INFS3204 - Sem 2 2006 - St Lucia - Internal

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Printed: 18 August 2006, 03:37PM

1. General Course Information

1.1 Course Details

Course Code: INFS3204 Course Title: Service-Oriented Architectures
Coordinating Unit: School of Information Technology and Electrical Engineering
Semester: Semester 2, 2006    Mode: Internal
Level: Undergraduate
Location: St Lucia
Number of Units: 2    Contact Hours Per Week: 2L2P
Pre-Requisites: COMP1500 or CSSE1001 or INFS1200
Incompatible: INFS7204
Course Description: How computing supports global enterprises.Architectures used for implementing interoperating inter-organisational information systems.
Assumed Background:

Good knowledge of relational database design, SQL, object-oriented programming, database programming, and web-related technologies.

Recommended pre-requisites: INFS1200/7900 and COMP1500/7901. Well related course: INFS3202/7202

1.2 Course Introduction

INFS3204/INFS7204 is the course to introduce the future of IT -  Service-Oriented Architecture (SOA). It aims to provide the in-depth knowledge for SOA and the practical experience in designing and implementing large-scale and composite business web applications. This course covers a wide range of SOA-related technologies, including XML, .Net, web service, composition techniques, and so on. After this course, you will understand the rational of SOA and its related technologies, be able to design and evaluate the web services from business point of view, have a knowledge to the research/open issues in SOA, and realize its future development trends.

1.3 Course Staff

Course Coordinator: Dr Heng Tao Shen     Email: shenht@itee.uq.edu.au
Homepage: http://www.itee.uq.edu.au/~shenht/ Campus: St Lucia
Building: General Purpose South
Room: 651
Consultation: By appointment.

Tutor:  Ming Zhang     Email: zhangmin@itee.uq.edu.au Campus: St Lucia
Building: General Purpose South
Room: 625


1.4 Timetable

Timetables are available on mySI-net.

2. Aims, Objectives & Graduate Attributes

2.1 Course Aims

This course teaches the concepts and technologies for the hottest topic: Service-Oriented Architecture (SOA).  It provides a comprehensive and systematic understanding to the latest SOA technologies and practical experience in designing large-scale composite web service applications.

2.2 Learning Objectives

After successfully completing this course you should be able to:

1  understand the rational of SOA and bounded web technologies from XML, .NET, web service, to their recent development trends.
2  know the technical issues and business issues associated with SOA.
3  be able to analyse business cases and develop large-scale composite web service applications for the complex business system

2.3. Graduate Attributes

Successfully completing this course will contribute to the recognition of your attainment of the following UQ (Undergrad Pass) graduate attributes:

GRADUATE ATTRIBUTELEARNING OBJECTIVES
A. IN-DEPTH KNOWLEDGE OF THE FIELD OF STUDY
A1. A comprehensive and well-founded knowledge in the field of study.1
A4. An understanding of how other disciplines relate to the field of study.2
A5. An international perspective on the field of study.1, 2
B. EFFECTIVE COMMUNICATION
B1. The ability to collect, analyse and organise information and ideas and to convey those ideas clearly and fluently, in both written and spoken forms.3
B2. The ability to interact effectively with others in order to work towards a common outcome.3
B3. The ability to select and use the appropriate level, style and means of communication.3
B4. The ability to engage effectively and appropriately with information and communication technologies.3
C. INDEPENDENCE AND CREATIVITY
C1. The ability to work and learn independently.1, 3
C3. The ability to generate ideas and adapt innovatively to changing environments.1, 3
C4. The ability to identify problems, create solutions, innovate and improve current practices.3
D. CRITICAL JUDGEMENT
D1. The ability to define and analyse problems.3
D2. The ability to apply critical reasoning to issues through independent thought and informed judgement.3
D3. The ability to evaluate opinions, make decisions and to reflect critically on the justifications for decisions.3
E. ETHICAL AND SOCIAL UNDERSTANDING
E1. An understanding of social and civic responsibility. 
E2. An appreciation of the philosophical and social contexts of a discipline. 
E4. A knowledge and respect of ethics and ethical standards in relation to a major area of study. 
E5. A knowledge of other cultures and times and an appreciation of cultural diversity. 

