Privacy Seminar - Opposition
How it works
As an opponent your role is to guide and stimulate discussions based on the student lectures. Each lecture is split into two parts: the societal and legal context (before the break), and presenting the (technical) solution (after the break). Each lasts 35-40 minutes and finishes with a discussion of 5-10 minutes, lead by the opponents. As an opponent you are expected to have read the relevant literature (so ask the group presenting about the papers the used well in advance). Prepare a few questions based on that, but also invite and encourage people in the audience to ask questions, and respond to what is said during the lecture itself.
Grading
You will be graded on the following criteria:
- Preparation
- How well did you prepare your role as opponent (judged by the kind of questions you asked, and how much this shows about what you know about the topic)
- Performance
- Interaction with the presenters, and the way you engage the rest of the audience.
On each of the criteria you can score. unsatisfactory (u), satisfactory (s), good (g), or very good (vg). If you score satisfactory on all criteria, this corresponds to a 7 as the final grade. Similarly, unsatisfactory corresponds to 4, good to 8,5 and very good to 10.
Last Version - e1e3326.
(Note: changeover from CVS to dotless svn version numbers on Jan 19, 2008, and changeover to GIT versioning on May 30, 2013.)
Maintained by Jaap-Henk Hoepman
Email: jhh@cs.ru.nl