Course Name:            Financial Accounting

Credit Hours:              3

Prerequisites:             None


Course Outline: 

 Introduction to Accounting, Accounting Principles, Book Keeping, Basics of Financial Statements, Adjustments to Financial Statements, The Cash Book, Bank Reconciliation, Control Accounts, Statement of Cash Flows, Financial Activities, Property, Plant and Equipment (PPE), Accounting Errors, Accounting for Partnerships, Balance Sheet.

 

Reference Materials:

  1. Fundamentals of Accounting by Wang’ombe, D. K., Focus Publishers (2008). ISBN-10:       9966-   01-087-4
  2. Fundamental Accounting Principles with Connect Plus by John Wild, Ken Shaw, and          Barbara Chiappetta, McGraw-Hill/Irwin; 20th Edition (December 27, 2010). ISBN-   10:       0077505980
  3. Financial & Managerial Accounting by Jan Williams, Sue Haka, Mark Bettner and Joseph Carcello, McGraw-Hill/Irwin; 16th Edition (2011). ISBN-10: 0078111048
  4. Principles of Managerial Finance by Lawrence J. Gitman and Chad J. Zutter, Prentice Hall; 13th Edition (2011). ISBN-10: 0136119468
  5. Fundamentals of Financial Management by J. Van Horne and John M Wachowicz, Prentice Hall; 13th Edition (2008). ISBN-10: 0273713639

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Course Title: Technical Report Writing

Level: BE Mechanical Engineering 5th Semester

Course Code: HS 312

Credit Hours: 3 (Theory)

01.   Course Syllabus

1.    Introduction to Technical Report Writing

·         Technical Report Writing as a subject

2.    Essay Writing

·         Descriptive Essay

·         Narrative Essay

·         Argumentative Essay

·         Discursive Essay

3.    Presentation Skills

·         How to Present a Topic

·         How to be Confident in a Presentation

·         Art of gathering Data for Presentation

4.    Technical Report Writing

·         Research an Endeavour

·         Characteristics of Technically Writing a Good Research

5.    Proposal for Research Proposal

·         Writing Introduction of a Proposal

·         Writing Literature Review of Proposal

·         Writing methodology, discussion, and conclusion of Research Paper

6.    Research Paper/Term Paper

·         Writing Introduction of Research Paper

·         Writing Literature Review of Research Paper

·         Writing Methodology of Research Paper

7.    Research Paper/Term Paper

·         Writing Discussions of Research Paper

·         Writing Conclusion of Research Paper

·         Writing Recommendation and Findings

8.    Research Paper/Term Paper

·         Emphasis on Style and Content

·         Emphasis on Language and Form

·         Emphasis on Clarity and Consistency

2.    Course Introduction

Technical Report Writing courses introduce you to some of the most important aspects of writing in the worlds of science, technology, engineering and business. The skills learned in technical writing courses can be useful in other fields as well, including education and social sciences. Its main objective is Enhance language skills and develop critical thinking.

3.    Learning Outcomes

CLO No.

Description

Domain

Level

Associated  PLO

 

         1                 

Apply effective Technical Report Writing and Presentation Skills

Cognitive

A3

PLO -1

 

         2                 

Demonstrate Proficiency in Writing Research Proposals and Reports

Cognitive

A3

PLO- 5

           

         3                 

Employment of different Standard Tools for Word usage and Referencing of Write-ups of Term Papers/Projects

Cognitive

A3

PLO-10

 

 

4.    Course Prerequisites

None

5.    Course Requirement or Rules

Teaching for this class will consist primarily of lectures where basic things regarding Technical Writing will be presented. Students will develop their understanding of the course content through reading the provided material and books.

6.    Textbooks

  1.  Technical and Business Writing for Working Professionals, Ray E. Hardesty, Xlibris Corporation, 15-Dec-2010, ISBN = 1456819402
  2. Successful Technical Writing/Instructor’s Guide, Bill Wesley Brown, Goodheart Willcox Publisher, 01-Mar-193-Technology and Engineering.
  3. Essay Writing and Academic Writing
  4. Writing. Advanced by Ron White. Oxford Supplementary Skills. Third Impression 1992. ISBN 0 19 435407 3      (particularly suitable for discursive, descriptive, argumentative and report writing), or Latest Edition.
  5. College Writing Skills by John Langan. McGraw-Hill Higher Education. 2004, or Latest Edition.
  6. Patterns of College Writing (4th edition) by Laurie G. Kirszner and Stephen R. Mandell. St. Martin’s Press.

7.    Key Dates, the time and means/methods of class meetings

MS Microsoft TEAMS will be used for online teaching. The Chat in MS TEAMS will provide additional supports for students to have discussions related to this course. It is strongly recommended the students to use the Chat.