Successfully completing this course will contribute to the recognition of your attainment of the following Engineers Australia graduate attributes:

GRADUATE ATTRIBUTELEARNING OBJECTIVES
1. Ability to apply knowledge of basic science and engineering fundamentals1
2. Ability to communicate effectively, not only with engineers, but also with the community at large1
3. In-depth technical competence in at least one engineering discipline1, 3
4. Ability to undertake problem identification, formulation and solution1, 3
5. Ability to utilise a systems approach to design and operational performance1, 3
6. Ability to function effectively as an individual and in multi-disciplinary and multi-cultural teams, with the capacity to be a team leader or manager as well as an effective team member1, 2
7. Understanding of the social, cultural, global and environmental responsibilities of the professional engineer, and for the need for sustainable development 
8. Understanding of the principles of sustainable design and development1
9. Understanding of and commitment to professional and ethical responsibilities 
10. Expectation and capacity to undertake life-long learning 

3. Learning Resources

3.2 Recommended Resources

There is not an appropriate text book to cover all the materials in this course since SOA is too quickly evolving and developing. Recommended reading and references will be provided for each lecture.  
 
Alonso, G., Casati, F., Kuno, H., Machiraju, V. Web Services Concepts, Architectures and Applications, Springer, 2004. ISBN: 3-540-44008-9.  
 

Ron S., Travis V., Jason B., Madhu S. XML and Web Services Unleashed, Sams Publishing, 2002. ISBN: 0-672-32341-9.

 
 

3.3 University Learning Resources

Access to required and recommended resources, plus past central exam papers, is available at the UQ Library website (http://library.uq.edu.au/search/r?SEARCH=INFS3204).

The University offers a range of resources and services to support student learning. Details are available on the myServices website (https://student.my.uq.edu.au/).

3.4 School of Information Technology and Electrical Engineering Learning Resources

Students enrolled at St Lucia who wish to retain a hard copy of this profile can use the free print quota provided each semester to students enrolled in courses in the School of Information Technology & Electrical Engineering. For information on how to use this print quota, see the School Policy on Student Photocopying and Printing (St Lucia) (http://www.itee.uq.edu.au/about_ITEE/policies/copy-print.html). Students enrolled at the Ipswich campus will either be provided with a hard copy or given directions in class on how to obtain a free copy.

ITEE course websites can be found at http://www.itee.uq.edu.au/~COURSECODE. Many ITEE courses also have Usenet newsgroups, named uq.itee.COURSECODE. Instructions for accessing newsgroups are available at http://studenthelp.itee.uq.edu.au/faq/1stYearFAQ.html#accessnews.

4. Teaching & Learning Activities & Modes

4.1 Learning Activities

Date
Activity
Learning Objectives
26 Jul 06 16:00
Introduction to Web Service & SOA. (Lecture):
1, 2
2 Aug 06 16:00
EAI and B2B interaction: the business case for SOA (Lecture):
Readings/Ref: Text0; Text1
1, 2
9 Aug 06 16:00
XML basic: Concepts, Syntax, DTD, Display, etc. (Lecture):
Readings/Ref: Text0; Text2
1
16 Aug 06 16:00
Holiday (Exhibition Day):
23 Aug 06 16:00
.NET basic: .NET, C#, etc (Lecture):
Readings/Ref: Text0; Text2
1, 2
30 Aug 06 16:00
.NET advance: ADO.NET, ASP.NET, Web form, etc. (Lecture):
Readings/Ref: Text0; Text2
1, 3
6 Sep 06 16:00
Web Service basic: SOAP, WSDL, UDDI, etc. (Lecture):
Readings/Ref: Text0; Text2
1, 3
13 Sep 06 16:00
Web service Advance: Composition & Orchestration (Lecture):
Readings/Ref: Text0; Text1
1, 2, 3
20 Sep 06 16:00
Service-Oriented Architecture (Lecture):
Readings/Ref: Text0; Text1
1, 2, 3
27 Sep 06
Term-break:
4 Oct 06 16:00
Semantic Web & Work Flow (Lecture):
Readings/Ref: Text0; Text1
1, 2
11 Oct 06 16:00
Guest Lecture. (Lecture):
1, 2
18 Oct 06 16:00
Project Demonstration (Lecture Series):
3
25 Oct 06 16:00
Course review. (Lecture):
1, 2, 3

