Instructor: Dr.
Ringwald E-mail: ringwald[at]csufresno.edu and replace [at] with @
|
Phone: 278-8426 |
Office: McLane Hall, Room 011, in the new Building J (or "J-wing")
Office hours: TTh 9:30-11 a.m., MF 1-2 p.m., W 1-3 p.m., and by
appointment,
but please e-mail or phone first, and please, not during the hour
immediately before class.
Another source of help is the Learning Resource
Center (phone: 278-3052). The LRC is a multipurpose learning facility
located in Lab School 137. They can help with writing and math skills,
both of which you'll need in this course, and indeed most courses here at
CSUF, and in the real world. College can be exhilarating and amazing, a
time to learn and experience a whole host of new and amazing things - but
at the same time, it can be confusing and unsettling. I should know, this
is exactly what happened to me when I went through it. I so wish I'd had a
place like this where I could have gone for advice and help! The LRC should
also be able to organize group study sessions, which I highly recommend, or
even tutoring, for this or other classes.
Course Description (from the CSUF 2000-2001 General Catalog):
(4 credits). Prerequisite: MATH 45 (May be taken concurrently) or
second-year high-school algebra. Concepts, theories, important physical
principles, and history of astronomy. Stellar properties, distances, and
evolution. Three field trips for observing with telescopes. G.E. Breadth
B1. (3 lecture, 2 lab hours).
Class objectives:
Preparation: This course will require the use of intermediate
algebra and basic geometry. We will also use scientific notation, unit
conversions, and proportions.
Course meeting times and location:
Required Course Texts:
Required Course Equipment: (1) Clear plastic ruler; (2) Flashlight (preferably with a red filter, for night vision); (3) Scientific calculator (that has scientific notation, and can calculate logarithmic, exponential, and other functions)
Course Web page:
http://zimmer.csufresno.edu/~fringwal/psci2100f.html
Course grades will be based on these weights:
2 Midterm Exams (drop lowest 1): | 20% |
Laboratory: | 20% |
Homework: | 10% |
1000-word paper, due at the beginning of the last session of class: | 20% |
Final Exam, which will be comprehensive (covering all material in the entire course): | 30% |
Please note:
If you miss a lab, then you will receive a zero for that lab. There will be no make-up labs without an excused absence for a compelling reason (e.g. job interview, illness documented by a doctor's note). If you have three or more unexcused absences from the lab then will receive an F in the course. Astronomy labs will start on Monday, September 11.
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! Cheating and plagiarism are very serious matters, and the worst possible things for science. What's the point of doing science, creating new knowledge about the Universe, if it isn't honest?
Therefore, while you may do the 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 who do this think I don't notice it? I certainly don't like it!
I like even less when students take papers from the Internet, and turn them in as their own work. This is now very 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).
Hang onto all copies of all work you have done in all your classes, ever. They'll be a big help if, one day, you find yourself teaching a class like this. Hang on to you textbooks, too: even the real stinkers can serve as bad examples.
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." (This last one was sprung on me last year. The shame is that, if you can run Netscape, you can run Java: just pull down the menu and select "Enable Java.")
Sorry, but I do not give make-ups for midterm exams. These classes are far too large for that, and even with smaller classes, 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 have to do this because we will be covering a lot of material at the forefronts of knowledge. This isn't like high school, where everything has been taught for years to hundreds of other people, and so how to teach it has been thoroughly tested by the time it gets to you. We're now doing the real thing: we're not on the sidelines watching science anymore, this is science, and everything is constantly changing and so must be custom-made.
College is a lot like juggling. There are many, many different things to do: work, parties, relationships, living away from home, road trips, clubs, sports, etc. The one ball you must not drop, though, is academics: without that, nothing else matters.
If you all do well in this class, well enough for all of you to earn "A"s, I'll award you all "A"s. The Dean will think it's weird, but I'll say you're a talented bunch, and if I need to, I'll personally argue on your behalf.
On the other hand, "F"s will be awarded for class non-attendance and flagrant neglect of class work - so don't do that, all right? I really hate awarding poor grades. I vastly prefer to see my students do well: it's a far better use of my own (not plentiful) time.
Still, if for some reason you get into trouble serious enough to want to drop the course, such as getting so far behind you can't catch up, don't just stop coming to class and think that will be the end of it. See "Adding and Dropping Course" on page 61 of the CSUF 2000-2001 General Catalog, as well as the current Schedule of Courses, for how to do this. Dropping a class is a serious matter. Try to avoid such a terrible waste of time and tuition money by keeping on top of things - for example, by always keeping up with your reading assignments. Again, I want to see you, my students, do well!
I will therefore assign a 1000-word paper, due on the last day of instruction for this class. 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 important. How you write it is also important: good content is so much easier to understand if it's written in a way that's 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 only about $3.95, although there is also now an online version. Read it from cover to cover twice a year, and understand it clearly, for life!
These papers may be on any topic in contemporary or historical astronomy or space exploration. Tentative paper titles (you're allowed to change your mind if you later discover something better: this is something I like particularly about science), with a typed or printed short summary (between 100 and 250 words) of your paper topic, will be due at the beginning of class on the class session immediately before Thanksgiving break.
Papers must be typed or better, computer printed, on standard 8.5-inch x 11-inch paper with standard, one-inch margins, in a readable 12-point serif font such as Times or Computer Modern Roman (not Helvetica, Monaco, or Geneva, which are sans serif and hard to read in large doses).
These papers must provide a list of references: not doing so can turn an "A" paper into a "B" paper. Use at least five references, with no more than two of the five from the web.
One thousand words isn't much. I want these papers to be well-thought-out, polished, beautiful little gems that have something to say, not big loads of ore for which it isn't even clear what they're about. It will help to focus on a specific topic. A 1000-word paper titled "Stars" can't be very good; stars are complex. A 1000-word paper on star formation would be a little better, but still, star formation is a vast topic in itself. More like it would be a 1000-word paper on Herbig-Haro objects, or on submillimeter-wave observations of Class 0 sources (the youngest protostars). As another example, a 1000-word paper on a topic as broad as relativity would not do an adequate job, unless it were something really special. A 1000-word paper on time would be only slightly better. A 1000-word paper on why time goes forward (a favorite subject of Steven Hawking's) would be much better. As yet another example, a 1000-word paper on the Sun would not do our magnificent star justice. A 1000-word paper on the solar neutrino problem probably wouldn't work, either. What might work would be a 1000-word paper on the recent discovery of neutrino mass with the Super-Kamiokande detector, and its implications for the solar neutrino problem, or on just one of the many amazing observational results from the SOHO spacecraft, such as the discoveries of the mechanism for coronal heating, flare-induced Sun-quakes, or rivers or tornadoes on the Sun: no kidding!
For ideas, see the text, including chapters we haven't yet read, as well as current and back issues of popular magazines such as Sky & Telescope, Astronomy, Physics Today, and Scientific American. These sources will also be useful for references for further reading. Articles in these magazines are also what your papers should be like, although your page limit is shorter. Feel free to use the Web for research, too, but be careful of what you use, there's really a great deal of rubbish on the Web. As always, when using the Web for research, be sure to attribute your sources, by listing their Web addresses (also known as URLs)!
Last updated 2001 January 25. Web page by Dr. Ringwald
(ringwald[at]csufresno.edu and replace [at] with @)
Department of Physics,
California State University, Fresno