing and acknowledging outside sources of ideas in work you submit. Please be aware of the HCDE Department's and the UW's policies on this: HCDE Academic Conduct. These will be strictly enforced.


 * Assignment Quality: You are expected to produce work in all of the assignments that reflects the highest standards of professionalism. For written documents, this means proper spelling, grammar, and formatting.


 * Privacy: Students have the right for aspects of their personal life that they do not wish to share with others to remain private. Please respect that policy.


 * Accommodations: To request academic accommodations due to a disability, please contact Disabled Student Services: 448 Schmitz, 206-543-8924 (V/TTY). If you have a letter from DSS indicating that you have a disability which requires academic accommodations, please present the letter to me so you can discuss the accommodations you might need in the class.


 * Permissions: Unless you notify me otherwise, I will assume you will allow me to use samples from your work in this course in future instructional settings.


 * Disclaimer: This syllabus and all associated assignments, requirements, deadlines and procedures are subject to change.