4.2 Teaching & Learning Modes

You are not required to attend any of the teaching sessions (except those in which an assessment activity is taking place), however, you are strongly encouraged to do so. The lectures and pracs have been specifically designed to aid your learning of the course material. Failure to attend a session may result in you being disadvantaged. It is up to you to find out what happened at any class session that you miss. You are also expected to work on the online tutorial material independently, and discuss with the lecturer and tutors for tutorial questions.

You must present your prac results to your lab tutor during one of your scheduled prac session before the deadline.

5. Assessment

5.1 Assessment Summary

Assessment Task
Due Date
Weighting
Learning Objectives
Practical
Pracs
14 Aug 06 09:00 - 14 Oct 06 17:00
15%
3
Project
Course Project
21 Aug 06 09:00 - 21 Oct 06 17:00
35%
2, 3
Exam - during Exam Period (Central)
Final Exam
Examination Period
50%
1, 2, 3

5.2 Course Grading


Grade 1, Fail: Fails to demonstrate most or all of the basic requirements of the course:

Total<20



Grade 2, Fail: Demonstrates clear deficiencies in understanding and applying fundamental concepts; communicates information or ideas in ways that are frequently incomplete or confusing and give little attention to the conventions of the discipline:

20<=Total<45



Grade 3, Fail: Demonstrates superficial or partial or faulty understanding of the fundamental concepts of the field of study and limited ability to apply these concepts; presents undeveloped or inappropriate or unsupported arguments; communicates information or ideas with lack of clarity and inconsistent adherence to the conventions of the discipline:

45<=Total<50



Grade 4, Pass: Demonstrates adequate understanding and application of the fundamental concepts of the field of study; develops routine arguments or decisions and provides acceptable justification; communicates information and ideas adequately in terms of the conventions of the discipline:

50<=Total<65



Grade 5, Credit: Demonstrates substantial understanding of fundamental concepts of the field of study and ability to apply these concepts in a variety of contexts; develops or adapts convincing arguments and provides coherent justification; communicates information and ideas clearly and fluently in terms of the conventions of the discipline:

65<=Total<75



Grade 6, Distinction: As for 5, with frequent evidence of originality in defining and analysing issues or problems and in creating solutions; uses a level, style and means of communication appropriate to the discipline and the audience:

75<=Total<85



Grade 7, High Distinction: As for 6, with consistent evidence of substantial originality and insight in identifying, generating and communicating competing arguments, perspectives or problem solving approaches; critically evaluates problems, their solutions and implications: Total>=85

5.3 Late Submission

No extensions will be granted except in exceptional personal circumstances (documented medical reason or family emergency). Personal hardware or computer failures are not grounds for extension.

5.5 Assessment Detail


Pracs
Type: Practical
Learning Objectives Assessed: 3
Due Date:
         14 Aug 06 09:00 - 14 Oct 06 17:00
Weight: 15%
Task Description: Prac exercises are designed to help you to develop practical skills with step-by-step instructions. They are essential part of the learning strategies of this course. Completing pracs on time will help you to work on your project too. There are 5 pracs in total, each of which carries 3 marks.
Criteria & Marking: To be released on web.

Course Project
Type: Project
Learning Objectives Assessed: 2, 3
Due Date:
         21 Aug 06 09:00 - 21 Oct 06 17:00
Weight: 35%
Task Description:

The project will be group of  based. Each group has 2 students.  It requires implementations in the lab or your own PC environment. The project is designed to test your ability of analsying, designing and developing large-scale business web applications. The project will be released in week 5 and due in week 12. Project assessment includes report, program, and a demonstration of the system in week 13. 


