hi,
I'll attempt to answer. I presume this is an electroplating reaction?
What appears to have happened is the dissolution of .026g of your Copper anode by: Cu(s) → Cu2+(aq) + 2e–. 0.026g copper is equivalent to 4.09*10-4 moles. For every mole of copper you get two moles of electrons, so you have 8.18*10-4moles of electrons which is equal to 78.8 Coulombs. The electrons should travel to the electrode and recombine with the Cu2+. The electrode should have increased by .026g but only increased by .022g. I don't know if that's due to experimental error or what.
Amps is short for Amperes - the unit of electrical current. That is measured in Coulombs/second. If the reaction took 3600 seconds then it seems fairly straightforward to divide the Coulombs - let's go with the higher 78.8C - and get 0.0219A or 21.89mA. Which is why I'm a bit confused with the order of the questions.
Chemistry isn't my area, so perhaps someone with more knowledge will help you more. Thought I'd chip in because Chemical Forums has been helpful to me!