COURSE INFORMATION SHEET
Advanced Physics I (AP-C)
--PH405
Trimester I, 2008
| Instructor: John Kolena |
Office: Bryan 443
|
Tutorial: every Wed. (6
- 7 pm)
|
COURSE WEBSITES
COURSEWORK
Your work is evaluated in the following areas,
according to the given percentage
weights:
Pre-Final Exam
|
|
Daily
work,
Class Participation |
20%
|
| Lab
work |
20%
|
|
Weekly Homework |
30%
|
| Tests |
30%
|
| Final Exam |
15 or 20%
|
Daily work: You are expected
to participate constructively in class each day.
This requires preparing your homework. In particular, 1) study the
relevant readings, 2)
answer the related questions and E-type problems at the end of the
chapter, and 3) prepare
written and electronic assignments as requested.
Participation means contributing productively to
class
discussion and problem solving, volunteering to present problem
solutions to the class, taking notes when appropriate during class.
Written solutions to assigned problems are due at
the beginning of class unless stated
otherwise. Be prepared to present and explain your solutions at the
board.
You will submit some assignments electronically
from the Moodle website. These are
generally done in
preparation for a class and are due shortly before that class so that
the instructor can read them and address
any difficulties during the class period. Your
class participation grade is jeopardized whenever you neglect to submit
one of these
assignments.
Unannounced quizzes relating to the homework
(which includes the reading) may occasionally be given.
Lab work: The requirements
for lab work are somewhat different from those in Physics with Advanced
Topics. You will be given some goals for each lab, but the experimental
design and procedures will often be left up to
you to devise. Also, there will be much more emphasis on analysis of
experimental uncertainties. You will keep
a complete record of your experiments in a lab journal. Guidelines for
writing lab reports are posted online.
You will submit some prelab and postlab
assignments electronically from the Moodle or APhys
website.
These are like electronic homework assignments in that they may not be
submitted
late unless stated
otherwise.
Lab groups will occasionally be called
on—sometimes with short notice—to
report orally on their work. In such situations, it is expected that
each partner be able
to present and answer questions about any part or aspect
of the laboratory.
Tests: See the syllabus for
test dates.
Tests cover text material, supplementary material presented in class,
homework, and lab
experiences. In line with current AP testing procedures:
- You may use calculators on free response
questions.
- Equations will be provided for free response
questions.
- You may not use calculators and equations will
not be provided for the multiple choice questions.
POLICIES
- Bring to each class: textbook, calculator,
notebook (also lab journal and pen on lab days)
- Classes will begin on time, and you are
expected to be on time. "Tardy" means not being in your seat
at the time when class is scheduled to begin. For classes that
start at 8am or immediately after lunch, if you are not in your seat at
the beginning of the class period, you will be marked tardy. For
classes that start at other times, I will allow a minute or so after
class has started before counting you tardy.
School policies require that you be marked severely tardy, if you are
15 - 25 minutes late, or absent if you arrive 25 minutes or more
late. If you are late to class and feel that you have a valid
excuse for being late, you need to talk with me immediately after class
to settle the issue.
Unexcused tardies will be dealt with according to the Physics Tardy
Policy. Grade penalties may also result for work that is missed due to
being late.
- Students are expected to follow the Physics
Academic Safety, Tardy, Classroom Computer Use, and Academic
Policies. You will receive a copy to read and sign.
- Written assignments that are due at times
other than class time are turned in to the appropriate envelope in the
PH405 box outside my office. Staple multiple pages of an assignment, as
unstapled papers will not be graded. Late submission of homework
means that the assignments is received at any time after the due
time. Late homework assignments (labs, problems, etc.) are
assigned a maximum penalty of 30% for the first day late. Credit may
not be assigned for homework turned in more than 24 hours late.
If you miss 2 of any combination of assignments, you will report to
Saturday Morning Restricted Study. Any additional miss after the first
2 missed assignments will result in additional Saturday referrals.
- Assignments that are submitted electronically
from the APhys or Moodle websites may not be submitted late. There is
no credit for late electronic work.
- Summaries of homework assignments, hints for
doing homework problems, and supplementary information are posted on
the APhys website. Check the site regularly. Updates are sometimes sent
by email.
- You are expected to have printing privileges,
as you will need to print during some labs.
- If you miss class due to an approved absence,
you are responsible for letting me know well in advance (at least
2 days for a regular class, at least a week for a lab
class) so that we can make arrangements for making up any work
you miss (you must still turn in all work by the regular due time,
though). If you miss class due to an unexcused absence, you will not
receive credit for any work that you missed (though you should still
find out what was missed and prepare the assignments for the next class
meeting). If you miss a number of classes for medical or other
reasons, you should arrange with me a plan for making up any work you
missed.
GRADES
The following scale is applied to grades. The
number
given is the lowest for the corresponding grade. Grades are not
adjusted to a curve.
| A+ |
94 |
|
B+ |
77.5 |
|
C+ |
67.5 |
| A |
84 |
|
B |
72.5 |
|
C |
62.5 |
| A- |
80 |
|
B- |
70 |
|
C- |
60 |