Criteria & Marking: Assessment criteria and marking scheme will be released together with the project.

Final Exam
Type: Exam - during Exam Period (Central)
Learning Objectives Assessed: 1, 2, 3
Due Date:
         Examination Period
Weight: 50%
Perusal: 10 minutes
Duration: 120 minutes
Task Description:

A 120 minutes final examination will be held during the final examination period. This exam will be close-book and may contain short-answer and essay questions.

This exam will have focus on the concept and the capability of using web service technologies in designing and implementing real business applications.


Criteria & Marking: Final exam marking.

6. Policies & Guidelines

 
This section contains the details of and links to the most relevant policies and course guidelines. For further details on University Policies please visit myAdvisor and the University Handbook of Policies and Procedures.

6.1 Assessment Related Policies and Guidelines

University Policies & Guidelines

An overview of the University’s assessment-related policies can be found on myAdvisor (http://www.uq.edu.au/myadvisor/index.html?page=2910).  Students should refer to section 3.30 Assessment in the University Handbook of Policies and Procedures (http://www.uq.edu.au/hupp/index.html?page=25108) for full details on all assessment-related policies.

Academic Integrity & Plagiarism
It is the University's task to encourage ethical scholarship and to inform students and staff about the institutional standards of academic behaviour expected of them in learning, teaching and research. Students have a responsibility to maintain the highest standards of academic integrity in their work. Students must not cheat in examinations or other forms of assessment and must ensure they do not plagiarise.

The University has adopted the following definition of plagiarism:

Plagiarism is the act of misrepresenting as one's own original work the ideas, interpretations, words or creative works of another. These include published and unpublished documents, designs, music, sounds, images, photographs, computer codes and ideas gained through working in a group. These ideas, interpretations, words or works may be found in print and/or electronic media.

The following are examples of plagiarism where appropriate acknowledgement or referencing of the author or source does not occur:

  • Direct copying of paragraphs, sentences, a single sentence or significant parts of a sentence;
  • Direct copying of paragraphs, sentences, a single sentence or significant parts of a sentence with an end reference but without quotation marks around the copied text;
  • Copying ideas, concepts, research results, computer codes, statistical tables, designs, images, sounds or text or any combination of these;
  • Paraphrasing, summarising or simply rearranging another person's words, ideas, etc without changing the basic structure and/or meaning of the text;
  • Offering an idea or interpretation that is not one's own without identifying whose idea or interpretation it is;
  • A 'cut and paste' of statements from multiple sources;
  • Presenting as independent, work done in collaboration with others;
  • Copying or adapting another student's original work into a submitted assessment item.

You are encouraged to read the UQ Academic Integrity and Plagiarism policy (http://www.uq.edu.au/hupp/index.html?page=25128) which makes a comprehensive statement about the University's approach to plagiarism, including the approved use of plagiarism detection software, the consequences of plagiarism and the principles associated with preventing plagiarism.

Feedback on Assessment
Feedback is essential to effective learning and students can expect to receive appropriate and timely feedback on all assessment.

For a detailed explanation of the feedback you are entitled to, you should consult the policy on Student Access to Feedback on Assessment. (http://www.uq.edu.au/hupp/index.html?page=25114)

As a student you have a responsibility to incorporate feedback into your learning; make use of the assessment criteria that you are given; be aware of the rules, policies and other documents related to assessment; and provide teachers with feedback on their assessment practices.

There are certain steps you can take if you feel your result does not reflect your performance. Please refer to the myAdvisor web site (http://www.uq.edu.au/myadvisor/index.html?page=2953).

School of Information Technology and Electrical Engineering Assessment Guidelines

Misconduct

Further to the statement on academic integrity and plagiarism above, students are required to read and understand the ITEE policy on Student Misconduct (http://www.itee.uq.edu.au/about_ITEE/policies/student-misconduct.html).

Late Arrival or Non-attendance at Examinations

The policy and procedure for late arrival or non-attendance at centrally controlled examinations is set out in the University's Examinations policy (HUPP 3.30.5), sections 8 and 10.2.

