http://online.chabotcollege.edu/shildreth/physics/4csyll08.html

Physics 4C - Chabot College - Scott Hildreth

Spring 2008 Syllabus

Homework - Calendar - Mastering Physics - ActivPhysics Aplets


 Instructor: Scott Hildreth   email: shildreth@chabotcollege.edu
 Office: 2013  voice mail: (510) 723 - 7468

Office Hours: Always one-half hour before and after our classes Tuesdays and Thursdays, in my office; I also might be in the physics lab (1714). Fridays before class from 12:00-1:00. My complete office hours for the term are available online at my home page: http://online.chabotcollege.edu/shildreth. You can also make an appointment to see me at another time that fits your schedule. If you ever come by and miss me, please leave a note with your name, phone number, and the best time to reach you, and I will call you back.

I will check email multiple times every day, and I recommend this as the best way to reach me! However, you MUST include a clear SUBJECT message in your email, and your name, to ensure that your email will not be treated as "SPAM" and automatically deleted. I check my voicemail messages, but not daily. If you have an urgent need, and cannot get to email, leave me a voicemail message but do not expect an answer back the same day.


About Physics 4C, General Physics; Waves, Sound, Thermodynamics, & Optics

This is the continuation of a 3 or 4-semester sequence of physics courses with calculus, designed for students majoring in:

Students who take Physics 4 generally are planning to transfer to four-year schools. Many Chabot students have gone on with great success to California State University campuses at Hayward, San Jose, and San Francisco, as well as Cal Poly SLO, and University of California campuses at Berkeley and Davis, among other schools. Chabot College has "articulation agreements" with these schools, which guarantee that your successful completion of Physics 4B at Chabot will be deemed equivalent to the same course at those schools. Your units will transfer, and you can continue in their physics sequence or continue on to more advanced work.

Subject Prerequisites for the course include:

Required Materials

1. Required Textbook

Physics for Scientists and Engineers, 2nd ed

2nd Edition (2008) Volumes 1& 2 with Mastering Physics

Randall D. Knight, California Polytechnic State University-San Luis Obispo
ISBN-10: 0321516567 (ISBN-13: 9780321516565)


Publisher: Addison-Wesley.  Note that there are other versions of this text, including individual volumes as well as an extended version with Modern Physics (which we will not address in this course.)  If you elect to purchase individual volumes, you'll need to get Volumes 2 and 3, including chapters 16-25.  I'll provide copies of chapters 14 and 15 as a review if you do not choose to purchase the combined volume.

Physics for Scientists and Engineers: A Strategic Approach, Vol 2 (Chs 16-19), 2/E,
ISBN-10: 0321516680 | ISBN-13: 9780321516688

Physics for Scientists and Engineers: A Strategic Approach Vol 3 (Chs 20-25) with MasteringPhysics, 2/E
ISBN-10: 0321516648 | ISBN-13: 9780321516640

The combined volume with Mastering Physics is listed at the publisher's site for $177.33 including Mastering Physics access.   If you have the first edition version of Knight's book, you may choose to use it, but you will be responsible for making sure you do the correct homework problems out of the 2nd edition text, and you must also purchase Mastering Physics access for our textbook.   Also note that this is the first term we'll be using this book at Chabot, so the bookstore will be buying back used copies at the end of the school term.

2. Student Workbook

Along with the textbook, a student workbook is suggested.  If you purchase the book new in the bookstore, the workbook is included for free with the bundle.  If you choose to purchase the workbook online, please visit: Student Workbook for Physics for Scientists and Engineers: A Strategic Approach, Standard Edition, 2/E  by Knight, © 2008 | Addison-Wesley. ISBN-10: 0321516427 | ISBN-13: 9780321516428

Note that this ISBN is for the large workbook; you are also able to just get workbooks for Volumes 2 and 3 (Chapters 16-25) for our class.

3. Required Homework & Tutorial Online System

This term, all of the Physics 4 classes will be using an advanced, online homework and tutorial system called Mastering Physics. If you purchase a new textbook, it will come with an individual access code.  If you purchase a used book, or use another author's book, you will still be required to participate in the homework assignments using Mastering Physics, and you can purchase your own access code online for $44.60 at the Mastering Physics website (ISBN 0321516397)

Other Requirements for our course:

Calculator: Multi-function with trig, statistics, exponentials. Graphing capability is optional.

