Want to know what we’re covering this semester? It’s in the syllabus. (Okay, there’s more than the syllabus, but it’s a good place to start).

I use Specifications Grading in all of my courses, so grading in this course may seem atypical. Visit my Specifications Grading website for resources and to learn more.

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Creating With Artificial Intelligence: 
Shaping the Future

CCA 190, Spring 2025, presented by Dennis Cheatham
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Hello! Welcome to the future.

“Speaking human really well will matter more than speaking machine in this next chapter.” —John Maeda, Design in Tech Report 2023, SXSW, March 12, 2023.

Do you want to use Artificial Intelligence (AI) to create the future in personal and potentially far-reaching ways? You’re in the right place. During our time together, we’ll inspect, use, and apply various Generative AI tools representing a new era of human-computer interaction. AI technologies (shorthand for large language models, deep learning, or machine learning) are increasingly embedded in human societies and impact daily activities. Learning how and when to use AI is fundamental. By the end of our time together, you’ll complete a Miami Plan Signature Inquiry requirement in the Technology, Information, and Society Topic Area. AI technologies are already reshaping every corner of society, shaping how people interact with one another and with knowledge. Together, we’ll learn to use AI to shape and anticipate the future these technologies will make possible. I’m delighted you’re here to learn along with me.

Like many paradigm-shifting technological advances of the past, some champion AI as ushering in a new age of prosperity, while others simultaneously vilify it as a threat to humanity. AI is identifying ways to address environmental challenges (United Nations Environment Programme, 2022) and its decoding cures for diseases (Nia, N. G., Kaplanoglu, E., & Nasab, A., 2023). AI also misidentifies people of color via facial recognition, perpetuates bias (Najibi, A., 2020; Small, Z., 2023), and assists bad actors who operate phishing scams and hack peoples’ online accounts (Rogers, 2023). AI can be used for good and for ill. When using these technologies, we must anticipate the intended and unintended consequences of our actions.

This course will focus on generative AI—tools that synthesize and “create” writing, images, source code, video, and other outputs based on how these technologies are “trained.” The ethics and use of generative AI technologies are a contentious space. Some claim that generative AI will destroy creativity and jobs. Others tout these technologies will usher in a new era of innovation—augmenting human capabilities and amplifying our ability to think, reason, and innovate (Mollick, 2023). Many organizations and leaders, including UNESCO, the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, warn that we need guidelines for acceptable generative AI use to reduce harm to ourselves and those around us (UNESCO, 2023). We’ll explore and create people-driven guidelines together as we use generative AI this semester.

Let’s shape the future together, shall we?

 

Why Are We Doing This?

AI technologies are becoming essential tools in every sector of society, from weekly meal planning to curing “incurable” diseases. To future-proof your endeavors and reduce the chance of harming other living beings and our collective environment—ya gotta know how to create and anticipate the effects of generative AI use.

 
 

Official Bulletin Description

 

A hands-on approach that explores Generative AI tools and the implications of their use in immediate and long-term scopes. Learners will use current Generative AI tools to develop skills and responsible use habits through actively creating images, stories, source code, professional materials, and life hacks. Through project work, learners will integrate Causal Layered Analysis and human-centered design processes with generative AI to develop foresight abilities for ideal futures when addressing Wicked Problems impacting local and global communities.

 
 

Course Prerequisites and Requirements

 

No prerequisites. Experience in art, music, creative writing, or writing source code is optional.

 
 

What It Takes to Succeed

 

Here’s what we are trying to learn this semester—our learning objectives!

Course Learning Outcomes

After completing this course, you’ll be able to:

  • Align AI Outcomes With Relevant Parties’ Needs: Use generative AI tools to create outcomes that match relevant parties’ needs.
  • Create Detailed AI Outcomes: Create outcomes with generative AI tools with a high degree of formal and functional detail.
  • Use AI Ethically: Demonstrate ethical use of generative AI tools.
  • Anticipate AI Consequences: Analyze AI’s intended and unintended consequences at varying scopes.
  • Identify Assumptions in Wicked Problems: Identify assumptions that underlie wicked problems.

Miami Plan Pillars Outcomes

This Miami Plan Signature Inquiry course is underpinned by four pillars that inform what and how you’ll learn.

Civic-Mindedness and Social Engagement

Our most significant activity in this course is using AI to dissect complex social issues, anticipate unintended consequences, and produce possible solutions for these wicked problems. By combining design thinking with strategic planning methods, amplified by Generative AI, you’ll have the skills to address issues your community faces in the future when you leave Miami.

