Guidelines for effective Partnerships
For partnered lab assignments, you should follow these guidelines:
-
The expectation is that you and your partner are working together side by side in the lab for most, if not all, of the time you work on partnered lab assignments.
-
You and your partner should work together on all aspects of the project that are partnered. In this lab, this includes the initial top-down design, including function prototyping and writing a main function that calls your function stubs appropriately.
-
If you are pair programming, where one of you types and one of you watches and assists, then you should swap roles periodically, taking turns doing each part.
-
There may be short periods of time where you each go off and implement some small part independently. However, you should frequently come back together, talk through your changes, grab each other’s code, and test your code together.
-
You should not delete or significantly alter code written by your partner when he or she is not present. If there is a problem in the top-down design code, then meet together to resolve it.
-
If there is any issue with the partnership, contact a professor.
Taking time to design a plan for your solution together and doing incremental design and testing that design together may seem inefficient, but in the long run it will save you time. By working together it is less likely that you have design or logic errors in your solution, and you will more easily be able to track down and correct bugs.
Partnerships where partners work mostly independently rarely work out well and rarely result in complete, correct and robust solutions. Partnerships where partners work side-by-side for all or most of the time tend to work out very well. You and your partner are both equally responsible for initiating scheduling times when you can meet to work together, and for making time available in your schedule for working together.