CITM600 Course Outline
CITM600 Course Outline
COURSE OUTLINE
2010 - 2011
1.0 PREREQUISITE
The prerequisites for this course are (ITM 310 and ITM 400), or ITM301 or Direct Entry.
Students who do not have the prerequisite will be dropped from the course.
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The course introduces data network planning concepts, and presents practical deployment and
management strategies including the assessment and determination of appropriate technologies for
implementing specific business communications systems.
1. Understand the types of business needs that can be addressed using information technology-
based networking solutions.
3. Understand the design and analysis of data communications networks through systematic
review of case studies, hands-on practice with practical network design methodologies
including analytic and simulation techniques.
6. Initiate, specify, and prioritize networking design projects and to determine the feasibility of
these projects.
7. Use at least one specific methodology for analyzing a business situation (a problem or
opportunity), modelling it using a formal technique, and specifying requirements for a system
that enables a productive change in a way the business is conducted. Within the context of this
methodology, students will learn to write clear and concise business requirements documents
and convert them into technical specifications.
10. Articulate various systems acquisition alternatives, including the use of packaged systems
and/or outsourced design and development resources.
12. Incorporate principles leading to high levels of security and user experience from the
beginning of the systems development process.
13. Design high-level logical system characteristics (user interface design, design of data and
information requirements).
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6.0 EVALUATION
The grade for this course is composed of the mark received for each of the following components:
Mid Term Test: 25%
• 1 hour duration scheduled for Week 6 or Week 7
• Multiple choice questions
Important Notes:
• Students will receive the results of their midterm test before the end of Week 8 of the course.
• ITM department policy requires that in order to pass this course, students must achieve an
average mark of at least 50% across all tests, including the final exam. If the student fails
to achieve at least 50% based on the weighted summation of these individual assessments the
student will be assigned a failing grade.
• Should a student believe that an assignment, test or exam has not been appropriately graded,
the student must review their concerns with the instructor within 10 working days from when
the graded work was made available to the students.
• In the group project work all group members will receive the same marks for their group
presentation and group project report, regardless of contribution (or lack of contribution) of
any member of the group.
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identification number after at least the first two digits have been removed.
• Some graded work will be returned to students prior to the last date to drop a course without
academic penalty.
• Regular lectures, prescribed weekly readings, problem based assignments, group project work,
and case study discussions are the main teaching activities that occur in this course.
• Since a major component of this course is problem-based learning the four individual assignments
provide the students practice and progressive skill-building that they can apply in the group based
project.
• Teamwork activities allow the students to apply the analytical techniques that were introduced in
class and practiced in the problem sets. In addition, by working in small teams the students
develop interaction and individual and group presentation skills.
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• The instructor will establish an active learning environment by engaging the students in a Socratic
exchange of relevant questions and ideas. Students should expect a frequent and substantive
interaction between the instructor and students and among students in every class.
• Those students that actively participate in the learning process will gradually assume ownership of
the knowledge contained in the course materials. In addition to ownership of the course content,
the students will master a set of skills that they can use to develop communications networks.
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10.0 TEXTS & OTHER READING MATERIALS
Required Textbook:
Priscilla Oppenheimer, Top-Down Network Design, Cisco Press; ISBN-10: 1587202832, ISBN-13:
978-1587202834, 3rd edition, August 2010.
Recommended Texts:
James D. McCabe, Network Analysis, Architecture and Design, Morgan Kaufman Publishers; ISBN:
978-0-12-370480-1. 3rd edition, 2007.
Tony Kenyon, High Performance Data Network Design, (IDC Technology) (Paperback), Publisher:
Digital Press; ISBN-10: 1555582079, ISBN-13: 978-1555582074, 1st edition (December 2001),
Russ White, Don Slice, Alvaro Retana, Optimal Routing Design, Cisco Press, ISBN: 1-58705-187-7,
Hardcover, 484 pages, 2005.
Stephen A. Thomas, IP Switching and Routing Essentials: Understanding RIP, OSPF, BGP, MPLS,
CR-LDP, and RSVP-TE. Wiley; ISBN: 0471034665 Paperback: 352 pages 1st edition (December 15,
2001).
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