Critical and Integrative Thinking

Generative AI puts the power of millions of bits of data in your pocket, but it cannot reason. It does not know “good style” or how well a designed outcome matches a stakeholder’s needs. In this course, you’ll strengthen your critical thinking skills by iteratively evaluating what Generative AI produces and determining if its products are useful, useful, or desirable for the intended need.

Collaboration and Innovation

We will create together with Generative AI and each other all semester. By the end of the semester, you will develop not only skills for producing a range of outcomes with Generative AI but also an expanded skillset for imagining many possible futures it can make possible. Through group work experiences and sharing, you’ll develop the social and emotional intelligence necessary when co-creating the future with various stakeholders.

Communication and Expression

Generative AI amplifies expression by reducing technical barriers. Complex imagery, source code, and fiction that once required specialized knowledge are now accessible to a new generation of creators. This course will apply Generative AI to enhance your ability to formulate and share outcomes that express your thinking across various media, especially those you may never have tried before.

Signature Inquiry Learning Outcomes

As a Miami Plan Signature Inquiry Course, Creating With Artificial Intelligence: Shaping the Future is designed to encourage exploring new content outside your major study area. You’ll see your major or minor through new lenses in this course—through the eyes of a rapidly evolving technology colored by design creativity and innovation. This course is an adventure of discovery with a few unique features because it’s a Signature Inquiry Course, such as…

Learn By Doing

We’ll make a lot of stuff with Generative AI this semester. Like a design studio, we’ll create outcomes, share them, and then iterate and improve them. You will make things and learn technologies and methods by using them. Be prepared to discuss, share, and collaborate using the tools we learn in class. If there’s a Generative AI tool you want to try beyond our course, there’s room for that, too.

Make Transdisciplinary Discoveries

Design is a way of thinking, not an exclusive discipline. Everyone can design. You’ll learn to make new connections between your disciplinary area of study and others by integrating concepts from your major with design methodologies, Futures Studies, and Generative AI. Be prepared to sample arts, sciences, humanities, and beyond in this course.

Explore Unexpected Sources

Humans have long dreamt of a day when computers would amplify our abilities, and those projections are rapidly coming true with the rapid emergence of AI. During our time together, you’ll dig into documentaries, fiction, popular culture, personal accounts, and scientific texts to triangulate how societies perceive AI’s past and future.

Synthesize And Share What’s Next

Generative AI puts the connections between hundreds of billions of words, images, videos, and other media at your fingertips. But alone, it is useless. This semester, you’ll learn to use Generative AI to create various outputs and then compile them into a cohesive story to share what it means and why it matters.

 
 

Our Course Environment

 

My priority as your coach is to create an environment where all learners have the best conditions for growth. In this course, we’ll learn skills you’ll need in your career and beyond. In this course, you can expect.

  • A place for everyone: Wherever you come from and wherever you’re headed, you are welcome here.
  • Meaningful work: The assigned work in this course will support your development as a designer. I will only invite you to do work worth your time and effort.
  • Openness about the course: I genuinely want to know how the course is going for you—so I can improve it. Please feel free to be open about how I can better help you achieve your goals.
  • Opportunities to explore: This is where you can try new things without fear of failure. Have a fantastic idea that may not fly? Try it!
  • Authentic feedback without judgment: Most learning in this course will come from class discussions about the work. I will give feedback to help you develop knowledge, thinking, and skills. This feedback is not about you as a person—it’s only about the work to support your development as a designer.
  • Clarity: I strive to provide clear, timely instructions so you’ll know what I am inviting you to do and when it’s due.

Your success will depend on a few things:

  • Engagement: Many activities in this course depend on active participation through feedback and asking questions.
  • Exploration and persistence: The most successful ideas usually appear on the nineteenth or ninetieth try. Explore many different approaches and keep revising and refining the work.
  • Stay on top of things: Good time and task management will help you stay on the journey as we learn together this semester.
  • Patience: With yourself, with others, and with me. We are all learners on a journey. We all make missteps sometimes.

Based on my experience, you’ll succeed in the course and beyond if you can do these things.

My Commitment to People

People don’t get to choose where or under what circumstances they were born or their characteristics and makeup. But often, they are judged, labeled, and treated differently by society because of their makeup. People in some communities and cultures learn prejudices and believe that others who think, look, feel, or act differently are undesirable—that they do not belong or are even less than human. Some laws and systems we live within today exclude certain people. Racist, ageist, and sexist attitudes prevent people from being treated justly and from being given opportunities to live the lives they want to live. I am committed to supporting people, no matter their story or makeup, by giving everyone opportunities to share their uniqueness with each of us. No one is “wrong” or “outside” in our class.

