131 Policies
A. General
The course during this Semester commences on Tue., Jan. 18 and
concludes on Tue., May 3. A schedule of lectures, examinations,
and reading assignments is distributed with this syllabus. A
schedule of homework assignments will be posted on the class web site.
LECTURES are on TTH from 12:15 until 1:30 in PSF 173. Role is not
taken, but attendance is strongly advised. Students are responsible for
any information imparted to the class during lectures.
Minimal preparation for lecture is to do the
reading assignment for that day, which is distributed with this
syllabus. To more fully prepare for lecture,
also take an advance look at the homework problems which will be
assigned for that lecture. A small number of Multiple Choice questions
will be asked during each lecture. These may cover the reading assignment,
or may check your comprehension of some topic that I have just covered
in lecture. You are expected to record your response to these questions
using your PRS (Personal Response System) transmitter. You must register
your PRS transmitter in order for your responses to be graded. A
guide to PRS, including instructions for registering your transmitter,
can be found at the course web site. YOU MUST USE ONLY THE TRANSMITTER
THAT YOU REGISTER AND NO OTHER. Use of another student's transmitter
is a case of academic dishonesty, just exactly like cheating on a test.
Any and all students involved in any such incidents will automatically
receive an E for the course, and may be referred to the Dean for further
sanctions.
RECITATION sections occur weekly as scheduled, beginning Tue.,
Jan. 18, and ending Mon. May 2. The purpose of the recitation section
is to give the student an opportunity in a small class environment to learn
essential concepts and problem-solving strategies. Each recitation period,
except the first, will open with a short quiz.
HELP-STUDY Sessions are for the students' benefit, but participation
is optional. Beginning Tue., Jan. 25, the Help-Study Hall (PSH-352) will
be staffed by volunteer faculty and Teaching Assistants several hours each
day between 8:40 and 3:30. Teaching Assistants associated with this course,
and your instructor, will keep some of their office hours in the Help-Study
Hall.
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 will be disseminated
regularly through e-mail. The student will be responsible for receiving
it. Exam and term grades will be published by e-mail or web page as soon
as they are available. If you currently have an ASU e-mail account, then
you need do nothing. If you DO NOT currently have an e-mail account at
ASU, or if you do not receive an e-mail from the instructor by Feb. 7,
then you should send the instructor a message at the address
gary.adams@asu.edu. The subject of the message should be "PHY 131 e-mail"
and the body of the message should include your name and your RECITATION
SECTION by TIME and by LINE NUMBER. Your e-mail address will be copied
from your message and added to the class list.
B. PRS (Personal Response System)
You will use your PRS transmitter to answer Multiple Choice questions
during the lecture period. Your answers will be graded, and your
PRS grade will count 5% of your overall class grade. For the first
two weeks, PRS questions will be considered practice questions, as
you learn to use your PRS transmitters. Beginning Tue. Feb. 1, PRS
questions will be graded. You are always encouraged to discuss PRS
questions with your neighbors in lecture, but when answering, always
think for yourself. A correct answer will be counted as 3 points,
an incorrect answer will be counted as 2 points, 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 40 PRS questions over
the course of the semester, so the maximum possible PRS score will
be about 120 points. The final PRS grade will be determined as a
percentage out of 108 points (or ∼90% of all possible points
should the number of possible PRS points change.) Your maximum PRS
grade is 100%, i.e. more than 108 points will not be counted as extra
credit. Since only 90% of all possible PRS points are required for
a perfect PRS score, no opportunity is provided to make up missed
PRS questions. USING SOMEOME ELSE'S TRANSMITTER, OR ALLOWING SOMEONE
TO USE YOUR TRANSMITTER, WILL RESULT IN AN AUTOMATIC FAILING GRADE FOR
THE COURSE. It is your responsibility to make sure that your PRS
transmitter is in working order, and that your response is recorded.
See the PRS page on our class web site for tips.
C. Homework
A list of assigned HOMEWORK problems will be made available on the class
web site as the semester proceeds. There will be one assignment for each
lecture. Almost all homework assignments are to be completed and
turned in using Mastering Physics; however, there will be ten to twenty
problems during the semester which have to be written up and handed in at
recitation. A guide to using Mastering Physics can be found on the course
web site. Due dates for Mastering Physics HW are available on the Assignment
List at the Mastering Physics web site. In general, assignments made on
Tue. are due by 11 PM the following Mon., and assignments made on Thur. are
due by 11 PM the following Wed., but the official due dates are always the
ones found at your Mastering Physics site. Assignments submitted after the
due hour has passed will receive a rapidly declining amount of partial credit
which will go to ten percent one hour after the due hour. Due dates
for problems that must be written up and turned in will be found
at theHOMEWORK SCHEDULE page on the course web
site.
