ENCN305-20S1 (C) Semester One 2020

Programming, Statistics and Optimization

15 points

Details:
Start Date: Monday, 17 February 2020
End Date: Sunday, 21 June 2020
Withdrawal Dates
Last Day to withdraw from this course:
  • Without financial penalty (full fee refund): Friday, 28 February 2020
  • Without academic penalty (including no fee refund): Friday, 29 May 2020

Description

Computer programming. Descriptive statistics. Monte Carlo and Bootstrapping methods. Design of experiments. Linear regression and generalized linear modelling. Optimization and linear programming.

Learning Outcomes

●    to  improve  students’  general  programming  skills,  so  they  can  develop  solutions  to engineering problems in Python and, potentially, in other programming languages.
●    to understand hypothesis testing and apply hypothesis test to different situations.
●    to introduce analytical approaches to examine dependence between different quantities for which observational data is available and use them for statistical inferences.
●    to   understand   basic   co  ncept   of   optimization   methods   and   their   applications   in engineering.
●    to be able to solve numerically a range of optimization problems in engineering.

Prerequisites

Timetable Note

This course is a lecture and  lab  -based  course.  There are 4 streams of labs/tutorials per  week, you can view/select these via your timetable. Please note that you will have a single two hour lab per week in section 1 but, in sections 2 and 3, you will have two labs/tutorials of two hours each - see below for details.

Section 1  - Computer Programming
●    The first lecture in week 1    is an  introduction to the course – all students should attend  .
●    All the other lectures in section 1 are provided through online videos.
●    Students are required to attend a two-hour computer lab each week.

The aim of the computer lab will be to apply the knowledge that you have obtained from lectures and also with an opportunity to work on problems with the support of a tutor.

Section 2  - Statistics (Weeks 7 to 10)
●    All the lectures in section 2  are provided through online videos.
●    Students are required to attend two tutorials each week covering different topics.

Each  tutorial  is  a two -hour  computer  lab,  in  which  you  will  use the programming  technique learnt from section 1 to solve practical statistics problems. The first 4 tutorials in the week are with topic I, and the last 4 are with topic II.  Both the lecturer and tutors will be in the tutorial.

Note: In week 8, there will be only one topic for the last 4 tutorials that week due to the ANZAC day.  The tutorial session on 28 April will be an open session for the ones who have additional questions on the statistics lecture or tutorials.

Section 3 - Statistics and Optimization (Weeks 11 & 12)
● All the lectures in section 3 are provided through online videos.
● Students are required to attend 1 computer-based tutorial each week, and only one topic is provided each week.
● Students are required to attend 2 lecture room-based tutorials each week covering different topics.

Course Coordinator

For further information see Civil and Natural Resources Engineering Head of Department

Assessment

Assessment Due Date Percentage 
final exam 45%
learn Quizzzes - Programming 10%
Test 25%
Tutorials (statistics & optimization) 20%


You cannot pass this course unless you achieve a mark of at least 40% in each of the mid semester test and the final exam. A student who narrowly fails to achieve 40% in either the test or exam, but who performs very well in the other, may be eligible for a pass in the course.

A resit test  may  be held at  the start of week 10 for students who do not achieve the 40% pass mark in the mid semester test.

Your  attendance  and  work  in  each  tutorial  will  be  graded  for  assessment.  If a student is unable to attend a tutorial  of a topic due to  personal  circumstances beyond  their  control they should discuss this with the lecturer involved as soon as possible.

Students  may  apply  for  special  consideration  if  their  performance  in  an  assessment is affected by extenuating circumstances beyond  their  control, provided  they have sat either the final exam, mid-semester   test or both.  Applications  for   special  consideration  should be submitted via the Examinations Office website  http://www.canterbury.ac.nz/exams/  within  5  days  of  the  assessment.  Where an extension maybe  granted for an assessment,  this  will be decided  by the course co-ordinator and an application to the Examinations Office may not be required.  Special consideration is not available for items worth less than 10% of the course.

Students  prevented  by  extenuating  circumstances  from  completing  the  course  after  the  final date for withdrawing may apply for special consideration for late discontinuation of the course. Applications must be  submitted to the Examinations Office within five days of the main examination period for the semester.

Textbooks / Resources

All course materials will be made available through Learn and the CSSE quiz server.

Notes

Programming, Statistics and Optimization is a compulsory 15 point course taught in the first semester of second professional to all civil and natural resources engineering students. It builds directly on the numerical methods and programming in EMTH171 and on probability and statistical material taught in EMTH210 and EMTH118/119.

The course is split into three broad components, each of which is comprised of a number of subtopics. The first component covers programming, in particular algorithm design, procedural and data abstraction, testing and debugging. These skills will be taught in a Python context but they are equally applicable to most other programming languages. The first component provides the necessary tools for solving problems that arise in the other components. The second component starts with descriptive statistics and hypothesis testing. It is followed by design of experiments, where methods such as block design and full factorial design will be covered. The Monte Carlo and bootstrapping methods will then be introduced for uncertainty analysis. You will also learn linear regression, Poisson regression, logistic regression and spatial modeling to discover knowledge from data and to make statistical inferences. The third component involves some basic principles of optimization methods and their
applications in engineering. You will learn skills such as linear programming to solve a range of optimization problems in engineering.

The concepts and techniques developed in this course will appear in a number of third professional courses, in particular all those that require the data manipulation or statistical characterization of experimental or observational data, and the use of optimization methods.

In all components of the course the emphasis is on the application of the programming skills, data
analytics and optimization methods to civil and natural resources engineering, and transportation
engineering in particular.

Indicative Fees

Domestic fee $975.00

International fee $5,500.00

* All fees are inclusive of NZ GST or any equivalent overseas tax, and do not include any programme level discount or additional course-related expenses.

For further information see Civil and Natural Resources Engineering .

All ENCN305 Occurrences

  • ENCN305-20S1 (C) Semester One 2020