EET-4367: Wireless Communications
Syllabus - Spring '07

Course Information

Title:Wireless Communications
Number:EET 4367
Credits:4
Prerequisites:EET 3367, MAT 2140

Instructor:Dr. Aurenice M. Oliveira
Contact:
Office room: EERC 411
Phone: (906) 487-3657
E-mail:
Lectures:M W F 1:00 - 2:00 pm (EERC 315)
Lab:W  2:00 - 5:00 pm (EERC 427)
Office Hours:M Th 2:00 - 5:00 pm or by appointment

Description

Topics include television systems, wave propagation, antennas, digital communications, overview of the wireless communications industry, wireless communications systems and standards (1G/2G/3G systems), wireless communications channels, multiple access schemes, wireless channel impairments and techniques to minimize them (if time permits).

Bibliography

Required Text

Reference/Recommended Reading

Course Objectives

The EET 4367 student will learn to:

Topics (book chapters)

17. Television Standards
07. Receivers
10. Digital Modulation
13. Electromagnetic Waves
14. Antennas
10. Wireless Digital Communications

Evaluation Criteria

Grade Composition

Hour Exams (2)20%
Lab25%
Final Exam20%
Homework and quizzes15%
Class Project20%
Total100%

Project/Presentation

Select a term paper topic and submit paper proposal by Wednesday Feb. 7th . Presentation will be scheduled the last 2 weeks (depending on the class size). A list of suggested topics will be presented in a few days.

Grading Scale

I use a grading scale where 100 is the maximum possible score. Numerical and letter grades correspond as follows:

90 - 100 = A   
80 - 85 = B 86 - 89 = AB
70 - 75 = C 76 - 79 = BC
60 - 65 = D 66 - 69 = CD
0 - 59 = F   

Numerical scores are recorded and used throughout the semester, being converted to a letter grade at the end of the quarter. The overall course grade will be determined by the relative contributions from exams, quiz, lab, homework, and final exam as given on the course syllabus.

Cheating

University rules require that any student caught cheating or copying from another student receive a failing grade for the course and be reported to the Dean of Students. Copying includes copying or sharing any part of a computer file.

Statements

Academic honesty and conduct

All work in this course must be completed in a manner consistent with the Michigan Tech Senate Policies, specially the Academic Integrity Policy and Procedures.

Following is the policy adopted by the Senate on November 9, 1960 and approved by the President:

“A student detected cheating beyond any reasonable doubt during any examination period or in the preparation of any significant individual assignment such as a quarter report, is to receive a failing grade for the course, and a record of the failure is to be submitted to the Dean of Students. This record is to be for the confidential use of the Dean of Students and is to be destroyed upon the student's graduation. On the second such occurrence, a student shall be expelled from the University without the possibility of readmission.”

Cheating shall be considered to include using any information to which you are not entitled. During an exam this would include written crib sheets, writing on your body, using the information from another student’s exam paper, programming formulas or data into the memory of a programmable calculator, etc. I will make every effort to enforce this cheating policy.

Students with disabilities

MTU complies with all federal and state laws and regulations regarding discrimination, including the Americans with Disability Act of 1990 (ADA). If you have a disability and need a reasonable accommodation for equal access to education or services at MTU, please call Dr. Gloria Melton, Associate Dean of Students, at 7-2212. For other concerns about discrimination, you may contact your advisor, department head, or the Affirmative Action Office 7-3310.

Additional Information

Attendance

Assignments

Make Up Policy

Changes

This syllabus is subject to change as found appropriated by the instructor. The changes will be announced in class in a timely fashion.