121 Policies -- Under Construction
A. General
The course during this Semester commences on THU Aug 17 and
concludes on THU Nov 30 (with final exam on MON Dec 4).
Class meetings are on
MW from 4:30 until 5:45 in PSH-356.
THERE IS NO LECTURING at these class meetings. Instead, class time
is spent on collaborative activities in small, assigned groups. You
will, at times, be required to report your group's findings to the
entire class (see Active Learning).
Minimal preparation for each class meeting is to do the
reading assignment for that
day, and to answer the Reading Quiz questions (at Mastering Physics)
for that reading assignment. To more fully prepare for each class
meeting, also take an advance look at the homework problems which
will be assigned for that day (at Mastering Physics). A small
number of multiple choice questions will be asked during each class
meeting. These may cover the reading assignment, or may check your
comprehension of some topic that has been covered in the small-group
activities. You are expected to record your response to these
questions by logging in to your Mastering Physics account with your
phone or laptop and using Learning Catalytics. You must
enter your ASU Posting
ID within Learning Catalytics in order for your responses to be
saved and graded.
RECITATION will
meet weekly on THU from 4:00 to 4:50 PM in PSH-356. Most recitations
will consist of small-group exercises which will be completed in teams
of two or three students; the teams will be assigned by your instructor.
These exercises will usually provide an introduction to the concepts and
problem-solving strategies which will then be explored in detail in the
following week's readings, classroom exercises, and homeworks; however,
in some cases, the concepts will have already been introduced in the
reading and the exercises will provide additional practice. While the
exercises will be a group activity, each student must write up his or
her own solutions, which will be collected at the end of recitation
by your TA. There will be nine graded exercises over the course of the
semester, and your lowest score of the nine will be dropped; there are no
make-up exercises for any reason. The recitation exercises will
count as 5% of your overall grade for the course.
Recitations are canceled on our six test days; see the Schedule
for these test dates.
HELP-STUDY Sessions are for the students' benefit, but participation
is optional. Beginning MON Aug 28, the Physics Success Center (PSF-186) will
be staffed by volunteer faculty and Teaching Assistants several hours each
day between 9:00 AM and 5:00 PM. Teaching and Learning Assistants associated
with this course will keep some of their office hours
in the Success Center.
An E-MAIL account is available for every student enrolled at ASU.
Instructions for obtaining an e-mail account can be obtained at the ASU
Computer Commons. Important class information may be disseminated
through e-mail. The student will be responsible for receiving it. If you
currently have an ASU e-mail account, then you need do nothing. If you
have not recently used your ASU email account, then you should double-check
to make sure that your email is properly being redirected to your favorite
email address.
B. Learning Catalytics and Classwork
You will use Learning Catalytics to answer Multiple
Choice questions during the class meetings. For the first two class meetings,
Learning Catalytics questions will be considered practice questions, as we learn
to use the system. Beginning MON Aug 28, at least
some Learning Catalytics questions will be graded. You are always encouraged to
discuss Learning Catalytics questions with your team and with others at your table,
but when answering, always think for yourself. A correct answer will be
counted as 2 points, an incorrect answer will be counted as 1 point, and
no answer will be counted as zero points; so the penalty for an incorrect
answer is very small. There are expected to be about 150 graded LC questions
over the course of the semester, so about 300 LC points will be possible.
However, about 255 LC points (or about 85% of all possible LC points should
there be more or less than 150 questions) are all that are required to receive
an overall LC grade of 100%. Your LC percentage will count as 12% of your overall
grade for the course. Since only 85% of all possible Learning Catalytics points
are required for a perfect Learning Catalytics score, no opportunity is provided
to make up missed Learning Catalytics questions. It is your responsibility to make sure that
your Learning Catalytics account is set up properly, and that your response
is recorded. See our Learning Catalytics information page
for more details.
Classwork will consist of small-group exercises which are usually related
directly to the assigned homeworks. Your team will complete each exercise
on a portable whiteboard at your table location. Several times during the
semester, someone from your team will be selected to report your team's
results to the entire class; all team members who are present on that day
will receive a satisfactory or unsatisfactory grade based on the quality
of that report. The teams will be rearranged several times during the
course of the semester.
There are expected to be a small number (less than 9) of unannounced
pop quizzes given during the semester. There may possibly be a pop
quiz at any class for which there is an associated Reading Quiz.
When given, the pop quizzes will begin promptly at 4:30 and last
for five minutes. The pop quizzes will be graded by other students
sitting at the same table; they will then be collected and recorded
by our LA's. Your Classwork grade will include a combination of your Pop Quiz grade and your Teamwork grade
as assigned by your Learning Assistants, and will count 4% of your
overall grade for our class.