Internet:  You need not own a computer, but you must have access to a computer (on campus, at work, or at home) that can access the Internet to participate in this class. In addition to the publisher site, we have a Blackboard shell for discussion, quizzes, tutorials, and homework/lab review.


Attendance

Physics 4C includes 4 hours of lecture/discussion each week on Tuesdays and Thursdays, and 3 hours of laboratory/discussion/quizzes each week on Fridays.

You must attend the lecture/discussion sections and the laboratory each week; attendance will be taken and factored into your overall course grade as "participation" credit. If you do miss class, I expect you to login to our online course site on Blackboard to respond to questions, post comments, and let me know you are still in our class. If you must miss a discussion or lab, you must notify me and attempt to make arrangements to attend an alternate section.

Grading:

Homework & Homework Quizzes: 24%

Labs & Research Paper: 20% -- about 12% on the labs in class, and 8% on the research paper and class presentation.

Discussion, Group Work, & Class Participation: 16%

Exams (40% of grade)

There will be 2 two-hour exams (held in the laboratory sections) and 1 two-hour final exam in the class. The exams include both essays and numerical problems. Check the course calendar for the tentative exam dates. Sample questions for the exams will be provided to help you prepare.

Homework & Homework Quizzes (24% of grade)

One of the most important factors for your success in Physics 4C, and future success at a 4-year school, will be your ability to solve physics problems and demonstrate your understanding of key concepts.  The best training to help you learn how to solve problems and really wrestle with those concepts is through  homework!

Lab Sections & Lab Write-ups (20% of grade)

Labs will give you a hands-on chance to investigate concepts. You will work in groups to set-up, perform, and analyze experiments, and submit a group write-up according to guidelines provided. Attendance is required, and typically there will not be opportunities to make-up missed lab exercises. A research paper on one aspect of physics in today's society will be assigned, counting for about 5 labs. You will present their paper in the lab.


Class Participation & Discussion (16% of grade)

Current research in physics learning shows that active group discussion is the most important ingredient for student success. Each week we will work in groups to explore concepts and problem-solving techniques. Attendance is required, and your active participation will be factored into your overall course grade. We'll often use Mastering Physics for our group work, and everyone in the group will share one ID and the credit for the work done together in class as long as each member of the team is mentioned in an email submitted to me for each problem.  If you miss a class, you can work on these problems yourself but remember that doing so individually will NOT translate to the same participation/achievement grade as doing them in class, with others.  In all your interactions in our class, whether on-campus or on-line, you are expected to participate respectfully and collegially. Please refer to the Chabot College Catalog for general expectations of student conduct in our course.

Grades will be based on an approximate scale, with extra factors taken into consideration if you are close to grade "borders" (like improvement during the term, group participation, attendance, etc.), and with the condition that you must pass exams with at least 40% score to pass the class regardless of other work.


Turning in Material & Late Work Policies

You may submit work in class, during office hours, under my door, and by email. Late work will not be accepted without advanced approval from me. Late lab reports will receive 50% credit at best. There is no opportunity to makeup homework quizzes or missed labs.  If you submit your work via email and attachments, it is your responsibility to ensure that any attachment is readable and properly formatted and virus-free. If I cannot read an attachment, I will reply to your email and request you resend your message with the text and answer in the body of the email message. Make a print copy of your work as a backup.
 


Academic Integrity:

I expect all work turned in to be original, and any research material for papers, labs, or extra credit, whether copied or paraphrased, must be cited to received proper credit. Be sure to use quotation marks, and note references. Copying material from the text or other sources without giving a reference is not acceptable. I want to know what you think, not what someone else thought! If you use the Internet to assist with assignments and extra credit, you must include the URL, the universal resource locator, that identifies the sources. Citation styles for all work should follow the MLA style; a handout about this style for web resources is available.

At a minimum, you must include the name of the site or title page of the webpage you access, the author if known, the date the site was created, the institution or organization hosting the site, the date you accessed the site, and the URL:

Victorian Women Writers Project. Ed. Perry Willett. Apr. 1997. Indiana U. Accessed: 26 Apr. 1997 <http:// www.indiana.edu/~letrs/vwwp/>.