The way in which late arrival at a School-controlled examination is dealt with will be at the discretion of the course coordinator, who may be guided by the policy for centrally controlled exams.

In the case that a student requests a special exam for a School-controlled exam, the request will be considered and, if allowed, the timing shall be determined by the course coordinator, in consultation with the School's Chief Examiner where necessary, and in accordance with HUPP 3.30.5. Unless otherwise indicated in the Course Profile, applications must be made in writing to the Head of School no later than one week after the exam. Late applications will not be accepted.
 
Examination Feedback
 
In addition to the advice above, students wishing to view examination answer scripts and/or question papers should consult with the School office (Room 217, General Purpose South Building [78], St Lucia; Room 218, Building 1, Ipswich) regarding arrangements. The ITEE policy on exam script viewing is available at http://study.itee.uq.edu.au/current_students/exam_script_viewing.html.

Supplementary Assessment

If you fail this course you may be eligible for supplementary assessment - see the general award rules and/or your program rules for details. You should note that even though you may be eligible for supplementary assessment under these rules, in some circumstances there may be no practical assessment that can be offered to allow you to meet the minimum passing requirements. These circumstances may include failure based on:
  • group or team based assessment;
  • attendance or class participation requirements;
  • laboratory-based assessment, where laboratories can't practically be made available after classes have finished;
  • project or thesis-based assessment, where a significant period of time would be required to undertake supplementary assessment;
  • progressive assessment, where subsequent assessment items build on earlier assessment items; or
  • multiple assessment items, where it is impractical to offer multiple supplementary assessment items.
If the course coordinator determines that there is no practical supplementary assessment that can be offered to allow you to improve your grade, then you will not be offered supplementary assessment and your grade will remain unchanged.

6.2 Other Policies and Guidelines

University Policies and Guidelines

Placement Courses
Students on a placement course – also known as a work placement, internship, industry study, industry experience, clinical practice, clinical placement, practical work, practicum, fieldwork, teaching practice – should refer to the University policy, Placement Courses (http://www.uq.edu.au/hupp/index.html?page=25120) for detailed information.

Working with Children
Students whose studies include a professional/work placement, internship, clinical practice, teaching practice or other similar activity which involves them in regular contact with children should refer to the University policy, Working with Children Check - "blue card" (http://www.uq.edu.au/hupp/index.html?page=25004) to find out how to apply for a 'blue card'.

Students with a Disability
Any student with a disability who may require alternative academic arrangements, including assessment, in the course/program is encouraged to seek advice at the commencement of the semester from a Disability Adviser at Student Support Services.  Refer to the University policy, Students with a Disability (Disability Action Plan) (http://www.uq.edu.au/hupp/index.html?page=25122) and to the policy on Special Arrangements for Examinations for Students with a Disability (http://www.uq.edu.au/hupp/index.html?page=25111)

Where an adjustment is made to an accredited program, it is the responsibility of the relevant Faculty to liaise with professional and registration bodies regarding the acceptability of the change/s. 

Occupational Health and Safety
Undergraduate Students (http://www.uq.edu.au/hupp/index.html?page=25055) and Postgraduate Students (http://www.uq.edu.au/hupp/index.html?page=25057) should be familiar with the University policies on occupational health and safety in the laboratory.

Other School of Information Technology and Electrical Engineering Guidelines

Ethical Clearance
If your course involves assignment or project work involving human subjects or human-related materials, you must investigate the need for ethical clearance and obtain it when required. Information on ethical clearance can be found at http://www.uq.edu.au/research/orps/index.html?page=5064&pid=5256.

Learning Summary

 

Below is a table showing the relationship between the learning objectives for this course and the broader graduate attributes developed, the learning activities used to develop each objective and the assessment task used to assess each objective.