I am committed to universal learning and have designed our course to be as supportive as possible. As your instructor, I am in a position of power in planning our activities and the feedback I give, including grades. By taking my class, you trust me to be fair, honest, and helpful for your growth. I am committed to using my position to help you grow as your cognitive coach. Being fair to you and creating an enriching and impartial environment weighs heavily on me. Thank you for trusting me.

Like you, I am a learner. I continue to learn my own unchallenged biases and ideals. Through experience, I am becoming more empathetic and understanding. This process is still at work in me—every day. If I make a mistake using a term, miss a disability, mispronounce a name or a pronoun that does not match your preference, or misunderstand or misrepresent a people group, please tell me—and please know that I don’t mean to harm.

Please practice respect for others’ ideas in discussions, critiques, and other feedback sessions. Be mindful of these differences—we all come from various experiences. This class is a safe space for all people and a space where we can all share our stories. You may disagree with what someone shares in our class. When this happens, please take a moment to understand where they are coming from and not judge them.

I am honored that you chose to share your life with me. I am committed to your growth and a future that is a place in which we all want to live.

If you encounter a concerning incident, visit the Miami University Office of Transformational and Inclusive Excellence reporting webpage to report an incident. Links to an external site.

 
 

How This Course is Structured

 

Course Meetings

Format Credits Meeting Place Days Times
Face-to-Face 3 Credit Hours 40 Irvin Hall Mondays and Wednesdays 2:50-4:10 p.m. Eastern 

Course Format

Face-to-Face This class is a face-to-face, studio-based course. This course’s class meetings will take place in Oxford unless otherwise indicated by the instructor. I may require you to participate in some field trips and off-site research. Discussions and design reviews will take up most of the scheduled class time. Expect to spend 2-3 hours a week per course credit hour to complete your work outside of class. The demands of studio work mean that time spent in class will be double the number of credit hours earned.

 
 

How We’ll Work Together

 

I’ll be your cognitive coach this semester—committed to being your guide on our learning journey.

How to Get in Touch With Me

Dennis Cheatham Office Hours
Associate Professor, Communication Design
ETBD Affiliate Faculty
dennis.cheatham@miamioh.edu

223 Hiestand Hall
Oxford, Ohio
dennischeatham.com Links to an external site.
Tuesdays, 1:00–4:00 p.m. Eastern (one-on-one office hours)
Sign up for an appointment Links to an external site.

If you’d like to meet at a different time, please ask, and I’ll do my best to make it work.

Please allow for a 24-hour response period for all emails. I may not reply to messages on weekends. If you have to miss a class, I may not be able to give feedback until the next class meeting or activity.

 
 

Materials We’ll Use

 

Required Texts

None

Recommended Texts

None

Required Software/Subscriptions

Heads Up: Many tools require account creation.

  • OpenAI: ChatGPT (Free)
  • Copilot (Free)
  • Google Gemini (Free)
  • Midjourney (After the trial period of 25 queries, $10 per month)
  • Grok (Free)
  • Anthropic: Claude (Free)
  • AIVA (Free, limited personal use)
  • Soundful (Free, limited personal use)
  • Otter.ai  (Free, limited personal use)
  • Runway (Free, limited personal use)
  • Fathom (Free)
  • Discord (Free)

Recommended Software/Subscriptions

Feel free to use any software to complete assignments, but I highly recommend the following. Make sure to get student pricing when available.

Required Equipment

  • Internet access
  • A computer (laptop preferred)

Recommended Equipment

  • A camera (can be on a computer, tablet, or smartphone)
  • Microphone or headset (many internal microphones do not record high-quality audio)
  • Software to record your screen, voice, and image

Totally Optional Software That Would Rock in This Course

No pressure. If ya got ‘em, you can use and explore ‘em.

  • Stable Diffusion XL Pro ($9 per month)
  • Runway Gen-2  ($15 per month)
  • Adobe Firefly (requires Creative Cloud subscription)
  • Grammarly, Specifically GrammarlyGO (various subscription plans)
  • Google Meet: Duet AI (if you can get in on the preview)
  • Jasper (various subscription plans)
  • Visual Studio Code (Free)
  • Amazon CodeWhisperer (Free with an account)
  • GitHub Copilot (various subscription plans)
 
 

Our Course Activities

 

Main Topics

This course is divided into modules.

