PHYS 100: Foundations of Physical Science

16 January 2001

Welcome to what promises to be one of the more interesting courses you will take at Boise State.  It is almost certain to be different than any you have taken in science.   Since the course is neither based on a textbook nor on standard lectures, if you have not participated in lab, what happens in class will not make sense or be of any real value to you on exams.  You can guarantee yourself the first 50% of your semester average by coming to all classes and lab, participating and handing in assignments.  If your schedule this semester calls for frequent absences from lab or class, then I suggest you take the course some other semester.  Grading will not be competitive, therefore cooperation between students in class and while studying is strongly encouraged.

 

WHAT WE WILL STUDY:           A tentative list of topics for this semester: Motion and Force and possibly Images from Lenses

 

Your Instructor:                     Dr. Dewey Dykstra 

                                           OFFICE:         MP 418

                       OFFICE PHONE:         426-3105

                       OFFICE HOURS:         M, W 9:00 - 10:30 am and by appointment.  I am here all day most days.  Feel free to come by at other times without an appointment.  Call ahead, if you are worried about wasting a trip.

              Electronic Mail:         dykstrad@email.boisestate.edu — I check my e-mail on a regular basis, so it is pretty easy to get in touch with me this way.

 

Laboratory:        Meet for lab at your scheduled time each week in the lab room, MP 304.  Bring your Doing Physics activity manual and some spare paper.  See the important notice about what to do if you have to miss a lab session (item 4 on page 3 in the IMPORTANT NOTICES section).

 

What you need:

1.   The Activity Manual: You need to purchase the activity manual for the course as soon as it is available.  Dr. Dykstra will comment on this at the first class meeting. The complete activity manual will be available in several installments. Be prepared to purchase the first installment at the beginning of the second week of class.  Dr. Dykstra will keep you posted as to the availability of the installments.  The title of the first installment to the activity manual is Doing Physics: An Introduction to Motion and Force. It is shrink wrapped in plastic and the pages are three-hole punched.  As we move on to study other topics, new installments to the activity manual will become available.  Be prepared to make these purchases when necessary.  The price of these installments is generally around $10.  There will be at most 3 of these this semester.

 

2.   Three-ring binder (1.5” rings suggested) to keep your PHYS 100 notes and materials in plus a small supply of three ring punched 8.5 x 11 inch paper to use for lab and class discussion notes.

 

3.   The textbook: While this course is NOT based on a textbook, Conceptual Physics by Paul Hewitt is the official optional text for the course.  In a very real and practical sense the text for this course will be in the lab experiences and the resulting discussions.  Occasionally there will be optional suggested readings from the text and other sources that will be placed on reserve at the Library.  I will not go through any suggested readings just to select items for the exams.  Reading in advance of assignments is NEITHER suggested NOR encouraged!

 

4.   Lab materials: – Occasionally you may find it useful to have the following:

       Calculator:  LCD display, “solar” powered, four functions (add, subtract, multiply, and divide).  If math courses are in your future, get one with trig functions.  If not, four functions are good enough.  This is not a problem solving class and there are no mathematics prerequisites, but arithmetic might be used occasionally and I’m sure that you would rather use a calculator than do it in your head.  (I know I would!)

Plastic ruler (6” will do) with centimeters and millimeters marked on it.

 

EXAMINATIONS:      There will be two or three major exams in class plus the final.  The final is not optional.  The final will be comprehensive and will cover only material that has been tested over in the class exams.  The exams will not be tests of what the instructor or the author of the text has said or merely what has happened in lab or class.  The exams will probe your understanding of the ideas that the class builds to explain the phenomena we study usually in applications of the ideas to different situations.  (See note 5 in IMPORTANT NOTICES on page 3 about missing exams.)

 

IMPORTANT DATES:

First Day of Class:  Tuesday, 16 January 2001 (the course begins)

Last day to register or add this course:  Monday, 29 January 2001

Presidents Day NO School:  Monday, 19 February 2001

Last day to drop this course:   Friday, 23 February 2001

Spring Break:  26 March – 1 April 2001

Last day of this class:  Thursday, 3 May 2001

Final:  Thursday, 10 May 2001, 8:00 AM  - 10:00 AM, in MP 101, the regular class meeting location.

 

GRADING:

Calculating the Semester Average:

 

Your semester average will be calculated from the following contributions:

            Class /Homework Activities:  20%

                                            Lab Activities:  30%

                                             In-class exams:  25%

                                                                 Final:  25%

Grading scale for the semester average: A: 90% and higher, B: 80% and higher, C: 70% and higher, etc.

 

YOUR SEMESTER AVERAGE WILL NOT NECESSARILY BE YOUR SEMESTER GRADE!

 

Determining the Semester Grade: Your actual semester grade will be determined by the higher of two letter grades: the semester average and the grade on your comprehensive final.

 

Cut-offs for letter grades on the final will be determined by performance on the final and will not necessarily be 90%, 80%, 70%, etc.  How performance on the final is to be judged will be made clearer during the semester.  This means effectively that the final is a second chance at earning a good grade in this course, if you have been attending and participating!

 

IMPORTANT NOTICES:

The university has clear regulations concerning course enrollment, dropping courses, etc.  Deadlines are being very strictly observed and few exceptions are being made anymore, so…

 

0.   Anyone officially registered for this course who has not attended the first week of class will be withdrawn from the course to make space for those who are interested in making a more serious effort in the class.

 

1.   If you are enrolled in this course, make a clear commitment to make a go of it well before 29 January or definitely drop the class before that time to make room for someone who does want to take it.

 

2.   Because this course is based on the laboratory experience, lab sections are the limiting factor on enrollment in this course.  We cannot offer a sufficiently high quality experience with more than 24 persons in each lab section.  Ultimately, if you are not able to get into an open slot in one of the lab sections by the last day to add, then you should plan to take this course another semester.  The Registrar’s Office controls who gets each seat in a lab section, so your instructor cannot guarantee anyone a seat without risking over enrolling the section; something he will not do.  On the other hand he will do all he can to make it possible for those who wish to get a slot in lab.

 

3.   The date and time of the final are fixed by university regulation and printed in the course schedule for the semester. Be prepared to be at the final as scheduled.  It is extremely unlikely that the final will be available to take early, so do not make plans to leave school early at the end of the semester.

4.   Because of potential crowding problems in lab sections, it is important to attend the section in which you are registered.  On the other hand, if, on occasion, you have to miss your regularly scheduled session of lab for any reason, do whatever you have to in order to make it to another section of lab that same week.  There are no make-up labs possible.  Totally missing lab one week has relatively minimal consequences, point-wise, on your semester average, but it has major consequences on your being able to make sense of what is going on in class and in preparing for exams.

 

5.   Any in class exam or final exam missed without making prior arrangements with your instructor will be counted as 0%.  Call or otherwise leave a note before hand if for some reason you find you have to miss an exam.  The office phone has voice mail.

 

6.   Because of the interactive nature of class and lab, it is virtually impossible to actually “make up” either.  The course is designed such that missing a lab or a class will not destroy one’s chances for a good grade in the end.  On the other hand, you must be present on the particular day to get credit for that day’s lab or class activities.  All absences are treated the same, whether they are for “official school activities” or not.

 

 

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