8.    Lesson Plan (together with the assigned readings for each lecture)

LESSON CONTENTS AND ASSOCIATED CLO(s)

 

1.      Contents

CLO No.

Delivery Methods

 

Pre Mid Term Session

 

 

1.    Introduction to Technical Report Writing

·         Technical Report Writing as a subject

Serial No. of lectures: 01 (Total Classes: 01)

1&2

Both Synchronous and asynchronous learning method will be used to deliver lecture.

 

 

2.    Essay Writing

·         Descriptive Essay

·         Narrative Essay

·         Argumentative Essay

·         Discursive Essay

 Serial No. of lectures: 02-06 (Total Classes: 05)

1 & 2

Both Synchronous and asynchronous learning method will be used to deliver lecture.

 

3.    Presentation Skills

·         How to Present a Topic

·         How to be Confident in a Presentation

·         Art of gathering Data for Presentation

 Serial No. of lectures: 07-08 (Total Classes: 02)

1 & 2

Both Synchronous and asynchronous learning method will be used to deliver lecture.

 

4.    Technical Report Writing

·         Research an Endeavour

·         Characteristics of Technically Writing a Good Research

 Serial No. of lectures: 09  (Total Classes: 01)

2&3

Both Synchronous and asynchronous learning method will be used to deliver lecture.

 

Post Mid Term Session

 

5.    Proposal for Research Paper

·         Writing Introduction of a Proposal

·         Writing Literature Review of Proposal

·         Writing methodology, discussion, and conclusion of Research Paper

Serial No. of lectures: 10-11 (Total Classes: 02)

2& 3

Both Synchronous and asynchronous learning method will be used to deliver lecture.

 

6.    Research Paper/Term Paper

·         Writing Introduction of Research Paper

·         Writing Literature Review of Research Paper

·         Writing Methodology of Research Paper

Serial No. of lectures: 11-13 (Total Classes: 03)

2& 3

Both Synchronous and asynchronous learning method will be used to deliver lecture.

 

7.    Research Paper/Term Paper

·         Writing Discussions of Research Paper

·         Writing Conclusion of Research Paper

·         Writing Recommendation and Findings

Serial No. of lectures: 14-15 (Total Classes: 02)

2& 3

Both Synchronous and asynchronous learning method will be used to deliver lecture.

 

8.    Research Paper/Term Paper

·         Emphasis on Style and Content

·         Emphasis on Language and Form

·         Emphasis on Clarity and Consistency

Serial No. of lectures: 15- (Total Classes: 01)

2& 3

Both Synchronous and asynchronous learning method will be used to deliver lecture.

 

9.    PPTs for each lecture as per template provided

PowerPoint slides will be available on University LMS before classes

10.   Details of the assignments and online quizzes

All course material including lecture slides, assignments, and quizzes will be made available on LMS throughout the semester.

11.   Any other Audio/video material

Audio/Video data Will be provided to students as and when needed

12.   Simulation Videos of related Practicals if possible

Laboratory is not involved.

 


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Course Name:            Basic Electronics (CSC-213)

Credit Hours:              3 (2+1)

Prerequisites:             None

 

Course Outline:

Zero Reference Level, Ohm’s Law, Linear & Non-Linear Resistors, Cells in Series and Parallel. Resistive Circuits. Resistors, Inductors, Capacitors, Energy Sources. Magnetism and Electromagnetism; Theory of Solid State; P-N Junction; Forward Biased P-N Junction; Forward V/I Characteristics; Reverse Biased P-N Junction; Reverse Saturation Current; Reverse V/I Characteristics, Junction Breakdown, Junction Capacitance. Opto-electronics Devices; Spectral Response of Human Eye; Light Emitting Diode (LED); Photoemission Devices, Photomultiplier Tube, Photovoltaic Devices, Bulk Type Photoconductive Cells, Photodiodes, P- N Junction Photodiode, PIN Photodiode, and Avalanche Photodiode; DC Power Supplies; Rectifiers. Filters, Voltage Multipliers, Silicon Controlled Rectifier SCR; The Basic Transistor; Transistor Biasing, Transistor Circuit Configuration; Modulation and Demodulation; Carrier Waves; Integrated Circuits.

