Instructor: Dr.
Ringwald E-mail: ringwald[at]csufresno.edu and replace [at] with @
|
Phone: 278-8426 |
Office hours: MWF 1-1:50, MW 4:30-5:20, and by appointment.
Office: McLane Hall, Room 011, in the new Building J (or "J-wing").
This is across the outdoor "hall" from McLane 149 and 151.
You don't need an appointment to come in during office hours. This
is time set aside for you, when I will be in.
Please feel free to contact me, if you have any problems whatsoever in this course: or if you're doing well, and just want to talk about energy and the environment. It's in our interest, and it matters to me, that you do well!
Course Description (from the CSUFresno 2001-2002 General
Catalog): (3 credits). Analysis of energy crisis; introduction to
various forms of energy, energy conversion processes and environmental
effects; present energy supply and energy projections; future energy
demands and ways of evaluating alternatives.
Class objectives:
Mathematics: This course will require the use of some algebra and
basic geometry, but mainly a lot of arithmetic. We will also use
scientific notation, units conversions, and proportions.
Course meeting times and location: Schedule 27613 (section 1): MW
3-4:15 p.m., in McLane 280.
Holiday: February 18 (Presidents Day)
Required Course Text: Energy: Its Use and the Environment, 3rd
edition (2002), by Roger A. Hinrichs and Merlin Kleinbach
It should be available at the campus Bookstore, in the University Student
Union building.
Required Course Equipment: (1) Clear plastic ruler; (2) Scientific calculator (that has scientific notation, and can calculate logarithmic and exponential functions)
Course web page:
http://zimmer.csufresno.edu/~fringwal/ps168.html
Course grades will be assigned for the following final
percentages:
85-100% = A; 70-84% = B; 55-69% = C; 40-54% = D; 0-39% = F.
These percentages will be computed with the following weights:
2 Midterm Exams: | 20% (10% each) |
Weekly reading quizzes: | 10% |
Homework and projects (please note: no late assignments can be accepted): | 20% |
Paper titles and summaries, two copies of which are due Wednesday, April 24: | 5% |
4000-word paper, two copies of which are due on the last day of instruction, on Wednesday, May 15: | 20% |
Final Exam, which will be comprehensive (covering all material in the entire course), which will be Monday, May 20, 3:30-5:30 p.m. in the regular classroom: | 25% |
Please note:
If Web access is still a problem for you, please come to office hours or make an appointment, and I'll let you use my machine. I won't therefore accept excuses such as "I couldn't use the Internet" or "My browser wasn't Java enabled."
Sorry, but I do not give make-ups for midterm exams. I can never be sure that a makeup was really fair, since it must be different from the regular exam. If you should have to miss a midterm exam for a compelling reason (e.g. job interview or illness documented by a doctor's note), I will void the part of the course grade that midterm would have counted and count the rest of the grade as 100%.
Once a student leaves the classroom after taking an exam, the student may not re-enter the classroom as long as that exam is still taking place. The student's leaving the exam will be taken to signify that the student has finished that exam.
I will therefore assign a 4000-word paper, due on the last day of instruction, Wednesday, May 15. Since I take this so seriously, I will personally read and grade every one, so make them good!
Having something to say in your paper is essential. How you write it is also important: good content is so much better if it's written in a way that's clear and easy to understand. For hints on writing, see The Elements of Style, by W. B. Strunk and E. B. White. This little book should be available in the campus bookstore for $6.95. (I made it a required text for PSci 21 this semester: I'm sure there will be some to spare.) There is also now an online version. Read it from cover to cover twice a year, and understand it clearly, for the rest of your life!
These papers may be on any topic on current, historical, or future concerns about energy, energy generation, energy use, any of their effects on the environment, or related science or technology. A typed (or computer printed) paper title and short summary (between 100 and 250 words) is due on Wednesday, April 24. You're allowed to change your topic after this if you discover something better: this is something I like particularly about science. A list of example paper topics should be attached to the printed copies of this syllabus. It is available online at http://zimmer.csufresno.edu/~fringwal/ps168.papers
Papers must be typed (or computer printed), on standard 8.5-inch x 11-inch paper with standard, one-inch margins. Use a readable 12-point serif font such as Times or Computer Modern Roman---not Chicago, Helvetica, Monaco, or Geneva, which are sans serif and hard to read in large doses.
These papers must provide a list of references, or works cited. Not doing so can turn an "A" paper into a "B" paper. There must be at least five references. No more than two of these five can web addressses. You may use more references than this required minimum: indeed, if you want an A, you should have substantially more.