For working on homework, STUDY GROUPS ARE STRONGLY ENCOURAGED.
This will be especially applicable for those HW problems
that have to be written up, but you may also want to
print out some of the Mastering Physics problems and work on them in
your study groups. However, you should realize that for most Mastering
Physics problems, the numerical values in the online versions will
be randomized, and so will be different for each student; so in your
study group, you will be finding the right method rather than the actual
answers.
A total of approximately 1800 homework points will be possible. The final
homework grade will be determined as a percentage out of 1600 points
(or ∼90% of all possible points should the number of total HW points
change.) Your maximum homework grade is 100%, i.e. more than 1600 points
will not be counted as extra credit.
600 HOMEWORK POINTS ARE REQUIRED FOR
A PASSING GRADE IN THE COURSE.
The following policies govern written homework:
Written assignments will be accepted only at the beginning of the
recitation period on the days they are due. LATE HOMEWORK WILL NOT BE
ACCEPTED.
STUDY GROUPS ARE STRONGLY ENCOURAGED. For most people, talking
about physics is an essential part of understanding physics and
developing an accurate and useful physical intuition. However,
written homework solutions should be one's own. Homework that has
obviously been copied will not receive credit and the students involved
will be subject to charges of academic dishonesty.
D. Quizzes
Quizzes will be given during the first 10-15 minutes of each recitation
beginning Tue. 1/25. This results in 13 quizzes for each recitation
section. The highest 10 quiz scores will be counted. Quizzes will be
similar to simpler problems, and will be on material already covered in
the lectures and/or homework assignments. Mon. and Tue. quizzes will
most likely come from material covered during the previous week.
Wed. and Thur. quizzes will most likely come from material covered
during the previous Thur. or Tue.
E. Examinations
The four tests will cover material indicated in the schedule by
lecture numbers. Each test will consist of 2-4 problems and 10-l5
multiple choice questions. The problems may be similar to homework,
but they may also represent applications of principles in entirely
different circumstances. The multiple choice questions may cover
conceptual questions as well as "quicky" problems. The final
examination will consist of 40 multiple choice questions. The final
will be comprehensive. For the test dates, see the
lecture schedule which accompanies this syllabus. Last year's tests,
(from Summer 2004) with solutions, will be available at the Noble
Library Copy Center beginning Tue., 1/25.
Examinations are governed by the following policies:
THERE WILL BE NO MAKE-UP TESTS. The lowest score of all
five tests will be deleted in the final course grade calculation.
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!
The use of hand calculators is permitted. However, YOUR
CALCULATOR MAY NOT CONTAIN STORED PHYSICS EQUATIONS.
Test paper (including scratch paper) will be provided. Bring
only your pencils and calculators.
Formula sheets will not be used in tests. Understanding a
concept of physics is tantamount to knowing its mathematical
expression and how to apply it to a given physical situation.
Non-trivial derivatives and integrals, numerical values of
physical constants, and some case-specific formulas will
be provided when their use is required.
Partial credit is given. Arithmetical errors will be treated
charitably, but for answers that do not make physical sense
(wrong dimensions, deviation by several orders of magnitude, etc.)
no credit will be awarded. In general, you must get the PHYSICS right
to receive any partial credit. Wrong physics = no credit.
In the event of a fire alarm occuring during an examination,
students will be asked to close their examination booklets, gather
their belongings and leave the room as expeditiously as possible,
leaving their examination booklets on the tables where they were
working. The booklets will be gathered and graded as they are.
Unless the alarm proves to represent a bona fide emergency, there
will be no make-up examination.
If a student believes there to have been an error in grading
his or her examination, the complaint should be PUT IN WRITING and
handed, together with the examination, to the course instructor. The
problem will be regraded by the individual who graded it originally.
If the student is not satisfied with the grader's response to the
complaint, he or she may appeal to the course instructor. In this
event, the instructor reserves the prerogative to regrade the entire
examination. (Simple errors, such as point addition, can be corrected
by contacting the student's recitation section instructor.)
F. Final Grades.
The final course grades will be determined with the following weights:
PRS(total points out of 108): 5%
Homework (total points out of 1600): 8%
Quizzes (best 10 of 13): 7%
Tests (best 3 of 4): 60%
Final Examination: 20%
A MINIMUM OF 600 HOMEWORK POINTS IS REQUIRED FOR A PASSING
GRADE IN THE COURSE. The scale for final letter grades will ultimately
be determined by the overall class performance. However, any student
who earns 90% of all possible points can expect to receive an A. Don't
depend on your instructors to figure your grade correctly. For a more
detailed explanation see
HOW TO FIGURE YOUR FINAL GRADE.
F. Withdrawal
Withdrawal policies are established by the University (see the
ASU Calendar.)
The deadline for course
withdrawal is Apr. 1.
Homework Schedule
Lecture Schedule