PHYS 2102 - General Physics for Technical Students - Spring 2008

LECTURES: All lectures are in 109 Nicholson Hall.

Sec. 1 - 9:30-10:30 AM           J. DiTusa    211B Nicholson, Phone 578-2606.  Section 1 syllabus.
                                            Office hours Tuesday 11:30-12:30 pm
Sec. 2 - 11:30 AM-12:30 PM    P. Motl       264 Nicholson, Phone 578-8277. Section 2 website.
                                            Office hours  Monday and Tuesday, 1-2 pm
Sec. 3 - 10:30 AM-12:00 PM    M. Gaarde  215B Nicholson, Phone 578-0889. Section 3 website.
                                            Office hours T-Th 12-1pm.
Sec. 4 - 1:30-3:00 PM             D. Browne  219 Nicholson, Phone 578-6843.
                                            Office hours Monday 2-3 pm.


NOTE:
The final exam is on Thursday, May 8, 5:30-7:30 pm. Half of the exam will be on the new material (end of chapter 31, and chapters 32, 33, and 35), and half will be cumulative. You can find a few practice tests under Final Exam below, and a formula sheet  here. The rooms for the exam are:

Section 1 (MWF, DiTusa) Note corrected room: Howe-Russell E-137
Sections 2, 3, and 4      Dodson 100


The third exam is on Thursday, April 10, from 6-7 pm.
The exam will cover material from chapters 29 through 31.8, as covered in homework sets 9 through 11. You can find practice tests and a formula sheet under EXAMS below. There will be a review session Wednesday night, April 9, 6-7 pm, in 130 Nicholson. The rooms for the exam are (same as last time):

Sections 1 and 2 (MWF classes) in 130 Howe-Russell
Sections 3 and 4 (TuTh classes) in 130 Nicholson

OFFICE HOURS: We encourage you to seek our help with the material or the homework. You can see our office hours listed above. In general you are welcome outside of office hours as well - make an appointment via email to make sure we are there.

CLASS SCHEDULE: Click on schedules for MWF or T-Th classes

TEXT: We will be using the 8th edition of "Fundamentals of Physics" by Halliday, Resnick and Walker. The LSU bookstore sells a special version of this edition made for LSU Physics 2102 - it is called PHYS2102. Bundled with this book is an access code for WebAssign, the PLUS version, which we will again be using for homework as described below. If you have purchased the whole 8th edition that is of course also fine (but you will have to purchase your WebAssign access separately). Older editions can in general also be used - but some section numbers may not be exactly the same.

LECTURES: We strongly encourage you to attend the lectures - you are responsible for knowing both the material presented in the text and in the lectures. In the schedule which is linked above you can find the detailed sections which will be covered in each class. You should read the relevant material before coming to class.

QUIZZES: We will have in-class quizzes several times per week, based on recent concepts or homework/reading assignments. The quizzes are meant to help you understand the concepts on the course.

HOMEWORK:
A homework assignment consisting of approximately 20 problems and a few questions from the text will be assigned on WebAssign once per week. Answers to homework will be entered into WebAssign via the internet. It will be due on Wednesdays at 2:00 AM. WebAssign has the feature that it gives you instant feedback allowing you to retry problems answered incorrectly. To access WebAssign, you will need a login name and a password. Your login name will be your PAWS login name, and your password will be your LSU ID number. You can change your password the first time you log in. There is a fee associated with using WebAssign. As mentioned above, you will automatically buy access to WebAssign with the LSU edition of the textbook, or you can purchase it separately on-line or at the bookstore. We recommend that you purchase the PLUS access to WebAssign. The first assignment is available on WebAssign and is due January 23rd at 2 am (yes, 2 am - very late Tuesday night or very early Wednesday morning).

Working the homework problems every week is your best way of succeeding in this course. The homework problems are your best way of assessing your mastery of the material AND your problem solving ability, and many of the problems on the exams will be similar to the homework problems - don't put it off until the last minute but allow yourself time to get stuck, try again, and seek help. Past experience shows a strong correlation between quality of homework and exam grades. We also encourage you to solve additional problems in the text and to make sure you master all the check-point conceptual questions in the text book.

TUTORING:
If you do not understand part of the material or experience difficulty in working the problems assigned seek help!!!! Either from your instructor through office hours, or from the graduate student tutors who will be available in room 102 Nicholson Hall at scheduled times posted there. You have already paid for this service and you are strongly encouraged to make use of it. If no tutor is present at a scheduled time, please note the time and date and report it to your instructor.

EXAMS:
There will be three (3) 1-hour exams given during the semester that will draw from the homework assignments and lecture materials. These exams will be closed book and consist of problems and short essay questions. Since partial credit will be given for the problems, it is essential that you show all work and give explanations and intermediate steps. An answer without showing the appropriate steps through a calculation will not be accepted. Units are to be carried through as a part of the solution. You will be supplied with a standard formula sheet for use during the exam. These will be available on the course web page sometime before the exam. No other written material is allowed. You will need a scientific calculator. The exams will be given Thursday evenings from 6-7 pm on the following dates:

Solutions:           Exam 1     Exam 2      Exam 3 

THERE WILL BE NO MAKE-UP EXAMS.
If you have to miss an exam and you have a valid and documented excuse, you will be allowed to substitute the grade on that exam for the average of your other exam grades (midterm and final exams).

FINAL EXAM:  The final exam will be on Thursday May 8, 5:30-7:30 pm.   Practice test 1    Practice test 2    PT2.solutions

GRADING:
The final grade in this course will be determined from exams and homework, as follows:

Preliminary exams  -  100 points each
300 points
Final Exam  -  200 points
200 points
Homework/Quizzes  -  70+30 points
100 points



TOTAL:
600 points


Your numerical grade will be the total number of points you obtain, divided by six. Given your numerical grade, your letter grade will be at least the following:

        A: 90-100      B: 80-90      C: 60-80      D: 50-60      F: below 50.

Send Comments or Questions to M. Gaarde
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Updated: Tue, 08-Jan-2008 10:13 AM

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