
Homework Guidelines
Click here to see one page from a homework set which follows most of the guidelines below. Note the neatness, the problem numbering, the one column format, the "Given, Find, and Solution" lines, the pertinent equations, and the boxed answers.
When you write up homework solutions, your work may be perfectly clear to you, but it might look like chicken scratch to the grader. To minimize potential problems with the grading, please follow the following guidelines for sumbission of homework papers:
- Use 8.5 inch by 11 inch paper, either ruled or unruled.
- Include a cover sheet with the course number, your printed name, and your signature. Include the date, the assignment number, and list the problems assigned. List the problems that you did not work. Print your name clearly. If your name is not clearly readable, no score will be recorded.
- Staple your work at the upper left corner of the cover sheet.
- Number each problem at a position on the page where the number will not be covered by the staple when you turn your paper in.
- Write on only one side of the paper.
- Number each part in the problem with the complete number, e.g. 3(a), 4(b), etc.
- At the beginning of each problem, or each part of a problem, draw any necessary diagrams and write a short statement of what is to be solved for. Clearly label any circuit diagrams with all pertinent voltages and currents.
- Work each problem and each part of a problem in order in a single column. Do not put more than one column on a page and no more than one equation or answer on a line.
- Do not submit out of order work. Work the problems in the order assigned and the parts of each problem in the order assigned. Out of order problems will not be graded.
- Separate problems by drawing a horizontal line between them.
- Do not submit problems with scratched out work. Either erase it or use a clean sheet of paper. Problems will not be graded if they contain scratched out work.
- Do not continue an equation on another page unless the continuation begins with an equal sign.
- Clearly mark all answers, by underlining them or by putting a box around them.
- If you do not complete a problem or any part of a problem, write stop and underline the word at the point where you stopped. This will indicate to the grader that your work is not complete and is not continued on another line or page.
The following extra items are required on homework problems requiring SPICE simulations:
- A circuit diagram showing the configurations with SPICE nodes numbered.
- The input SPICE deck you used to generate your SPICE results.
- Edited and highlighted SPICE results which support your numerical results. SPICE results that are unedited and not annotated will not be graded.
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