  • Thinking and Feeling Machines: Develop an AI vocabulary and explore how films, television, and writing have envisioned artificial intelligence. AI terminology, history, concepts, hopes, dreams, and fears.
  • Brains Behaving Badly: Explore what happens when people and computers behave (and misbehave). AI jobs and losses, deep fakes, ethics, bad actors, representation, bias, AI hallucination, AI shortfalls
  • Creating with Artificial Intelligence: Use various generative AI tools to learn how they work and what they can do. Using the tools iteratively: prompts, inputs, revisions, getting what you want, and finding what you didn’t know was possible.
  • The New Everyday: Explore who humans are and could become in an era when our abilities are augmented with Generative AI tools that can spark discoveries and expand abilities, with careful attention to how Generative AI should “fit into” our daily lives and society.
  • Wicked Problems: Learn methods to dissect sociotechnical problems across the spectrum. Societal and personal challenges, design thinking, Causal Layered Analysis, activity-centered design, human-centered design, sustainable innovation, and business models, rapid prototyping with AI
  • You Are the Future: Use generative AI and human-centered design to create more preferable futures. Bringing it all together: self-selected projects, optional group projects for those pursuing an A.

The Flow of a Typical Week

Most work in this course will occur during weekdays unless we have a scheduled travel experience or field trip.

Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday

Some work due, class meetings

Let’s Talk About… Discussion

No work due

Some work due, class meetings

Let’s Talk About… Discussion Ideas Posted

Some work due, class meetings No work due No work due No work due

Weekly Activities

All in-class activities, such as lectures, discussions, and presentation slides, are linked to each week’s “This Week” Canvas pages in Modules. Want to know what we’re doing in class and how many assignments are left in the semester? Check this week’s “This Week.”

Semester Schedule

Here’s an overview of modules and activities during our semester together. Some dates may change, so refer to assignments in Canvas for up-to-the-minute information.

Week Module Weeklies Projects Activities
Wk 1
Jan 27–31
01. Thinking and Feeling Machines

Weekly: Semester Goals

Weekly: Let’s Talk About…

Wk 2
Feb 3–4
Method: Thinking and Feeling Machines
Wk 2
Feb 5–7
02. Brains Behaving Badly Weekly: Reflection
Wk 3
Feb 10–14
Method: Brains Behaving Badly
Wk 3
Feb 10–14
03. Creating with Generative AI Weekly: Let’s Talk About…
Wk 4
Feb 17–21
Weekly: Reflection Method: Using Generative AI Tools: Story
Wk 5
Feb 24–28
Weekly: Let’s Talk About… Method: Using Generative AI Tools: Professional
Wk 6
Mar 3–7
Weekly: Reflection Method: Using Generative AI Tools: Image
Wk 7
Mar 10–14
Weekly: Let’s Talk About… Method: Using Generative AI Tools: Sound, Video, or Code
Wk 8
Mar 17–21
Weekly: Reflection

Experience Booster: Generative AI Combined

Experience Booster: Using Generative AI Tools: Bonus

Wk 9
Mar 24–28
Spring Break!
Wk 10
Mar 31–Apr 4
04. Wicked Problems Weekly: Let’s Talk About…
Wk 11
Apr 7–11
Weekly: Reflection Project: Wicked Problems
Wk 12
Apr 14–18
05. You Are The Future Weekly: Let’s Talk About…
Wk 13
Apr 21–25
Weekly: Reflection Task: Final Revision Deadline
Wk 14
Apr 28–May 2
Weekly: Let’s Talk About…

Project: You Are the Future Poster

Project: You Are the Future Process

Experience Booster: Humans+ (Group Project)
Wk 15
May 5–9
Weekly: Reflection
Final
May 12–16
Task: End of Semester Deadline
 

Assignments: Choose Your Own Adventure

 

Grades will work differently in this course than you may have experienced. I use an alternative grading system to give you more control of your learning experience, to mirror how professional practice works, and to focus us all on growth instead of numerical grade values. While I must report a grade to the university at the end of the semester, there are more useful ways to get feedback than number grades. I mean, what’s the difference between an 83.4 and an 85.1, really?

In most careers, tasks such as writing a movie script, welding a joint that holds 100 kilograms, or designing a smartphone app require repetition to accomplish success. Many rounds of revisions lead to a successful product, such as the script for Everything Everywhere All at Once, a welded joint on a stadium seat in Goggin Ice Center that holds a fan who is celebrating a goal, or Google Maps. Very few people are skilled enough to complete a task on the tenth try successfully, but most need many attempts to succeed. The grading system for this course will allow us to focus on the revisions and feedback necessary to achieve success that adds up to inspiring work and discovery.

Here are a few highlights of the grading system for this course.

