ITEC 275 Computer Networks Switching, Routing, and WANs Week 1
Instructor Professor DAndrea
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Agenda Introductions Review policies, procedures, and expected
outcomes Learning Activities Introduce homework problems Location
of Power Point presentations
http://cs.franklin.edu/~dandrear/itec275/_Winter_
2015_Network_Presentations/Week_One_Network _ppt or.pptx
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Introductions Professor Robert DAndrea Adjunct faculty at
Franklin Winter term, teach ITEC275 and ITEC 400 Cell phone
614.519.5853 Industry experience in security, systems
administration, network administration, software development, and
deployment of software and hardware.
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Introductions Program Chair Information Technology Professor
Todd Whittaker [email protected] Cell phone
614.918.8321
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Introductions Face-To-Face introduction: Name Major Interest
level and experience in networking Goal for this class
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Administration Principles of Computer Networks Top-Down Network
Design A systems analysis approach to enterprise network design
(3rd ed.). Indianapolis, IN: Cisco Press. ISBN:
978-1-58720-283-4
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Administration Principles of Computer Networks ITEC275 serves
as an introduction to the function, design, administration, and
implementation of computer networks. Topics include network
infrastructure, addressing, sub-netting, architecture, protocols,
applications, and the OSI networking model.
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Administration Course Outcomes 1.Diagram an end-to-end network
communication path, describing each intermediate step. 2.Design a
small-scale network configuration, including addressing, routing,
and switching. 3.Describe the functions of the TCP/IP and Ethernet
protocols including select fields, flags, options, headers, and
trailers for both.
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Administration Course Outcomes (contd) 4.Distinguish between
types of data elements (segments, packets, frames, and bits). 5.Map
the key elements of the TCP/IP protocol suite to the OSI
model.
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Administration Text Oppenheimer, P. (2011). Top- Down Network
Design: A systems analysis approach to enterprise network design.
(3rd ed.). Indianapolis, IN: Cisco Press. ISBN: 978-1-
58720-283-4.
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Administration Academic integrity Items on the Web can serve as
inspiration for your solutions if: You understand the solution as
if you had written it yourself. You cite your source of inspiration
Not citing your source can get you charged with
cheating/plagiarism.
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Administration Academic integrity Items on the Web can serve as
inspiration for your solutions if: You understand the solution as
if you had written it yourself. You cite your source of inspiration
Not citing your source can get you charged with
cheating/plagiarism. Note: if a homework problem says research X,
or investigate Y, then Im expecting a citation! Technically, you
should cite your textbook on almost every HW assignment.