Here are some useful ways to list references:
For a journal article:
Ringwald, F. A., & Naylor, T. 1998, The Astronomical Journal, volume 115,
pp. 286-295,
"High-Speed Spectroscopy of a Cataclysmic Variable Wind: BZ
Camelopardalis"
For a magazine article:
Ringwald, F. 2000, Astronomy, vol. 28, No. 6, p. 48 (June issue),
"The Sky Down Under"
For a book chapter:
Ringwald, F. A. 1998, in the Third Conference on Faint Blue Stars, edited
by A. G. Davis Philip, J. W. Liebert, R. A. Saffer, and D. S. Hayes
(Schenectady, New York: L. Davis Press), p. 425,
"PG 1002+506: a Be Star at Z = +16 kpc"
For a book:
Warner, B. 1995, Cataclysmic Variable Stars (Cambridge: Cambridge Univ.
Press), p. 221
(Don't forget to include a reference to the specific
page that contains the information you used: it's too much to expect your
reader to wade through the entire book to find what you mean.)
For a web page:
Ringwald, F. A., 1998,
http://zimmer.csufresno.edu/~fringwal/comp2.3lis
"Composite-Spectrum and Related Stars That Are Candidate
Detached Post-Common-Envelope Binaries, v. 2.3" (March 29)
Knowing how the references were used is also important. You should
therefore cite references in the text, especially when making statements
of fact that aren't well-known or immediately obvious. Give the author's
name and the year of publication, so your reader can easily match up the
statements with the references. Here are three different examples of how
to cite references in the text:
Here, Smith (1995) and Horne (1999) were journal articles, but Warner (1995) was a book. Note that with the case of Horne (1999), one can put the author's name into the sentence, useful for emphasizing that Horne did this work.
You need not use this exact format for citing references, but do use a format precise enough so that I can look the references up myself. It's frustrating when a student writes something interesting, but gives a reference that's so imprecise, I'm unable to find out more about it!
Four thousand words isn't much. I want these papers to be well-thought-out, polished, beautiful little gems, not big loads of ore. It will help to focus on a specific topic. For example, whole books have appeared on the topic of solar energy. Can you really write a 4000-word paper on solar energy that isn't superficial? Better would be "Passive Solar Heating for Household Use," but again, whole books have appeared on this. Even better would be a review of a specific system, design, or method, or building codes or legal issues with building codes.
For ideas, see the text, including chapters we haven't yet read. See also current and back issues of reputable popular magazines such as Scientific American, New Scientist, Discover, or National Geographic, or scientific journals such as Physics Today, Science, or Nature. Articles in these magazines are what your papers should be like.
Feel free to use the World Wide Web for research, too, but be careful of what you use, since there's a great deal of rubbish on the web. When using the web for research, be sure as always to reference your sources, by listing their web addresses, also known as URLs. Because everything on the web is subject to change without notice, it is also essential to list the date that appears on the page to indicate when it was last updated, as in the above example. If no such date appears on the page, list the version number appearing on the page. If there is no version number, then list the date you consulted the page.
Here are some other tips on writing:
I will admit that, to enliven my lectures, I sometimes do inject opinions and value judgements. There is a big difference between spoken and written communication, however. Avoid imitating this when you write: stick to the facts.
This error may be common, but it drives me wild, and can be bad for your grade.
This is how I grade papers:
For more on how papers are graded, see the copy of the California State University, Fresno General Education Writing Rubric.
However, if you do collaborate, it must be genuine collaboration: not one person doing all the work, and the others blindly copying. That's cheating! Therefore, while you may work together, write up the results separately, in your own words. A dead giveaway is when I get two papers that are exactly the same. Do people think I don't notice it?
I like even less when students take papers from the Internet, and turn them in as their own work. This is now easy for professors to detect, with www.plagiarism.org. Modifying someone else's paper slightly, or changing the words around, or stringing someone else's paragraphs together, even if they're cited, is no better: these dubious practices still don't make it your paper. For information on the University's policy regarding cheating and plagiarism, refer to the Schedule of Courses (Legal Notices on Cheating and Plagiarism) or the University Catalog (Policies and Regulations).
To prevent plagiarism, two copies of both the paper titles and summaries and the papers themselves are due, on the appropriate dates (April 24 for the titles and summaries, and May 15 for the papers). I must have two copies, or the paper (or summary) gets an F. I will keep one of the copies of these papers and summaries on file, for life. If I find a plagiarized paper, I will send it to the Dean and recommend the student be expelled - or the degree be revoked, if I don't find it until 25 years from now.
Go to Dr.
Ringwald's home page
Last updated 2002 January 20. Web page by Dr. Ringwald
(ringwald[at]csufresno.edu and replace [at] with @)
Department of Physics, California State University, Fresno