  • Assignments have no point values: No partial credit, averaging, or grade weighting.
  • No Late Work: Anything turned in late cannot earn completion credit.
  • Spend a Token to recover assignments: If you miss a deadine, “spend” a Token get chances to turn it in.
  • Unlimited Revisions: You’ll have chances to retry the assignment if needed, get more feedback, and continue to improve until the work is successful.
  • You’ll get specific feedback on what to “fix”: After I review your work, you’ll receive detailed feedback that will help you know what changes to make so it gets closer to successful work.
  • Choose your own adventure final grade: Do the work that matches the grade you want to earn. Want an A? You’ll do the most work. Want a C? You can do less work than those going for an A.

You’ll get to select from available assignments for the semester. The final course grade is based on how many learning tasks you select and complete in each “Assignment Bundle” by the end of the semester. See the table below for how this works.

An assignment will not count toward the semester grade unless “Success” has been achieved for all learning outcomes.

Over the semester, you’ll develop knowledge, thinking, and skills through revisions and feedback to improve and achieve new heights! I’ve provided specific guidance below on how it works, and we’ll discuss it in class when we meet. Please ask me if you have questions or are unsure of—I’m happy to help!

Assignment Bundles

This course has five types (Bundles) of assignments. The final grade I’ll report at the end of the semester will reflect how many assignments you complete in each bundle. The bundles are:

 

Projects

Significant assignments with many parts. You’ll combine all the knowledge, skills, and thinking in these projects. Project Work is the work with the most freedom in the course, where you will practice the design process from start to finish.

 

Methods

Focused assignments that help you develop abilities that combine with other skills. Think of these assignments as LEGO bricks—they require selecting the suitable methods for the job and configuring them to achieve intended outcomes. Throughout your career or endeavors, keep retooling and upgrading your skills.

 

Experience Boosters

Through these experiential activities, you’ll engage all the senses and “plus” other coursework. Those who select the most adventurous semester journey will do many Experience Boosters. Some Boosters may hold Token caches.

 

Weeklies

These assignments are activities we do almost every week in class, such as discussions and weekly reflections. They mark the time of the semester as places where we discuss work, share ideas, and reflect on the experience to make sense of what we are learning together.

 
 

How Work Will Be Evaluated

 

Work will receive one of the following results per learning outcome:

  • Success: You’re done! The work meets or exceeds the specifications. Wow, you learned a lot. 🙌
  • Not done yet: Close, but needs revision. The work doesn’t quite meet the goal for this assignment. Give it another go. 💪
  • Incomplete: Hmm. Something’s missing. Check the specifications to find what was missed. 🤏

Work that earns “success” for every learning outcome in an assignment will count as “complete” and count toward the final grade. There is no partial credit.

All activities are evaluated in these ways:

Type Basis for Grading What’s Recorded in Canvas
Projects Meets the specification Success, Not done yet, or Incomplete
Methods Meets the specification Success, Not done yet, or Incomplete
Experience Boosters Meets the specification Success, Not done yet, or Incomplete
Weeklies Meets the specification Success, Not done yet, or Incomplete
Attendance Present in class on time
 
 

Feedback and Revisions

 

You can revise work unlimited times to earn a completion. Revisions are due by the Final Revision Deadline around week 13 or 14 of the semester. Check Canvas for the exact date.

Because learning requires feedback and revisions—we get stronger the more tries we have to learn content—you can revise all assignments without penalty until it meets the Successful for each of its learning outcomes.

Bundle Revisions allowed When How to revise and turn in
Project Work Unlimited Until the Final Revision Deadline Canvas assignments
Methods Unlimited Until the Final Revision Deadline Canvas assignments
Experience Boosters Unlimited Until the Final Revision Deadline Canvas assignments
Weeklies Unlimited Until the Final Revision Deadline Canvas assignments

Our Course has two “chapters” for revisions, like a book.

Final Revision Deadline: All work due before the Final Revision Deadline can be revised up to this date in week 13. See Canvas assignments for the exact date. Once the Final Revision Deadline has passed, that “chapter” is closed and tokens cannot be used to recover this work. Assignments due after the Final Revision Deadline may be revised until the End of Semester Deadline.

End of Semester Deadline: All work due between the Final Revision Deadline and the End of Semester Deadline can be revised up to this date. You can use tokens for assignments that are due between the Final Revision Deadline and the end of the semester. Once the semester ends, no more revisions are possible and tokens cannot be used.

Note: If you turn in revisions right before the Final Revision Deadline, you will not have time to make another revision. Turn revisions in early so you have the best chance of getting a completion.

 
 

Late Work

 

All work is due at the time shown in Canvas for each assignment. Late work will not be accepted and will earn an evaluation of “Incomplete” with no opportunity for revisions. The “Incomplete” evaluation goes into effect as soon as work is turned in late.