Hints & Suggestions for Success!

  1. Create a study group. Working with others is a great way to check your understanding of the assignments and the concepts. In the first assignment, you will introduce yourself to the class, and learn about your classmates. Read what they say, and call or email 2 or 3 to say you are interested in forming a study group. You are free to set up and join multiple groups, but try at least one, and if that doesn't work, look for another.  You'll have to work together in the group work material on-campus, and I expect you can continue to work together outside of class to finish group work assignments or lab reports.

  2. Model, Simulate, Reproduce, Experiment! Don't miss an opportunity to build mental AND physical models for problems and questions. Make sketches of what is happening (and label the pieces clearly.) Use blocks, wheels, pencils, erasers, paperclips, books -- whatever you have handy to create a physical analogy for problems. If a question asks about a battery and a light bulb, try to build it! (Your family and/or co-workers may think you a bit strange, but only until you show them your passing grades in the class! Then they'll be very impressed.) Building mental and physical models is one technique that every great physicist seems to have shared, from Archimedes to Galileo, from Newton to Einstein to Feynman.

  3. Involve friends & family. Sometimes the very best way to learn something is to TEACH others; in this class, you'll have lots of interesting questions about how the world works, and you should actively try those questions -- and your answers! -- on willing friends and family members. Tell them you really need their help! See if they understand a bit better after you have explained what happened. When you submit your homework solutions, actively comment on those posted by your classmates. Help them understand how you see the problem. Teach them what you know. Not only will they benefit, but you will too! You'll find you understand the problem much better, and occasionally by trying to explain what you think you know, you'll find you have to start completely over. But that's OK! You are learning, and that is the goal for this class.

  4. Set up a REGULAR time to do the work. College classes allow you more flexibility with your schedule, but they are also seductive in their ability to allow you to procrastinate. If you wait until 11 pm Tuesday to start the homework due Wednesday, I guarantee that you will have a very hard time! Be rigorous with yourself, and set up a schedule each week when you will read the book, start the homework, etc. The self-discipline you encourage is a skill even more useful than what you learn about physics! (Yes, I really mean that! So do employers looking for self-motivated, independent and hard-working folks.)

  5. Let me help! Call me, email me, stop by and leave a note if you can. Use the discussion sections, the discussion forum, whatever works for you. No one learns physics very well by picking up a textbook and just reading alone -- even the best scientists in the world have to check their understanding by bouncing their ideas off others, and asking for advice and help.

Online Resources:

1. Class websites

http://online.chabotcollege.edu/shildreth/physics/4chw08.html &

http://online.chabotcollege.edu/shildreth/physics/4ccal08.html

This is the class website, with the syllabus, calendar, links to other physics courses on the web, and lecture outlines. You can send me email, and get information on the research project paper. This site also has a link to the following online discussion forum:

2. Class Discussion Board

http://clpccd.blackboard.com

This is our online classroom where you can post messages, review homework and practice exam answers, take quizzes, and see great simulation tools to help you learn Physics. Your Username and Password are pre-set if you have registered for the course. Go to the online course site, and save the page as one of your favorite sites (if you use Explorer or AOL), or "bookmark" the page, if you use Netscape). Login instructions are available at: http://www.chabotcollege.edu/DistanceEd/ .

3. Publisher Websites

http://session.masteringphysics.com/myct?productID=knight2

This is the online portal to the Mastering Physics system for our textbook by Knight, 2nd ed.  From here, create your own userid and password.  You'll need your personal access code only once, and from then on, can access the site with your userid and password.  I would suggest using the same userid and password as that for Blackboard.

You will need our Mastering Physics class ID: CHABOTPHYSICS4C2008

I have set up a default userid of physics4cstudents and password spring2008 for you to use if you are waiting to ADD or purchase your textbook.

http://wps.aw.com/aw_knight_physics_1/

The publisher has an excellent companion website for our book that students found quite useful, using "ActivPhysics", a comprehensive set of java tutorials and collaborative questions.  We'll sometimes use these in our class work. 


Back to Chabot College Home Page

Questions? Email me at shildreth@chabotcollege.edu

1/22/08 - SH