CS70

Spring 2017 CS70 at UC Berkeley

Resources

Extras

Materials produced in past or the current semester.

  • Sinho's Notes

    57 pages, detailed rundown of probability topics

    by Sinho Chewi, Spring 2016 uGSI

  • Alvin's Booklet

    60 pages, 35+ exam-level or harder problems

    by Alvin Wan, Spring 2016 Head uGSI

  • Online Practice Problems

    warm-up exercises for every problem set

    by Professor Anant Sahai, EECS faculty

  • Spring 2016 Walkthrough Videos

    problem-by-problem video walkthroughs and alternate solutions for past exams

    by Professor Satish Rao, Sinho Chewi, Alvin Wan

LaTeX

The link below teaches you how to get LaTeX set up.

www.ling.upenn.edu/advice/latex/pc-setup.html

The followings are links to my favorite LaTeX tutorial. They cover the most basic to slightly advanced LaTeX, which you may need in this course.

If you get stuck, stackoverflow may be one of your best friends.

Tips

These tips have been collected through the years from professors, past and present. You can also check out the Learning How To Learn coursera for other general tips

Don't fall behind

In a conceptual class such as this, it is particularly important to maintain a steady effort throughout the semester, rather than hope to cram just before homework deadlines or exams. This is because it takes time and practice for the ideas to sink in. Make sure you allocate a sufficient number of hours every week to the class, including enough time for reading and understanding the material as well as for doing assignments. (As a rough guide, you should expect to do at least one hour of reading and two hours of problem solving for each hour of lecture.) Even though this class does not have any major projects, you should plan to spend as much time on it as on any of your other technical classes.

Read the lecture notes before lecture

The material takes some time to sink in. You'll be able to pick up the nuances if you've already got a gist of what will be covered.

Take the homeworks seriously

The homeworks are explicitly designed to help you to learn the material as you go along. Although the numerical weight of the homeworks is not huge or is zero, we work hard to make them instructive and interesting. Do read the sample solutions, even for the problems on which your recieved full points. You may well learn a different way of looking at the problem, and you may also benefit from emulating the style of the solutions. (In science people learn a lot from emulating the approach of more experienced scientists.)

Don't procrastinate on homework

Our best advice is to read through the homework problems as soon as they are available, and let them percolate in your brain. Think through possible approaches while you are waiting in line, or stuck in an elevator, or whatever. Sleeping on a problem has often helped people to come up with a creative approach to it. Definitely do not wait until the night before it is due to start working on the homework.

Make use of office hours

The instructor and TAs hold office hours expressly to help you. It is often surprising how many students do not take advantage of this service. You are free to attend as many office hours as you wish (you are not constrained just to use the office hours of your section TA). You will also likely get more out of an office hour if you have spent a little time in advance thinking about the questions you have, and formulating them precisely. (In fact, this process can often lead you to a solution yourself!)

Come to homework parties

We encourage collaboration on homeworks (but please read the homework policy above! all solutions must be your own). If you want to find a group to work with, or you and your friends want a nice place to work together, come to the homework parties.

Take part in discussion sections

Discussion sections are not auxiliary lectures. They are an opportunity for interactive learning, through guided group problem solving and other activities. The success of a discussion section depends largely on the willingness of students to participate actively in it. As with office hours, the better prepared you are for the discussion, the more you are likely to get out of it.

Form study groups

As stated above, you are encouraged to form small groups (two to four people) to work together on homeworks and on understanding the class material on a regular basis. In addition to being fun, this can save you a lot of time by generating ideas quickly and preventing you from getting hung up on some point or other. Of course, it is your responsibility to ensure that you contribute actively to the group; passive listening will likely not help you much. And recall the caveat above that you must write up your solutions on your own.

Pay attention in lectures

As the semester proceeds, many of you will no doubt feel the urge to 'daydream' during lectures, or to skip them altogether, on the grounds that you can catch up by reading the lecture notes. If you follow this strategy, you should be aware that reading mathematics is NOT the same as reading a novel or a news article: each page of mathematics needs to be read many times before it is fully understood, and needs to be backed up by examples and discussion. Following the material in class should save you several readings; even just watching it go by without fully understanding it makes your later reading easier. And you also get the benefit of student questions, examples etc. Exactly how you handle lectures is up to you. One strategy is to print out the lecture notes in advance, bring them to lecture, and add a few additional notes during class.