Late work examples:

Due Date Work Turned In Feedback Result
September 2 at 11:59 p.m. September 2 at 3 p.m. “Success”, “Not Done Yet”, or “Incomplete”: Work is eligible for revisions.
March 15 at 2:40 p.m. (beginning of class) March 15 at 3:00 p.m. “Incomplete”: Work is not eligible for revisions.
October 3 at 11:59 p.m. October 4 at 12:00 a.m. “Incomplete”: Work is not eligible for revisions.

The easiest way to avoid late work is to use a token. More on that below.

 
 

Tokens

 

Life happens, and sometimes you need help to bend the rules. That’s where tokens come in. Each student will start out with two tokens indicated in the Canvas Gradebook. You may use tokens for the following:

  • Recover an assignment that missed the deadline: Use a token to turn in an assignment and make revisions even though it initially missed the deadline. All group members must spend a token to recover late work for a group project.

To spend a token, enter your request in the assignment’s text field. I will remove tokens from the Canvas Grade Book after students spend them. Tokens are non-transferable and have no value in my other courses. Tokens can not be used to extend the Final Revision Deadline or the End of Semester Deadline. Please do not eat the tokens; they are not chocolate (though that would be cool).

Tokens can not be used after the End of Semester Deadline.

Learn more about how to use Tokens in the Tokens assignment.

Saving Tokens and Plus Grades

Miami University’s grade point system allows students to earn “plus” and “minus” grades. You can earn a “plus” with the letter grade I report by ending the semester with the same number of tokens you started with. In other words, if you complete the semester with three tokens, your letter grade will be “plussed” because you never needed an extension, didn’t need an extra revision, or did extra work to earn more tokens. Spend wisely!

Earning More Tokens

There may be opportunities to earn tokens throughout the semester. Stay tuned!

 
 

Due Dates and Times

 

“Canvas Time” deadlines are due at the time indicated in Canvas. This time is calculated based on the time zone where you are located. Class meeting times will always be in “Canvas Time.” For example, if we have a meeting at 8 p.m. Eastern, the meeting will take place at 5 p.m. for learners in the Pacific time zone.

Set your time zone in Canvas so Canvas Time displays correctly. Visit the How do I set a time zone in my user account as a student? Links to an external site. page to learn how.

“Local Time” deadlines are due at 11:59 p.m. in the time zone where you are physically located.

If you live in a time zone west of Oxford, Ohio, your “Local Time” deadline will be later than the 11:59 p.m. time shown in Canvas. Ignore Canvas’s “late” notice. As long as you turn in work before 11:59 p.m. in your local time, you will not be penalized for late work.

  • For students who live in Oxford, Ohio, “Local Time” and “Canvas Time” are the same.
  • If we are traveling as a class (Destination Weekend, Walt Disney World, etc.), “Local Time” is wherever we are located.

Should you travel to another time zone when turning in work before the “Local Time” deadline, alert the instructor ahead of time to avoid a penalty.

 
 

Course Grades

 

This is where our course format looks most different from traditionally graded courses. According to the table below, I will report the final course grade to the university. Each row indicates the minimum number of assignment completions needed to earn a desired grade. To earn the grade you wish, complete all the requirements listed in the row for that grade. The numbers in parentheses are the total number of assignments planned for that assignment bundle. I will update the course grade table if any numbers change during the semester.

Semester Grade Project (3) Methods (6) Experience Boosters (3) Weeklies (15) Attendance
A 3 6 3 14 4 or fewer unexcused absences
B 3 6 2 13 4 or fewer unexcused absences
C 2 5 0 11 5 unexcused absences
D 1 4 0 10 5 unexcused absences

 

A grade of “F” is reported if the requirements for a “D” are not met in any bundle.

Grades Example: If Shane wanted to earn a “B” in the class, they would only complete the requirements in the “B” row above. As long as they earned a completion for all assignments that add up to a “B,” they would make a “B.” Shane could ignore all of the requirements for the “A” row. If Shane completed all of the requirements for a “B” but fell short and did the “C” level of Weeklies, then the final grade would be a “C.”

Notice how each row builds on the one below it. Someone working to earn a “C” would complete all of the “D” requirements plus a little more. Students who pursue the “A” adventure would meet all of the “D,” “C,” “B,” and “A” requirements. If someone pursues the “A” level journey but falls short but still completes all of the “B” requirements, they would earn a “B” in the course.

Use the Grades tab in Canvas to track your progress as you complete assignments. Each assignment will be displayed as complete or incomplete in the grade book. Once work meets the specification (Success), the grade book will show a checkmark for that assignment. If there’s an “X” in the gradebook, the assignment is incomplete and does not earn credit (yet). More on that in a sec.

