Instructor: Dr.
Ringwald E-mail: ringwald[at]csufresno.edu and replace [at] with @
|
Phone: 278-8426 |
Office hours: By appointment only until 2002 August 26.
Office: McLane Hall, Room 11, 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.
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:
(1) To serve as a conceptual physics course, with emphasis on energy
generation and use, and their effects on the environment.
(2) To run the course as a seminar, encouraging student participation.
(3) To promote student understanding of scientific method, and to practice
critical thinking and reasoning skills, useful both in and outside of
science.
(4) To examine the interaction between science, technology, and society,
in the context of "the energy crisis."
(5) To provide experience with quantitative reasoning and graphics,
again useful both in and outside of science.
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.
Holidays: February 18 (Presidents Day), March 25 and 27 (Spring
Break), April 1 (Cesar Chavez 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/psci168.html
Course grades will be awarded 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:
20% | Two Midterm Exams (10% each) | |
10% | Weekly reading quizzes | |
20% | Homework and projects (please note: no late assignments can be accepted) | |
5% | Paper titles and summaries, two copies of which are due Wednesday, April 24 | |
20% | A 4000-word paper, two copies of which are due on the last day of instruction, on Wednesday, May 15: | |
25% | 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: |
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.
All students are required to remove hats and sunglasses during all exams, because they have in the past been used to aid cheating. Students may not use calculators, pagers, or cell phone that can communicate outside the classroom during exams. Any students found attempting to do so will get an F in the entire course, because that constitutes cheating.
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?
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: none of these dubious practices 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 May 17. Web page by Dr. Ringwald
(ringwald[at]csufresno.edu and replace [at] with @)
Department of Physics, California State University, Fresno