Learning Objectives

After successfully completing this course you should be able to:

1  understand the rational of SOA and bounded web technologies from XML, .NET, web service, to their recent development trends.
2  know the technical issues and business issues associated with SOA.
3  be able to analyse business cases and develop large-scale composite web service applications for the complex business system


Assessment & Learning Activities

  Learning Objectives
  1 2 3
Learning Activities
Introduction to Web Service & SOA. (Lecture)
selected
selected
 
EAI and B2B interaction: the business case for SOA (Lecture)
selected
selected
 
XML basic: Concepts, Syntax, DTD, Display, etc. (Lecture)
selected
   
Holiday (Other)      
.NET basic: .NET, C#, etc (Lecture)
selected
selected
 
.NET advance: ADO.NET, ASP.NET, Web form, etc. (Lecture)
selected
 
selected
Web Service basic: SOAP, WSDL, UDDI, etc. (Lecture)
selected
 
selected
Web service Advance: Composition & Orchestration (Lecture)
selected
selected
selected
Service-Oriented Architecture (Lecture)
selected
selected
selected
Term-break (Other)      
Semantic Web & Work Flow (Lecture)
selected
selected
 
Guest Lecture. (Lecture)
selected
selected
 
Project Demonstration (Lecture Series)    
selected
Course review. (Lecture)
selected
selected
selected
Assessment Tasks
Pracs    
selected
Course Project  
selected
selected
Final Exam
selected
selected
selected

Graduate Attributes

Successfully completing this course will contribute to the recognition of your attainment of the following UQ (Undergrad Pass) graduate attributes:

  Learning Objectives
  1 2 3
Graduate Attributes
A IN-DEPTH KNOWLEDGE OF THE FIELD OF STUDY
A1. A comprehensive and well-founded knowledge in the field of study.
selected
   
A4. An understanding of how other disciplines relate to the field of study.  
selected
 
A5. An international perspective on the field of study.
selected
selected
 
B EFFECTIVE COMMUNICATION
B1. The ability to collect, analyse and organise information and ideas and to convey those ideas clearly and fluently, in both written and spoken forms.    
selected
B2. The ability to interact effectively with others in order to work towards a common outcome.    
selected
B3. The ability to select and use the appropriate level, style and means of communication.    
selected
B4. The ability to engage effectively and appropriately with information and communication technologies.    
selected
C INDEPENDENCE AND CREATIVITY
C1. The ability to work and learn independently.
selected
 
selected
C3. The ability to generate ideas and adapt innovatively to changing environments.
selected
 
selected
C4. The ability to identify problems, create solutions, innovate and improve current practices.    
selected
D CRITICAL JUDGEMENT
D1. The ability to define and analyse problems.    
selected
D2. The ability to apply critical reasoning to issues through independent thought and informed judgement.    
selected
D3. The ability to evaluate opinions, make decisions and to reflect critically on the justifications for decisions.    
selected
E ETHICAL AND SOCIAL UNDERSTANDING
E1. An understanding of social and civic responsibility.      
E2. An appreciation of the philosophical and social contexts of a discipline.      
E4. A knowledge and respect of ethics and ethical standards in relation to a major area of study.      
E5. A knowledge of other cultures and times and an appreciation of cultural diversity.      

Successfully completing this course will contribute to the recognition of your attainment of the following Engineers Australia graduate attributes:

  Learning Objectives
  1 2 3
Graduate Attributes
1. Ability to apply knowledge of basic science and engineering fundamentals
selected
   
2. Ability to communicate effectively, not only with engineers, but also with the community at large
selected
   
3. In-depth technical competence in at least one engineering discipline
selected
 
selected
4. Ability to undertake problem identification, formulation and solution
selected
 
selected
5. Ability to utilise a systems approach to design and operational performance
selected
 
selected
6. Ability to function effectively as an individual and in multi-disciplinary and multi-cultural teams, with the capacity to be a team leader or manager as well as an effective team member
selected
selected
 
7. Understanding of the social, cultural, global and environmental responsibilities of the professional engineer, and for the need for sustainable development      
8. Understanding of the principles of sustainable design and development
selected
   
9. Understanding of and commitment to professional and ethical responsibilities      
10. Expectation and capacity to undertake life-long learning