Plus and Minus Grades

To earn a “plus” grade (e.g., “B+”), end the semester with all the tokens you started with (see Tokens below). The only way to earn a “minus” grade is for “Incomplete” performance on group work. See details about Group Participation Evaluations in these assignments in our course.

Your Grades and Work

In addition to being evaluated by your course instructor, this academic work may be:

  • Viewed by designated Miami University personnel to gauge broader program achievement within Miami University.
  • Included in assessment reports, such as short quotations from your work that do not identify you.

I may want to show your work publically—in presentations, published papers, or in our hallways. You may decline to have your work shown for any reason. I will credit you for any of your work that I share. Any work that can be connected with you will not be shared with a public audience, nor will it be used for other purposes, such as published research, without your explicit written consent.

Assessment data are used by the university to determine how effective we are at cultivating successful students and achieving learning goals, not to evaluate your work as an individual student.

 
 

Attendance Expectations

 

The Policy Library states that students are expected to attend all scheduled class meetings. Should they be absent, students are responsible for the material covered in the missed class.

Attendance and Grades

Attendance is factored into determining the semester grade for this course. Students can miss four class meetings for any reason with no penalty. However, missing class meetings beyond this number will affect the final grade.

A student with six unexcused absences will be dropped from the course.

Excused Absences

Excused absences do not affect the semester grade, but not every absence is excused.

Miami University recognizes that students may have religious observances, military training obligations, pregnancy, or related conditions, including recovery from childbirth, that conflict with class sessions. I will provide accommodations for completing missed work when you are absent due to military training, religious observance, or pregnancy. I will also excuse student-athletes and student performers from class when necessary for school-sponsored athletic events.

Students must send me written notification at least one week before the requested absence, noting the event that prohibits class attendance and the date(s) that will be missed.

I will excuse absences due to health conditions when it is unsafe or unhealthy for you to attend class. This includes contagious illnesses, surgeries, and medical appointments. These absences are excused only if you notify me in writing before the class meeting. A doctor’s note or written excuse is appreciated and may be required in these cases.

Absences will not be excused after class is missed unless in extreme circumstances when students have proof that they were incapacitated and unable to contact me in advance.

Late Arrivals

Please arrive on time and do not leave class early. If you arrive late, please ensure I know you were present. Notify me at the end of class that you arrived late. Three late arrivals equals one unexcused absence, which may affect the final grade.

Recording Attendance

My record of your attendance is available in Canvas. If I do not input your attendance correctly, please contact me as soon as you notice the error so I can correct it.

Attendance for Online or Hybrid Courses

Attendance requirements for courses with online or hybrid formats may not involve synchronous meetings. These courses shift focus from “in-class minutes” to “time spent on tasks.” All activities in these courses must be completed to meet the “time spent on task” requirement for credit. Required, in-person meetings in hybrid courses and synchronous video chat meetings in online classes may have point values related to them, and missing these required meetings may impact student grades. It is essential to pay close attention to course schedules to determine attendance requirements every week.

Synchronous Video Meetings

We may meet via video chat several times this semester. Students are not required to turn on their cameras during our video meetings. Feel free to do so if you would instead communicate using just your voice for these meetings.

Inclement Weather

In case of a significant weather event, check your email daily for announcements about changes to the class. Our meetings will only be canceled if the university closes.

 
 

Generative AI

 

My short policy is: if I can tell you used Generative AI for a final project outcome that’s not an AI assignment, my work evaluation will not be positive. If the content in the work you produce clearly is not yours without citation, that’s a plagiarism issue (and in the field, your client may get sued for it). Use Generative AI wisely as a tool to enhance your abilities.

Generative AI is allowed in this course under each assignment’s parameters. Some assignments will ask you to specify when and how you used AI to supplement your work. Generative AI is an important tool for you to know how to use. Like any tool, it has appropriate and inappropriate uses. AI also has limitations. AI output is not always accurate, may be contradictory, may be biased, may be overly vague, and may not be current. AI has been known to “make stuff up,” mainly quotes and sources. Let’s learn how to use this tool together in ways that do not undermine your learning or cause academic dishonesty issues.

 
 

Academic Integrity and Honesty

 

Plagiarism is literary or artistic theft. It is the false assumption of authorship, the wrongful act of taking the product of another person’s mind and presenting it as one’s own. Copying someone else’s writing or design, intact or with minor changes, and adding one’s name to the result constitutes plagiarism. Assignments must be your work unless they are specifically group projects. It is unlawful and unethical to copy work found elsewhere and make a “close copy” or only make slight changes and present it as one’s work.