C. Reading Quizzes and Homework
There is one Reading Quiz (RQ) for each of the 25 topics listed in our
Topic and Reading Schedule;
all Reading Quizzes can be found only at Mastering Physics (MP). Each RQ
is due at 4:25 PM on the day the topic for that RQ is covered in our
classroom. The final question on every RQ
is an opportunity for you to ask a question about a topic which you may
have found confusing in the reading, or in the previous class; any of
these questions submittted by 1:00 PM on the day before that RQ is due
will be answered by your instructor. The Reading Quizzes will count 6% of
your overall class grade.
There is one assigned MP Homework (HW) for each of the 25 topics listed
in our Topic and Reading Schedule.
Due dates for each MP HW are available on the MP Assignment list. The
purpose of HW is to practice for our tests; the due dates for the MP HW's
are therefore set to the day of the test for which those HW's are practice
(the official due dates are always the ones found at MP). Please take a look at the Tips for Using MP.
In addition to our MP HW practice, there are also HW questions available
at WebAssign; these appear at WebAssign by topic, and are also due on
the dates of the tests for which those particular HW's are practice.
In order to give you some credit for practicing by working on our
MP and WebAssign HW's, the HW practice will count as 3% of your
overall class grade (2% for MP and 1% for WebAssign). To earn this
3% credit, you need to earn 40% of the available points in the
practice HW's available at MP and WebAssign.
D. Graded Team Exercises
Eight of the nine non-test recitation meetings will consist of a graded team
exercise which will be distributed at the beginning of recitation and
completed within your assigned team. Exercises will be the same
for all teams in a given recitation. Exercises will be solved as a
team, but each student will write up his or her own solution; solutions
will be graded individually and returned the following week. Your lowest
graded team exercise score will be dropped. THERE ARE NO
MAKE-UP TEAM EXERCISES FOR ANY REASON. The recitation exercises will
count as 5% of your overall grade for the course.
E. Quizzes
We expect there will be no scheduled Quizzes
in Fall 2023, only the Pop Quizzes already discussed in Part B
above.
F. Testing
The six tests will cover material indicated in the schedule by
topic numbers. Each of the six tests will
be given online, through
WebAssign, on computers provided by the physics department in the
Physics Testing Center (PSH-563), under the supervision of recitation
TA's and/or LA's. The online tests have a 50-minute time limit and the
testing center will be open from 3:55 PM - 5:05 PM on
the test days.
On those days, recitation will be cancelled. The final exam, on MON Dec 4
from 4:50-6:40 PM
will be comprehensive, and it will be given online in PSH-563 with
assigned seating.
At this time, it is expected that all six tests will be Numerical.
On Numerical test, you have six tries to enter the correct numerical
answer, and you lose one-tenth of the the credit for the question
for each wrong answer submitted. With Numerical testing, you know
your score when you leave the Testing Center. It is also possible
that some Numerical tests will be replaced with Multiple Choice (MC)
testing. In MC tests, you get only one try for each question, and
you do not know the results until they are published on our class
webpage.
Testing is governed by the following policies:
In figuring your test average, two of the six test scores
will automatically be dropped.
The use of hand calculators is permitted. For tests, TI solar
calculators will be provided by the Department of Physics.
Academic dishonesty on an examination will result
automatically in a failing grade for the course and referral to
the Dean for further sanctions. Cheating in any form will not be
tolerated!
A full set of test rules is
available at the course web site.
Scratch paper will be provided. Bring
only your writing instruments.
An equation sheet will be provided; it will include any necessary
constants and a few equations. Before the test, a copy of the equation sheet
will be available on the class website.
In the event of a
fire alarm occuring during an examination,
students will be asked to gather their belongings and leave the
testing room as expeditiously as possible. Those students whose
testing was interrupted by the alarm will then be given the
appropriate amount of extra time to finish their tests, or else
given an entirely new test, once the exam is able to resume.
G. Final Grades.
The final course grades will be determined with the following weights:
Learning Catalytics: 12%
Classwork: 4%
Reading Quizzes: 6%
Homework Practice: 3%
Recitation Exercises (drop 1): 5%
Testing: 52%
Final Examination: 18%
The scale for final letter grades will ultimately
be determined by the overall class performance. However, any student
who earns 80% of all possible points can expect to receive an A of some
type (A-, A, or A+); students who earn 65-80% of all possible points
can expect to receive some type of B, and students who earn 50-65% of
all possible points can expect to receive a C or C+. Don't
depend solely on your instructors to figure your grade correctly.
For a more detailed explanation see
HOW TO FIGURE YOUR FINAL GRADE (usually posted later in the
semester).
H. Withdrawal
Withdrawal policies are established by the University (see the
ASU Calendar.)
The deadline for course
withdrawal is Nov 1.
I. Appendices
Additional, University-required information on commercial note-taking,
accommodations, classroom behavior, Title IX, and withdrawal details can be
found in the Online Appendices.
Topic and Reading Schedule