Spring 2006 ECEN3714 Network Analysis
Classroom Instructor: Dr. George Scheets
FAX: (405) 744-9198          E-Mail: scheets@okstate.edu
Contact Information:
    Mondays & Wednesdays: NH372, Tulsa Campus, Phone: (918)594-8473
    Tuesdays, Thursdays, & Fridays: ES303, Stillwater Campus, Phone: (405)744-6553
Office Hours:  Monday, Wednesday - Friday: 1300 - 1400;  &  Tuesday: 1530 - 1630
Classroom Grading: 460 point total.  11 quizzes (110 points), 2 exams (200 points), 1 comprehensive final exam (150 points).
    Students missing an exam or the final without notifying the instructor in advance will receive a zero for that test.  At the instructor's option, make-up exams will be available for non-business related reasons, but will be harder. These make-ups will be given on the scheduled make-up time, which is Friday, May 5th, at 1600 hours.
    No make-up quizzes will be given.  If you contact the instructor in advance with a good excuse, you may, at the instructor's option, be excused from a quiz.  Otherwise if you miss a quiz you're out 10 points.
Laboratory Instructor: Eric Larson           E-Mail: ericcl@okstate.edu
Lab Home Page
Laboratory Grading: 170 point total.  11 experiments (110 points), 1 practical (30 points), 1 design project (30 points).
     Lab scores (0-170 points) will be multiplied by 1.35 to get a final point spread from 0 to 230.
     Students missing a lab exercise without notifying the lab instructor in advance will receive a zero for that particular lab experiment.
     In the event of a serious illness or injury, a student may be excused from a lab and rescheduled for a make-up during one of the two allowable make-up dates (see lab calendar).  Make up labs will be harder than the originally scheduled experiment.  Insure an absence is cleared in advance with your lab instructor.
Total Grade: 690 points; 2/3 from class work, 1/3 from lab work. 
Grade Scale: 90/80/70 % of total points = A/B/C etc.  Final break points will be curved. 
     Exception: The lab exercises are important.  They constitute one of the few hands-on experiences in the curriculum.  Students who skip a lab exercise will NOT participate in any class curve.

Cheating: Don't do it! Quizzes, exams, and lab reports should be your own work.  Expect to get an 'F' for the course if you are caught cheating.
Required Text: Electric Circuits, 7th Edition, James Nilsson & Susan Riedel, Prentice Hall, 2005, ISBN 0-13-146592-9
Prerequisites:  ECEN2613 Introduction to Electrical Science and MATH2613 Differential Equations.
Course Objectives: To introduce some of the basic tools needed for circuit and signal analysis and design, especially the Laplace transform and frequency domain analysis. Frequency domain analysis is one of the most important tools of electrical engineering.  It allows us to understand the effect an electrical circuit has on a given signal by breaking the signal up into its individual frequency components and then analyzing the effect of the circuit on each frequency.
Web Assistance:
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Chapter 13 Solutions, Part A
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Chapter 12 Solutions
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2005 home page
Quizzes & Tests

Final 2005
Exam 2    .2005    .2006
Exam 1    .2005    .2006
Quiz 11   .2005     .2006
Quiz 10   .2005     .2006   
Quiz 9     .2005     .2006
Quiz 8     .2005     .2006
Quiz 7     .2005     .2006
Quiz 6     .2005     .2006
Quiz 5     .2005     .2006
Quiz 4     .2005     .2006
Quiz 3     .2005     .2006
Quiz 2     .2005     .2006
Quiz 1     .2005     .2006
Tentative Course Outline:
Laplace Transforms
Inverse Laplace Transforms
Laplace Transforms in Circuit Analysis
Time response of First and Second order circuits
Transfer Functions & the Engineer's favorite mathematical function- Convolution
Frequency Response
Passive Filters
Fourier Series