Fair use allows for the limited use of copyrighted material without permission. You may use elements such as photography or logos created by someone else as elements in your work to make it more realistic. For example, you may use product photos or logos in your work to show how the work would align with a client’s brand. In these cases, credit the original content owner/producer in your portfolio or whenever you show the work outside our class. Do not take credit for others’ work.

Evidence of plagiarism–misrepresenting others’ work as your own–can lead to failure of an assignment and possibly dismissal from the class with an F grade. Visit the Miami University Academic Integrity website Links to an external site.for complete information regarding academic integrity.

Any suspected instances of academic dishonesty will be handled under Miami University’s Academic Integrity policy found in Part 1, Chapter 5 of the Student Handbook. Links to an external site.Please review this policy and note that a lack of knowledge or understanding of the appropriate academic conduct is not an excuse for committing academic dishonesty. Please ask if you have questions about how to complete an assignment or what could constitute academic dishonesty for a particular assignment.

 
 

Accommodating Disabilities

 

If you are a student with a physical, learning, medical, and/or psychiatric disability and feel that you may need a reasonable accommodation to fulfill the essential functions of the course listed in this syllabus, please get in touch with the Miller Center for Student Disability Services Links to an external site. at 513-529-1541 (V/TTY), located in the Shriver Center, Room 304.

  • Oxford Campus: SDS@miamioh.edu
  • Hamilton Campus: MUHODS@miamioh.edu
  • Middletown Campus: MUMDC@miamioh.edu

Current SDS registered students should request accommodations according to SDS procedure Links to an external site.. You are strongly encouraged to request and discuss your accommodations needs during the first 1-2 weeks of the semester.

If your accommodation plan requires extended time for all activities, I will extend deadlines for every activity for the entire semester. If the accommodation plan extends time only when needed, you must inform me before the assignment deadline, and I will gladly extend the due date.

 
 

Mental or Emotional Distress

 

If you are a student who may be experiencing mental or emotional distress, you are encouraged to call Student Counseling Service (513-529-4634). For emergencies outside of business hours, the H.O.P.E. Line is available at all times for Miami students at 855-249-5649.

 
 

Computer Failures

 

I cannot make deadline exceptions if your computer fails. Use Dropbox, Google Drive, or another cloud-based storage method to keep copies of working files to reduce the chance of losing work due to a computer failure. A portable hard drive paired with a backup solution for periodic comprehensive backups can help you recover from hardware failures when they happen.

 
 

Course Evaluations

 

You’re invited to complete an evaluation of faculty performance at the end of the semester. I am very interested in the feedback I get from students as I continually improve my teaching. I consider completing this short survey an essential part of your participation in this class, as it is your opportunity to share your thoughts on how I can improve the learning experience. You will be notified of the dates for the administration of the student evaluation of faculty by the university.

 
 

Recording

 

Course materials provided to you, including presentations, tests, outlines, and similar materials, are copyright-protected by the faculty member(s) teaching this course. You may make copies of course materials for your personal use. Please do not copy, reproduce, or electronically transmit any course materials to any person or company for commercial or other purposes without the faculty member’s express permission.

Out of respect for fellow learners, please ask before recording video or audio in this class.

 
 

Course Materials and Copyright

 

Course materials provided to you, including presentations, tests, outlines, and similar materials, are copyright-protected by the faculty member(s) teaching this course. You may make copies of course materials solely for your own use. You may not copy, reproduce, or electronically transmit any course materials to any person or company for commercial or other purposes without the faculty member’s express permission. Violation of this prohibition may subject the student to discipline/suspension/dismissal under Miami’s Code of Student Conduct or Academic Integrity Policy.

 
 

Policy Library

 

Each Miami University student is entitled to certain rights and responsibilities associated with higher education institutions. Please take time to familiarize yourself with the Miami University Policy Library. This class adheres to all standards set out in the Policy Library. Visit the Miami University Policy Library website Links to an external site. to learn more.

 
 

Changes

 

I may make adjustments/changes to the course syllabus to correct errors and maintain its accuracy. I will notify you if I make such changes.

 
 

Acknowledgments

 

Thanks to these inspiring educators for writing and guidance about Specifications Grading and for challenging me to write a syllabus that’s not so professory. I’m growing and learning, and their work has helped me immensely.

  • David Largent, Associate Lecturer of Computer Science at Ball State University
  • Abagail Noyce, Research Assistant Professor at Carnegie Mellon University
  • Jesse Stommel, Teaching Assistant Professor at the University of Denver
  • Robert Talbert, Professor of Mathematics at Grand Valley State University