 

Reference Materials:

  1.  Basic Electronics Solid State by B. L. Theraja, S Chand & Co Ltd, 5th Edition, 2007,   ISBN-13: 978-8121925563
  2. Electronic Principles by Albert Paul Malvino, 6th Edition, 1999, ISBN 0-07-115604-6


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Course Name:            Digital Logic and Design (CSC-211)

Credit Hours:              3 (2+1)

Prerequisites:             Basic Electronics

 

Course Outline:

Number Systems, Logic Gates, Boolean Algebra, Combination logic circuits and designs, Simplification Methods K-Maps, Quinne, Mc-Cluskey,, Flip Flops and Latches, Asynchronous and Synchronous circuits, Counters, Shift Registers, Shift Registers Counters, Triggered devices & its types. Binary Arithmetic and Arithmetic Circuits, Memory Elements, State Machines. Introduction Programmable Logic Devices (CPLD, FPGA);


 Lab Assignments using tools such as Verilog HDL/VHDL, MultiSim, etc.

Reference Materials:

  1. Digital Fundamentals by Thomas L. Floyd, Prentice Hall; 11th edition.
  2. Fundamentals of Digital Logic with Verilog Design by Stephen Brown and Zvonko Vranesic, McGraw-Hill; 3rd Edition (February 12, 2013). ISBN-10: 0073380547
  3. Digital Fundamentals: A Systems Approach by Thomas L. Floyd, Prentice Hall; (July 13, 2012). ISBN-10: 0132933950
  4. Digital Design, by M. Morris Mano, Michael D. Ciletti, 4th Edition, Prentice Hall (2007). ISBN-   10: 0131989243
  5. Fundamentals of Logic Design by Jr. Charles H. Roth and Larry L Kinney, CL Engineering; 6th Edition (March 13, 2009). ISBN-10: 0495471690


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Course Name:            Data Structure and Algorithms (CSC-212)

Credit Hours:              3 (2+1)

Prerequisites:             Discrete Structures

 

Course Outline:

 Introduction to Data Structures and Algorithms. Complexity Analysis. Arrays. Sorting Algorithms: Insertion Sort, Selection Sort, Bubble Sort, Shell Sort, Heap Sort, Quick Sort, Merge Sort, Radix Sort, Bucket Sort. Linked Lists: Singly Linked Lists, Doubly Linked Lists, Circular List. Stacks, Queues, and Priority Queue. Recursion: Function call and Recursion Implementation, Tail Recursion, Non-tail Recursion, Indirect Recursion, Nested Recursion, Backtracking. Trees: Binary Trees, Binary Heap, Binary Search. Tree Traversal, Insertion, Deletion, and Balancing a Tree. Heap. B-Tree, B+Tree, Spanning Tree, Splay Trees. Graphs: Representation, Treversal, Shortest Path, and Cycle Detection; Isomorphic Graphs. Graph Traversal Algorithms. Hashing. Memory Management and Garbage Collection.

 

Reference Materials:

  1. Data Structures & Problem Solving Using Java by Mark Allen Weiss, Addison-Wesley, 4th  Edition (October 7, 2009). ISBN-10: 0321541405 (or Latest Edition)
  2. Algorithms, Robert Sedgewick, Princeton University Publisher: Addison-Wesley     Professional (latest Edition)
  3. Data Structures: Abstraction and Design Using Java by Koffman and Wolfgang, Wiley; 2nd       Edition (January 26, 2010). ISBN-10: 0470128704
  4. Data Structures and Algorithms in C++ by Adam Drozdek, Course Technology; 4th Edition (August 27, 2012). ISBN-10: 1133608426
  5. Data Structures Using C++ by D. S. Malik, Course Technology; 2nd Edition (Jul 31, 2009). ISBN-10: 0324782012
  6. Data Structures and Other Objects Using C++ by Michael Main and Walter Savitch, Prentice Hall; 4th Edition (March 6, 2010). ISBN-100132129485

 


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Course Name:            Probability and Statistics (NS-219)

Credit Hours:              3

Prerequisites:             None

 

Course Outline:

 Introduction to Statistics, Descriptive Statistics, Statistics in decision making, Graphical representation of Data Stem-and Lead plot, Box- Cox plots, measures of central tendencies and dispersion, moments of frequency distribution; Counting techniques, introduction to probability, sample space, events, laws of probability, Conditional probability and Baye’s theorem with application to random variable (Discrete and continuous) Binomial, Poisson, Geometric, Negative Binomial Distributions; Exponential Gamma and Normal distributions; Regression and Correlation, Estimation and testing of hypotheses, use of elementary statistical packages for explanatory Data analysis.

 

Reference Materials:

  1. Probability & Statistics for Engineers & Scientists Ronald, W. Myers, Y. 2008”, 8th edition. Prentice Hall Publisher.
  2. Probability and Statistics for Engineering and the Sciences Lay, L. Devore. 2003. Duxbury Publishers.
  3. Statistical Data Analysis. G. Cowan.1998. Clarendon and Oxford.


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